http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/aponline/20010720/aponline170630_000.htm



Rove's Pharmaceutical Links Probed

The Associated Press
Friday, July 20, 2001; 5:06 p.m. EDT

WASHINGTON –– Presidential adviser Karl Rove met with two lobbyists from the
pharmaceutical industry last month while he owned nearly a quarter of a
million dollars worth of stock in a pair of drug companies, the White House
acknowledged Friday.

Rove had what the White House described as an introductory meeting June 5
with former Rep. Vin Weber, R-Minn., and Alan F. Holmer, the president of the
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America. Webster is a lobbyist
whose clients include the pharmaceutical trade group.

"They talked very generally about prescription drug coverage and Medicare
reform and how to expand access to prescription drugs for seniors, issues
we've been talking about for a long time," said Jackie Cottrell, a
spokeswoman for the group.

The National Journal first reported the meeting.

Rove sold all 23 of his individual stocks for $1.5 million within two days of
the drug industry meeting.

"Karl was fully aware of ethical regulations and has abided by them at all
times," said White House spokeswoman Anne Womack. "On broad policy issues it
is completely appropriate for Karl as senior adviser to the president to meet
with constituent groups."

"If someone is in a key policy position at the White House, he should not be
meeting with executives from corporations where he owns a substantial amount
of stock," said Rep. Henry Waxman, who has urged the Justice Department to
investigate Rove for possibly violating the conflict of interest law.

"We wrote to the White House a month ago asking for information about Mr.
Rove because he met with executives of Intel," said Waxman, the ranking
Democrat on the House Government Reform Committee. "Now it appears that was
not an isolated incident, but part of what appears to be a pattern."

At the March 13 Intel meeting, the chip maker's executives made a pitch to
Rove for a high-tech merger which the Bush administration approved less than
two months later. The White House also acknowledged that Rove participated in
meetings on the Bush administration's energy policy while he owned stocks in
energy companies, including Texas-based Enron Corp.

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