-Caveat Lector-

Subj:    BUSH LIED -- AND HERE'S THE PROOF
Date:   1/12/02 2:46:26 PM Central Standard Time
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] (BuzzFlash.com)


http://www.dallasnews.com/texas_southwest/1Atxenron_12tex.ART0.d1e8.html

Lay gave more to Bush
President had said Enron chief was Richards supporter

01/12/2002

By WAYNE SLATER / The Dallas Morning News

AUSTIN – In distancing himself from Enron, President Bush said that CEO
Kenneth Lay "was a supporter" of Democrat Ann Richards in his first race for
Texas governor in 1994.

But records and interviews with people involved in the Richards campaign show
that he was a far bigger Bush supporter.

Mr. Lay and his wife gave Mr. Bush three times more money than Ms. Richards
in their gubernatorial contest, according to a computer-assisted review of
campaign finance reports by The Dallas Morning News.

Because of its collapse, Enron's financial ties with candidates have drawn
more scrutiny and increasingly are being viewed as a political liability.
Some officeholders have returned Enron campaign contributions.

Mr. Bush, a Republican, collected $37,500 from the Lays in his successful bid
to unseat the Democratic incumbent, state records show. Ms. Richards received
$12,500. Enron executives and the company's political action committee also
heavily favored Mr. Bush.

White House spokesman Scott McClellan said Friday that the president
acknowledged that Mr. Lay more recently has been a Bush supporter but did not
err in his comments Thursday.

Ms. Richards' former chief of staff, John Fainter, said Friday that Mr. Lay
and the former Democratic governor "had a cordial relationship" and she named
him to a state business council. But he said the Enron chief was not a
Richards political supporter.

It is typical for some big-money donors in Texas politics to hedge their bets
by contributing money to both sides in political races.

But interviews with people involved in the 1994 race indicate that Mr. Lay's
initial $25,000 donation to help launch Mr. Bush's gubernatorial
campaign–when he had no primary opposition– was seen in the Richards camp as
early evidence he was against them.

Also, Mr. Lay identified himself in an interview broadcast last summer as a
Bush supporter.

Mr. Lay told PBS' Frontline that he faced "a little difficult situation" in
choosing sides.

"I'd worked very closely with Ann Richards also, the four years she was
governor," Mr. Lay said.

"But I was very close to George W. and had a lot of respect for him, had
watched him over the years, particularly with reference to dealing with his
father when his father was in the White House," he said, "and some of things
he did to work for his father, and so [I] did support him."

Thursday, amid growing national attention of the Enron bankruptcy, Mr. Bush
was asked by reporters about his relationship with Mr. Lay.

Mr. Bush said he "got to know Ken Lay" as a member of the Governor's Business
Council, a nonpartisan board appointed by the governor to boost economic
development in Texas.

"He was a supporter of Ann Richards in my run in 1994 and she had named him
the head of the Governor's Business Council. And I decided to leave him in
place just for the sake of continuity. And that's when I first got to know
Ken."

President Bush said Mr. Lay later became a supporter of his gubernatorial
re-election in 1998 and the presidential race in 2000.

Ties run deep


A longtime backer of the president's father when he was in the White House,
Mr. Lay was a "Bush Pioneer" in the 2000 race, an elite tier of campaign
contributors who pledged to raise at least $100,000. He also gave $100,000 to
Mr. Bush's inauguration.
The ties between Mr. Lay and the Bush family are deep.

Besides being one of the first President Bush's major financial backers, Mr.
Lay headed the host committee of the 1992 Republican National Convention in
Houston that nominated the ex-president's re-election effort.

"The president has clearly noted that Mr. Lay has been a supporter of his
campaigns," Mr. McClellan said Friday.

He maintained that Mr. Bush was accurate in describing Mr. Lay as a Richards
supporter in 1994. He noted that after giving $25,000 to Mr. Bush early in
the contest, he contributed $12,500 to Ms. Richards in donations reported in
July and October 1994.

Also in October, Mr. Lay's wife, Linda, contributed $12,500 to Mr. Bush.

"Mr. Lay was a supporter of Ann Richards during the 1994 race," he said. "And
any suggestion to the contrary is revisionist history."

Craig McDonald, director of Texans for Public Justice, a nonprofit group that
tracks campaign contributions, dismissed the White House response.

"President Bush's explanation of his relationship to Enron is at best a half
truth," he said. "He was in bed with Enron before he ever held a public
office."

Perry to keep donations


Meanwhile, Republican Gov. Rick Perry said Friday that he will not return any
of more than $139,000 in contributions he's received from Enron executives
since 1994.
"Individuals who have worked for the Enron corporation have contributed to my
campaign, I'm sure, over the last four or five years," Mr. Perry said.

"Campaign contributions don't impact my thought process. Never have, never
will," he said.

According to state records, Mr. Lay's most recent contribution to Mr. Perry
was $25,000 in June. That same month, he contributed $25,000 each to Attorney
General John Cornyn and Comptroller Carole Keeton Rylander, both Republicans.

"I took no money from Enron," Mr. Perry told reporters, apparently seeking to
distinguish between contributions from individuals and from the company PAC.

In fact, Mr. Perry has received money from the Enron PAC, according to The
News review.

The company gave $2,000 to Mr. Perry in December 1998, after his election as
lieutenant governor.

The News review of campaign contributions from Mr. Lay over the last 10 years
indicates that he has given money to Republicans and Democrats. But most has
gone to Republicans.

For example, since 1996 in statewide races, Mr. Lay has given $3,000 to House
Speaker Pete Laney, a Democrat and more than $200,000 to Republicans,
including Mr. Perry, Mr. Cornyn, Ms. Rylander, and Railroad Commissioner Tony
Garza.

A review of contributions before 1995, a period in which Democrats held most
statewide offices, indicates a more balanced distribution of donations,
including money to former Attorney General Dan Morales, former Land
Commissioner Garry Mauro, and former Gov. Mark White, all Democrats.

At the same time, Mr. Lay donated thousands of dollars to Republican
statewide candidates, including former Gov. Bill Clements, 1990 gubernational
hopeful Clayton Williams, and former state Treasurer Kay Bailey Hutchison,
now a U.S. senator from Texas.

Also Friday, Mr. Cornyn – who is seeking the Republican nomination for Senate
– withdrew his involvement in inquiries into bankrupt energy giant Enron
Corp., a day after he spurned calls from consumer and government watchdog
groups to take himself off the case.

Texas Watch and Common Cause Texas on Thursday had complained that campaign
contributions to Mr. Cornyn from Enron executives cast doubt over his ability
to remain impartial.

Mr. Cornyn's office had insisted he would stay on the case but he changed his
mind less than 24 hours later.

"It is imperative that the public maintain the utmost confidence in the
integrity of any investigation," Mr. Cornyn said in a written statement.

Researcher Laura Nevarez contributed to this report.

Online at:
http://www.dallasnews.com/texas_southwest/1Atxenron_12tex.ART0.d1e8.html
© 2001 DallasNews.com

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