HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

----- Original Message -----
From: mart-remote
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, January 27, 2002 9:10 AM
Subject: Fwd: Fw: Enron Got Its Money's Worth


  ICARUS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
From: "ICARUS"
To: "MART"
Subject: Fw: Enron Got Its Money's Worth
Date: Sun, 27 Jan 2002 01:40:37 -0600


 Enron Got Its Money's Worth
 Look No Further Than the National Energy Plan
 
by Robert Scheer
 January 22, 2002
Los Angeles Times

ne of the major falsehoods being bandied about by
apologists for the Bush administration is that while
Enron may have bankrolled much of the president's
political career it got nothing for those bucks once
George W. occupied the White House.

That is nonsense.

The administration's energy program, developed by Vice
President Dick Cheney in secret meetings--six of them
with Enron officials--could have been written by
lobbyists for the now failed company. At the behest of
Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Los Angeles), the minority staff
of the House Committee on Government Reform has
prepared a devastating analysis of 17 major concessions
made to Enron that gave Kenneth L. Lay, Bush's intimate
friend and Enron chief executive, just about everything
he wanted. The report concluded that "it is unlikely
that any other corporation in America stood to gain as
much from the White House plan as Enron."
 
Those Bush administration concessions to Enron included
finishing the job of deregulating the electricity
market begun by Bush's father. The senior Bush's
actions had paved the way for the company's meteoric
growth.
 
george W.'s energy plan also made it even easier for
Enron to sell energy derivatives in the commodity
market and pursue other financial shenanigans that had
been a major source of profit. The unregulated selling
of energy derivatives, an Enron specialty, was
celebrated in the Bush energy plan as "sophisticated
and customizable." We now know that practice was so
sophisticated that it was the major source of Enron's
paper profits.
 
Oddly, given that Republicans are presumed to favor
leaving power with the states, the Bush energy plan
emphasized increased federal power over utility
pipelines that forced local utilities to carry Enron's
product. This was an expansion of the "open access"
powers granted in the 1992 Energy Policy Act, passed in
the first Bush administration. That law undermined the
power of local authorities and regional utility
companies for the benefit of Enron. In 1999, Enron had
defined "open access" as the company's "single-most
important initiative."
 
Two years later, George W. delivered. Fortunately this
subversion of the political process had a short life
because Enron went belly up before Bush could save the
company from itself.
 
But the question remains why Bush, as governor and
president, wanted to foist the example of such a
despicable corporate player upon the American people as
a model for business behavior.
 
Surely the Enron alums who occupy key positions in the
administration knew that the president's model
corporation had avoided paying federal income taxes for
four out of the past five years.
 
Enron even claimed $382 million in government refunds.
How dare this president collect taxes from ordinary
Americans after touting a company that created 881
offshore dodges to avoid taxes. Few taxpayers can open
subsidiaries in the Cayman Islands pretending to do
business, but Enron had more than 700 there.

The IRS and Treasury Department under the Clinton
administration had attacked the use of such tax dodges
and attempted to eliminate them. Bush, however, sought
to reward a company that, far more than any of its
competitors, took advantage of offshore loopholes.
Dynegy, Enron's lead competitor, had no offshore tax
havens, suggesting that it is possible to do business
honestly.
 
But how would Bush know of his pet company's chicanery,
his apologists howl--particularly the talk radio right-
wingers who spent eight years skewering Bill Clinton
over the most minor transgressions? Bush should have
known because his top economic advisor, Lawrence B.
Lindsey, who was paid $50,000 in 2000 for consulting
work for Enron, went straight from that gig to being
head of the White House's National Economic Council. In
the latter capacity, Lindsey wrote a rosy report on
Enron's emerging problems and presented it to the
president shortly before the company's collapse.
 
Were he and the other Enron alum who hold high
positions in the administration lying to the president,
or did Bush not want to hear any bad news about his
once-favorite company? Either way it smells.
 
Robert Scheer writes a syndicated column.
---------------------------
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST
==^================================================================
This email was sent to: archive@jab.org

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://TOPICA.COM/u/?a84x2u.a9WB2D
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================

Reply via email to