Bit biased (anti-Republican), but still of interest.

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From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, January 25, 2002 7:14 PM
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Subject: The scandal that has left the credibility of American politics
in shreds - The Independent


http://www.independent.co.uk/story.jsp?story=116215

The lndependent                               Friday, January 25, 2002 

The scandal that has left the credibility of American politics in shreds 

     by Andrew Gumbel
                 
When you think of Texas and melodrama, you tend to think of Dallas. But the
Texan city that's currently providing all the prime-time intrigue,
back-stabbing and sudden reversals of fortune - on a colossal, improbably
scale - is Houston. And, in contrast to the adventures of JR, Sue Ellen and
friends, this is for real. Houston today is a city living on its nerves. The
lawyers, accountants and political lobbyists who used to enjoy long lunches
and fat cigars together are at each other's throats. Thousands of well-to-do
families with appearances to keep up and mortgages to pay off have been
thrown into destitution. The golf courses are deserted, the country clubs
somber as a funeral party. 

The very emblems of the city are at risk, from the ball park to the ballet,
because the corporation that bankrolled them all and made Houston proud has
sunk into a vortex of bad debts, lawsuits, rip-offs extraordinaire, and
scandal reaching into the furthest corners of national politics.

It has been just over a month since the energy trading company Enron - once
America's seventh largest corporation and the emblem of the new economy,
George Bush style - filed for bankruptcy following revelations of major
accounting irregularities and the overnight collapse of investor confidence.
But the fall-out is just beginning. 

In the past 48 hours, the man who symbolized Enron's meteoric rise by
hobnobbing with presidents and steamrollering every conceivable government
regulation out of his way, company chairman Kenneth Lay has been forced to
resign. The FBI has been all over Enron's corporate headquarters because of
allegations of wholesale shredding of incriminating documents, even after
the company was ordered to stop doing it.

Suddenly, the Enron name has been transformed from a badge of pride into a
cancer eating away at everything it touches. Flagrant conflicts of interest
and the whiff of legalized bribery abound at every turn. Most recently, the
man who succeeded Mr Bush as Texas governor, Rick Perry, has been flailing
around for days over the question of how he came to name the outgoing head
of Enron's Mexico operations to the main state energy regulation body in
apparent violation of even Texas's notoriously lax guidelines on public
appointments. (The commissioner has now stepped down.)

The chief justice of Texas's state Supreme Court, meanwhile, has gone
through verbal hoops to explain how he and seven of his fellow judges
accepted almost $100,000 in electoral campaign money from Enron over the
past eight years, even as they presided over cases in which Enron had a
direct interest in the outcome. Intriguingly, Chief Justice Tom Phillips
argues that the real impropriety would be to return the money. "To return
contributions now from one group years after they were made," he said in a
formal statement that must rank as one of the great classics of weasely
self-justification, "could signal that the justices had prejudged any
dispute against Enron that might come before us."

Enron's spectacular collapse has now begun to shake the very foundations of
American politics. We are not, after all, just talking about some relatively
obscure financial transaction that may or may not have involved the man
currently occupying the Oval Office. We are talking about the one-time
darling of the stock market, the symbol of everything bright and hopeful in
corporate America, being revealed as the perpetrator of a grand accounting
hoax, in which a handful of senior executives made themselves inordinately
rich while sticking it to their rank-and-file employees and, in effect,
paying the politicians and regulators to look the other way.

We are talking about a company that managed to insinuate itself into every
level of public life, from the sponsorship of local political races in Texas
to the hiring of corporate consultants who went on to take prominent roles
in the Bush White House. We are talking - perhaps most significantly - about
a generalized system of corporate influence-peddling and back-scratching
spreading far beyond Enron, a system that has reached epidemic proportions
in American public life and which, with Enron's fall, is now being widely
exposed as a public outrage and a gigantic scam. Anybody who doubts this -
anybody who thinks that the scandal is just an ordinary political one that
will leave as little mark on George Bush's presidency as the dodgy
Whitewater land deal ultimately did on Bill Clinton's - need look no further
than the extraordinary list of people who have already been tainted,
embarrassed or otherwise caught with their pants down, even at this
relatively early stage.

The rot is spread deep and wide: to the federal judge who, until a sudden
change of heart this week, saw no reason to recuse herself from 46
Enron-related cases even though she has disclosed "long-standing
friendships" with two of the lawyers representing Enron, including one who
was best man at her wedding; to the Republican Senator from Texas, Phil
Gramm, who happily worked to lift federal regulations on energy trading even
as his wife Wendy served on Enron's board of directors; to the hundreds of
congressmen on both sides of the aisle who have been taking Enron money
(three quarters of the Senate and almost half of the House) and who now have
to try to launch congressional investigations into the debacle even as they
seek to avoid any taint of personal wrong-doing.

That is not to mention the White House itself, where no fewer than 35
administration officials have declared that they owned Enron stock at some
point, in some cases running into the hundreds of thousands of dollars, and
several senior figures, including the US Trade Representative, Robert
Zoellick, and the White House economic adviser, Larry Lindsey, who served as
paid Enron consultants before entering government. Mr Lindsey has been
particularly active in blending his political and his commercial interests.
For much of 2000 he remained on the Enron payroll, even as he was in charge
of the economic platform on which Mr Bush was running for president. And
late last year, before the catastrophic nature of Enron's problems became
public, he took it upon himself to conduct an investigation into the
possible wider economic fallout of a major energy company - he insists he
had no particular one in mind - going bankrupt overnight.

At least until recently, it was never much of a secret that Enron would be a
major policy player in the Bush administration. The new president was on
first-name terms with Enron's chief executive, Kenneth Lay (he called him
Kenny Boy), and was widely known to share his deregulation-happy philosophy.
Indeed, part of the reason Mr Bush had some trouble filling the post of
Energy Secretary was that Washington insiders believed Mr Lay would be the
de facto holder of that office.

The precise extent of Enron's influence over the past year is now a matter
for congressional investigation. The White House has disclosed that there
were at least six meetings between Enron and administration officials ahead
of the energy plan unveiled by Vice President Dick Cheney last May. And Mr
Cheney made efforts to help Enron collect a $64m debt on an energy project
in India on a recent state visit.

Perhaps more significantly, just about every energy-related decision to come
out of the administration has reflected Enron's priorities: the push to open
up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil exploration; the encouragement
of mining and logging on public lands; the determination to resist
conservation policies; and the unilateral decision to withdraw from the
Kyoto Protocol on curbing global warming. The energy plan echoed Enron's
line on 17 key points, including a favorable assessment of electricity
deregulation - a policy that has earned Enron billions of dollars but which
has played havoc with consumer markets, notably in California. Even the
economic stimulus package now under consideration in Congress, a package
supposed to pull the country out of recession and lift the grim post-11
September mood, offers Enron tax breaks and other concessions worth $254m -
more than any other company.

The scandal would be bad enough if it was just about Enron, but it goes
deeper than that, to a whole nexus of political and economic interests
which, in common with Mr Bush and to some degree in concert with him, used
Texas as a springboard to broaden their influence on the national and
international stage. The recent revelations about Enron - the hidden debts
and offshore subsidiaries, the years of unpaid taxes and the brutal manner
in which employees were barred from selling company stock at the crucial
moment of meltdown, leaving their retirement packages virtually worthless -
have sucked in at least two other major institutions.

The first is Arthur Andersen, the Big Five accounting firm responsible for
auditing Enron, which knew of its client's troubles at least as far back as
last February but kept defending Enron's erroneous financial statements and
even took the extraordinary decision to shred hundreds of Enron documents
when it became clear the jig was up. Yesterday, David Duncan, the former
Andersen partner who has been blamed for the shredding, refused to testify
before Congress, citing the Fifth Amendment. Jim Greenwood, chairman of the
House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on oversight and investigations, told
him: "Enron robbed the bank, Arthur Andersen provided the getaway car, and
they say you were at the wheel."

The second, less well known institution is the Houston-based law firm Vinson
& Elkins, which did $455 million in legal work for Enron last year and is a
familiar player in corporate lobbying circles in Austin, the Texas state
capital. V&E has not been accused of any ethical lapses to date, but it has
been shown up for its spectacularly bad judgment. In October it conducted an
investigation into Enron's finances following a warning letter written to Mr
Lay by a company vice president, Sharron Watkins, expressing fears that the
company was on extremely shaky ground. V&E, who were consulted by Mr Lay
against Ms Watkins' advice, approvingly described Enron's network of
affiliates and secret partnerships as "creative and aggressive". "No one has
reason to believe that it is inappropriate from a technical standpoint," the
V&E report added, neglecting to notice that the creative accounting had kept
some $600 million of debt off the company balance sheet (a "false and
misleading" practice, according to the Securities and Exchange Commission,
which is also investigating).

What could prove most damaging to Mr Bush is the fact that all these
companies were part of a close-knit corporate culture whose dominance in
Houston, Texas's business capital, went unquestioned for years. Andersen
successfully lobbied to lift the ban on audit firms acting as consultants
for their clients, and promptly went to work for Enron. V&E, meanwhile,
serviced them both and joined in their various lobbying efforts to lift all
kinds of government regulations on business. Crucially, all three companies
were massive donors to Mr Bush's various campaigns. Enron has given more
than $500,000 since Mr Bush's first run at Texas governor in 1994. V&E gave
$335,000, and Anderson another $230,000. No fewer than five individuals from
the three companies, including Mr Lay and a managing partner from Andersen
laid off last week for his role in the document-shredding debacle, were
named as "Pioneers" by the 2000 presidential campaign team because they each
raised more than $100,000 for the Bush coffers.

For a long time, it all seemed so cozy. The lawyers, accountants, corporate
lobbyists and political operatives all lived in the same swanky Houston
neighborhoods. They all played golf together, sat on the boards of the same
charities, went to the Enron-sponsored Houston opera, had their cancer
treated at the Enron Clinic and watched ball games at the city's proudly
named baseball stadium, Enron Field. They enjoyed power lunches at Tony's
(house specialty: truffle-scented baby hen) and took frequent lobbying trips
to Austin and Washington. After all, the politicians seemed so willing to do
their bidding: for a few hundred thousand dollars in campaign contributions,
tax breaks and business opportunities opened up like Ali Baba's cave of
treasures in the Arabian Nights. When Mr Bush took office a year ago, their
prospects only looked sweeter. After all, the whole direction of the
Republican Party had shifted markedly towards the energy industry (both Bush
and Cheney are former oilmen) and towards Texas (thanks partly to the
president, but also to such influential Texan figures as Senator Gramm, the
House Majority Leader, Dick Armey, and the House Chief Whip, Tom DeLay).

Clearly, the companies overreached, and the system they exploited so
effectively is now turning to bite them on the backside. The Enron meltdown
may be having a traumatic effect on those who chose to get caught up in the
headiness in the first place, but it also feels like a long-anticipated
vindication to the few watchdogs brave enough to have kept an eye on the
orgy of political spending over the years and to denounce the effective sale
of American democracy to the highest bidder.

"Their attitude was, they throw money like most others take a piss, two or
three times a day, wherever it lands they don't care, it's going to do them
some good somewhere," said a characteristically colorful Jim Hightower, a
former Texas politician turned populist author and radio commentator.
"What's going on now has ripped the mask off the whole corrupt system. These
are delicious times, to see them squirm like this."

There is almost certainly more to come, and one place to look for signs of
trouble could be Halliburton, the oil company that Vice President Cheney ran
for five years before jumping back on to the election campaign trail. Like
Enron, Halliburton's shares have been in free fall since last summer, losing
75 per cent of their value - the reason being the looming threat of an
astonishing 260,000 asbestos-related lawsuits. Like Enron, Halliburton has
been a generous political donor, funneling almost $500,000 to congressional
candidates in the past four years, much of it to support representatives who
wanted to limit the ability of workers to sue companies for asbestos
exposure. And of course it has close ties to the Bush administration - aside
from the Cheney connection, its board includes Lawrence Eagleburger, who
Secretary of State under the first President Bush.

This scandal season will almost certainly not result in an easy political
"gotcha!" - a clear instance of illegality with the power to bring down a
senior politician. The Enron debacle is likely to be too murky, too wrapped
in swirls of obfuscation, for any realistic chance of that. In any case, the
point is not what political leaders may have done illegally. The point is
how much they are being seen to get away with perfectly legally under the
present set of campaign finance rules. It is the shamelessness of the system
that is likely to anger the public most effectively. And that will be the
biggest liability of all for the man in the Oval Office.  


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