NY Times December 12, 2013
New Obama Adviser Brings Corporate Ties
By ERIC LIPTON

WASHINGTON — The defense contractor Northrop Grumman gave money to the 
left-leaning Center for American Progress, founded by John D. Podesta, 
as the nonprofit group at times bemoaned what it called the harmful 
impact of major reductions in Pentagon spending.

Pacific Gas and Electric sent in a donation as Mr. Podesta championed 
government incentives to promote solar energy and other renewable 
sources that the California company buys more of than nearly any other 
utility.

The pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly was also a donor because of what it 
said was the Center for American Progress’s advocacy for patients’ 
rights — and just as the debate heated up in Washington over potential 
cuts to the Medicare program that covers Lilly’s most profitable drugs.

Mr. Podesta, named a senior adviser to President Obama, is not currently 
a lobbyist and therefore does not have to worry about the Obama 
administration’s self-imposed ban on hiring lobbyists to administration 
jobs. But he will nonetheless arrive at the White House after having run 
an organization that has taken millions of dollars in corporate 
donations in recent years and has its own team of lobbyists who have 
pushed an agenda that sometimes echoes the interests of these corporate 
supporters.

These financial ties offer a hint of the blurry lines in Washington 
between the research organizations like Mr. Podesta’s — which is a 
virtual external policy arm of the Obama administration — and lobbying 
shops. The ties could also cause some complications for Mr. Podesta as 
he heads into the West Wing.

Executives at the Center for American Progress said Thursday that the 
roughly $3 million a year they receive in direct donations from 
corporations is a small part of its $42 million annual budget, and has 
no impact on the policy positions it advocates. The donations do not 
include the many millions of dollars more given by foundations that are 
often run by major corporations.

Neera Tanden, the president of the Center for American Progress, said in 
an interview that the group frequently takes positions that conflict 
with the corporate agendas of its donors, including companies like Eli 
Lilly. Ms. Tanden cited a study the center issued late last year calling 
for maintaining Medicare services for the elderly by cutting payments to 
drug companies. She also said that senior scholars at the center had 
supported major cuts in military spending, even while others wrote about 
their harmful impact.

“This is an institution that tries to find the right answers,” said Ms. 
Tanden, who reports to Mr. Podesta, the board chairman. “It does not 
answer to the agenda of any individual supporters or corporations.”

But Mr. Podesta, who was paid $220,000 last year by the center and who 
last served as a registered lobbyist in 2006, also arrives at the White 
House after serving on the corporate boards of at least two companies 
with ties to the clean-energy industry, Equilibrium Capital of Portland, 
Ore., and Joule of Bedford, Mass. The future of both companies depends 
in part on environmental policies set by the government and heavily 
promoted by the White House.

Mr. Podesta has also served on an advisory board to Gryphon 
Technologies, a Washington-based contractor that has done work for the 
Defense Department and Homeland Security, an assignment that earned him 
$10,000 this year. In addition, he earned $90,000 as a consultant to the 
HJW Foundation of West Chester, Pa, according to an aide working with 
him on the disclosure report he is preparing. HJW is a nonprofit group 
run by Hansjörg Wyss, a billionaire businessman and major contributor to 
the Center for American Progress.

Mr. Podesta has one of the most distinguished résumés among liberal 
policy experts in Washington, having served as a chief of staff in the 
Clinton White House and as a senior Capitol Hill aide to a former Senate 
majority leader, Tom Daschle, among others.

“His appointment and background is completely consistent with the 
administration’s ethics pledge, which was never intended to ban anyone 
who works in the public policy space from joining government service,” 
said Eric Schultz, a White House spokesman. “To the contrary, he is 
exactly the kind of person you hope to attract to public service.”

Mr. Podesta will join a list of others at the White House who are 
veterans of Center for American Progress, including Denis McDonough, the 
chief of staff, who was a senior fellow there, and Jennifer Palmieri, 
the communications director, who led the center’s lobbying wing.

But the sensitivity to Mr. Podesta’s private sector work and the stands 
he has taken on issues is already apparent. Even before the White House 
officially confirmed his appointment, officials said that Mr. Podesta 
would not participate in the debate over the proposed Keystone XL oil 
pipeline connecting Canada to the Gulf Coast. Mr. Podesta, with the 
support of clean energy groups, has been a steadfast opponent of the plan.

Joule, a company that has tried but failed to win federal grants to help 
turn its experimental carbon dioxide-to-ethanol concept into a 
commercial scale project, is betting its future on its ability to 
deliver alternatives to fossil fuel.

Mr. Podesta, who has been at the Center for American Progress since he 
created it in 2003, has visited the White House at least 130 times since 
2009, serving as an informal adviser to the administration.

In his new role, expected to last perhaps a year, Mr. Podesta will work 
on issues including health care and climate change, which have been 
major issues at the Center for American Progress as well.

Executives who have worked with Mr. Podesta describe him as a man whose 
passion about public policy has driven his career.

“I don’t think John has ever joined a board or organization for economic 
reasons — certainly not ours,” said Bill Campbell, the chief financial 
officer of Equilibrium Capital, which manages about $560 million in 
assets that it invests in energy-efficient, sustainable agriculture, 
among other projects. “He is driven by a sense of purpose and a sense of 
responsibility.”

The company paid Mr. Podesta by giving him a small ownership share in 
the firm as well as some cash compensation, Mr. Campbell said. Mr. 
Podesta, in advance of his White House appointment, has since sold that 
stake for an amount Mr. Campbell would not disclose.

Mr. Podesta’s move to the White House comes as the Center for American 
Progress is preparing for the first time to release a list of its 
donors. It will start first with corporations that are part of what it 
calls the American Progress Business Alliance, which it promotes as a 
way for corporations to gain access to its experts and receive 
invitations to “V.I.P. events with leaders from government” and “Hill 
and national leaders,” according to a brochure the group published.

The American Progress Business Alliance this year includes Eli Lilly, 
Northrop Grumman, Pacific Gas and Electric, Verizon, Bank of America and 
dozens of other prominent corporations.

Ms. Tanden said the decision to release the list — which comes after a 
report this year in The Nation magazine naming some of the companies — 
is not related to Mr. Podesta’s move to the White House. She said it was 
instead a choice made by the organization’s board this past summer to 
promote more transparency related to its funding.

Mr. Podesta, who stepped down from his post as president of the 
organization in 2011, has not been regularly involved in fund-raising 
efforts since then, Ms. Tanden said.

Kitty Bennett contributed research.


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