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... there's Starr ???


>From TheNation.CoM

March 8, 1999

IMPEACHMENT: THE SEQUEL

Smoke in Starr's Chamber

by THOMAS FERGUSON

See below for background and related information.

The government of the world's sole superpower came close to melting down,
in the political equivalent of Three Mile Island. Not surprisingly, people
want to know why, particularly because public opinion was so strongly
opposed to impeachment. The usual answer is to point to the religious
right. These groups are a factor. But the plain fact is that most of the
heavyweights who fought this battle--the Wall Street Journal, Richard
Mellon Scaife, The American Spectator, Rupert Murdoch's Weekly
Standard--are clearly seeking kingdoms of this world.

So what explains the long-running meltdown? In a political system in which
it is accepted practice to sell nights in a White House bedroom but
consensual sex there can bring down the regime, there is another answer:
money. From this standpoint, the high drama of impeachment looks like an
extraordinary case of business as usual, with the primary issues being
taxes, government regulation and the future of laissez-faire.

Bill Clinton, after all, captured the White House by relying on a powerful
but very thin wedge of support within big business. Despite his noisy
efforts to walk away from the legacy of the New Deal, the "New Democrat"
Clinton never succeeded in expanding that base. Instead, most of American
business opposed him from his earliest days in office, when he proposed a
modest increase in taxes on Americans in the highest income brackets. With
a straight face Republicans accused the Administration of waging "class
war," while at the same time claiming (falsely) that the bill raised taxes
on most working Americans.

That remarkably bitter clash prefigured the willingness of the GOP,
including the so-called moderates, to threaten the Administration with
historically unusual (some critics suggested unconstitutional) tactics of
opposition. Though in many cases the Administration bent over backward to
compromise and enlist industry's support, virtually every new measure it
contemplated only fanned the flames of jihad. Despite major concessions to
insurers and initial support from some industrial interests, the
much-touted healthcare initiative failed in the face of one of the greatest
and most expensive lobbying battles in American history. The President's
effort to regulate firearms (as promised during the campaign) by passage of
the Brady Bill drew bitter, lavishly financed attacks from the National
Rifle Association and firearms manufacturers. New rules proposed by
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt to control grazing by Western ranchers on
federal lands at below-market rates ignited a firestorm. Oil companies
opposed new taxes on energy, while seeking drilling rights in Alaskan
wildlife sanctuaries. Most firms in oil, paper, chemicals, electric power
and related industries were up in arms over a proposed treaty on global
warming. Although the Administration revised the government's approach to
regulation along lines many industries had been demanding, efforts to put
across legislation for environmental cleanup went nowhere, despite some
significant business support.

Though the Brady Bill and a compromise tax measure finally passed, a long
series of defeats and scandals threw the White House into a tailspin. All
the battles over taxes and regulation and the Administration's occasional
talk--it was just talk, though the Democrats then controlled both houses of
Congress--of raising the minimum wage sent enormous, gushing streams of
money from anxious businesses to the Republican Party [see Ferguson,
"G.O.P. $$$ Talked; Did Voters Listen?" December 26, 1994].

A rough calculation based on my sample of large concerns and investors for
the 1996 election makes the point more starkly. Lumping together (most)
firms in the pharmaceutical, insurance and healthcare sectors with those in
branches of industry most directly affected by the environmental concerns
the Administration was raising (paper, chemicals, etc.), and then adding
enterprises in firearms and the retail and wholesale sectors (whose
tumescent growth during recent merger waves has had major political
implications, since such firms are usually acutely sensitive to questions
of minimum wages and mandated benefits), one arrives at the very
conservative estimate that by the middle of its first term, the New
Democrat, self-consciously pro-business Clinton Administration was
essentially at war with well over half of the largest investors in the
United States. The sum total of opponents with less immediately drastic
interests at stake, of course, would run far higher.

This calculation, however, leaves out one very special case: tobacco. Here,
relations with the new Administration, initially tense, rapidly became
apocalyptic. Because the logic of this shift is central to understanding
the most critical single episode in the long impeachment drama and because
the oceans of ink spilled by the press on Kenneth Starr's investigation
have unaccountably submerged the heart of the matter, the facts about the
tobacco industry's long war with the Clinton Administration require a
careful look.

Pressures on the big tobacco companies long antedated Bill Clinton's
arrival in the White House, of course. Nevertheless, the industry's
political effort, which was massive--and quite bipartisan, though with an
elective affinity to the GOP's stout laissez-faire traditions--gave it
formidable protection. Though one of Clinton's first acts as President was
to ban smoking in the White House, the evidence is that the Administration
was not then looking for a major confrontation. Dr. David Kessler, whom the
Administration kept on as head of a Food and Drug Administration that was
already under siege from many other industries, only slowly decided to
broaden the campaign against tobacco, which his agency traditionally had
not sought to regulate.

Several developments eventually changed this situation. An inevitable
consequence of bringing together the advocates of sweeping healthcare
reform was the bringing together of the advocates of a wider campaign
against the tobacco industry. In addition, the logic of the
Administration's health plan ran sharply counter to the interests of the
tobacco companies. As a proven cause of massive medical expenditures, the
industry was naturally suspect. No less important, however, tobacco was a
vulnerable source of new tax revenues in a period when raising taxes was
politically very costly. Indeed, to fund the health plan, the White House
proposed a huge increase in excise taxes on cigarettes, from 24 cents a
pack to 99 cents.

This proposal immediately sent the industry to battle stations. What
happened next, however, moved the conflict--and in the end, it appears, US
politics--to a whole new level of vehemence. Studies that suggested smoking
might fall sharply if nicotine were reduced persuaded the FDA's Kessler
that nicotine might in fact qualify as an addictive substance in the
technical, legal sense of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. This had
sweeping implications, for regulating tobacco would then fall squarely
within the FDA's purview. As a report for CQ Researcher put it, "If the FDA
successfully claims jurisdiction over tobacco, the agency could not only
determine how much nicotine would be allowed in cigarettes but also how
they are labeled, marketed and distributed. In short, the FDA would gain
virtual control over cigarette production and could even totally ban
tobacco products.... FDA regulation 'could mean, ultimately, removal from
the market of tobacco products containing nicotine at levels that cause or
satisfy addiction,' Kessler wrote in February [1994]. 'Only those tobacco
products from which the nicotine had been removed or, possibly, tobacco
products approved by the FDA...would then remain on the market.'"

In the spring of 1994, Kessler testified to Congress that the industry had
known for decades that nicotine was addictive but concealed that from the
public. He also argued that tobacco companies had calibrated levels of
nicotine in cigarettes to keep smokers hooked.

The tobacco industry counterattacked. Taking out full-page ads in
newspapers and turning loose a legion of lobbyists, it fought back on many
fronts. But while it succeeded in scaling back the proposed cigarette tax
even before the Clinton healthcare plan's fiery crash landing, the
industry's efforts to ward off the FDA were unavailing.

At the end of June 1994, talk of the industry's sweeping campaign and
possible compromises surfaced in the national press. In July, however, the
New England Journal of Medicine published a major study by two researchers
whose previous work, according to the Washington Post, "has been heavily
relied on by the FDA." The new study, which the Post suggested "also could
prove influential" in shaping a forthcoming report by an FDA advisory
panel, presented a case for compelling cigarette makers to reduce the
nicotine content of their products by about five-sixths over a period of
years. The newspaper report noted that the study's authors readily conceded
that such proposals "might seem drastic to some." Quoting an FDA
spokesperson's praise of the report as providing "the kind of information
that the advisory committee will be working with in August," the story
reported that the FDA group planned to begin hearings into "nicotine
addiction and dosage" on the first of August.

That report, and an accompanying denunciation by the Tobacco Institute,
appeared in the Post on July 14, 1994. That very day Jesse Helms and Lauch
Faircloth, the two conservative Republican senators from North Carolina,
the state with the biggest stake of all in tobacco, met Judge David
Sentelle for lunch in Washington. Sentelle, like Faircloth (who had once
headed North Carolina Democrats for Helms before switching parties and
winning election to the Senate) a Helms prot�g�, had formerly chaired the
Republican Party of Mecklenburg County in North Carolina. He had also
served as a delegate to the 1984 Republican convention from the Tarheel
State and named one of his daughters "Reagan" in honor of the President.

Because of a quirk in the law governing special prosecutors, Sentelle had
recently regained a position of extraordinary sensitivity. In early 1992,
as special prosecutor Lawrence Walsh's investigation of Iran/contra neared
its climax, Chief Justice William Rehnquist had suddenly named the very
junior Sentelle to replace moderate Republican Judge George MacKinnon as
head of the three-judge panel that supervised special prosecutors.
Subsequently, however, the law had lapsed, so that when the Whitewater
scandal first burst upon the American political scene, Attorney General
Janet Reno had named the first special prosecutor, Republican Robert Fiske.
Thanks to the reinstated statute, Sentelle and his two other colleagues
once again had authority over investigations by special prosecutors.
Faircloth and Sentelle subsequently denied that the then widely discussed
Whitewater investigation figured as a topic at their lunch. Shortly
thereafter, however, Sentelle's panel rejected Reno's request that Fiske be
allowed to continue and replaced him with Kenneth Starr.

The appointment was a milestone, in many senses. Starr worked at Kirkland &
Ellis, a prominent Washington law firm. According to an article in Salon
Magazine last November 18, he represented the tobacco industry; he was also
peripherally involved in friend-of-the-court activities on behalf of the
lawsuit filed by Paula Jones against the President.

As Starr's investigation proceeded, the battle between the industry and the
Clinton Administration escalated. One careful, though necessarily
incomplete, attempt to estimate total contributions by the tobacco
companies in American national politics noted that in the 1991-92 election
cycle contributions by the industry totaled at least $5.7 million, of which
about 57 percent went to Republican candidates for President or Congress.
Total contributions during the 1993-94 cycle--the Clinton Administration's
first two years--ran at roughly the same level despite the absence of a
presidential campaign (which normally swells expenditure levels), while the
percentage of contributions in favor of the then completely out-of-power
GOP rose to 68. Thereafter, both total contributions and the percentage in
favor of GOP candidates exploded, as Democratic campaign rhetoric
increasingly singled out tobacco for special attention. In the 1995-96
election cycle the tobacco industry donated more than $10 million to
national political campaigns, with more than 80 percent of the funds headed
for Republicans. Incomplete figures for the 1997-98 cycle show the industry
giving more than $7 million, with about 78 percent of that going to GOP
candidates. Lobbying expenses, it should be noted, normally run many times
the level of an industry's formal political contributions.

A case this strong does not need to rely on overstatement. To my knowledge,
no one ever asked whether the judge and the senators discussed the morning
news, which, as veterans of North Carolina Republican politics (and in
Helms's and Faircloth's cases, recipients of vast contributions from
tobacco companies), they assuredly could understand quite well. One might
also like to know more about what Sentelle said to the other two members of
the panel overseeing special prosecutors, though the most reasonable
judgment is probably that conservative jurists who don't know what they
want are not well placed to resist another conservative jurist who does and
heads the panel.

It also bears repeating that tobacco has never been alone in campaigning
against the Clinton Administration. All along, the basic political fight
has not been over tobacco but over taxes, regulation and the extent of
laissez-faire. Republican leaders in both the House and the Senate, after
all, have been as much in thrall to the medical-industrial complex as they
have to tobacco, and both sectors have been singled out in the business
press as among the likely winners in the political paralysis that comes
with even failed impeachment proceedings.

The tobacco industry has a long history of targeting its political enemies.
An antitobacco Web site now carries a dedication to the late Michael Synar,
once Congressman from Oklahoma. A longtime opponent of tobacco, Synar
introduced legislation to regulate the product in Clinton's first year in
office. A year later he lost a runoff primary to an opponent backed in part
by tobacco interests. As this essay goes to press, news is breaking that
another recipient of tobacco-industry largesse, House impeachment manager
Asa Hutchinson, asked Federal Judge Susan Webber Wright if she would
testify in the impeachment trial even as she was deciding whether to hold
the President in contempt for his testimony in the Paula Jones case.

Such facts cast a long shadow over US politics. It has always been hard to
fathom how Ken Starr could insist that his representation of Brown &
Williamson, a leading tobacco firm, after he took over as special
prosecutor did not raise at least the appearance of a grave conflict of
interest. But it is too much for Starr now to suggest that he might rush in
where Congress fears to tread and indict the declared enemy of the industry
that has for so long retained his services. If government regulation is to
be anything more than rank politics, longtime servants of highly regulated
industries simply cannot be allowed to disregard appearances so blithely.
There may well be a case for indicting Clinton, but Kenneth Starr should
not be allowed to make the decision. If the nation goes down that route,
the people of the United States are entitled to be sure that it is not in
fact Tobacco Road.


------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thomas Ferguson, a contributing editor of The Nation, is professor of
political science at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. He is the
author of Golden Rule: The Investment Theory of Party Competition and the
Logic of Money-Driven Political Systems (Chicago). This essay is adapted
from his "Blowing Smoke: Who Wants Clinton Impeached And Why," for American
Democracy in the Twenty-First Century, edited by William Crotty.
------------------------------------------------------------------------


Background and Related Information


The Center for Responsive Politics


Offers smoking statistics and information on tobacco lobbies and campaign
donations.
http://www.crp.org/diykit/smoking.preventive teenage smoking.htm




Smoking Out Starr


"A Dozen Questions Congress Should Ask Kenneth Starr" gives information on
his representation of the tobacco industry at the time he was acting as
independent counsel.
http://www.salonmagazine.com/news/1998/11/18newsb2.html


------------------------------------------------------------------------


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