Enron End Run
Claim: Democrats and the Clinton administration received more
campaign contributions from Enron and were more accommodating of
Enron's lobbying efforts than Republicans and the Bush
administration.
Status: False.
Example: [Collected on the Internet, 2002]
SCANDAL IN THE WHITE HOUSE
Texas, an energy company, big money, Bush in the White House.
This has all the makings of a Republican scandal.
Certainly there is a political dimension here. Enron's chairman
did meet with the president and the vice president in the Oval
Office.
Enron gave $420,000 to the president's party over three years.
It donated $100,000 to the president's inauguration festivities.
The Enron chairman stayed at the White House 11 times. The
corporation had access to the administration at its highest
levels and even enlisted the Commerce and State Departments to
grease deals for it.
The taxpayer-supported Export-import Bank subsidized Enron for
more than $600 million in just one transaction.
BUT ... the president under whom all this happened wasn't George
W. Bush.
It was William Jefferson Clinton.
Origins: The debacle that was Enron was years in the making and
will probably never be fully unravelled no matter how much time
is devoted to investigating it. Enron traded so much money and
influence through its lobbying efforts for so many years — among
both Republicans and Democrats, in federal as well as in state
governments — that neither party can rightly take the moral high
ground in decrying the scandal. As The San Francisco Chronicle
reported in 2002:
Enron's tentacles ran so deep into Washington's political
establishment that 71 sitting senators and nearly half of the
current House of Representatives received Enron money during the
last decade, including some who are now investigating the
company's bankruptcy.
And The Hartford Courant noted:
The company also was generous with state and local candidates
from both major political parties. Its tentacles were wrapped
around high-profile figures in several administrations.
The attempt made in the piece of netlore quoted above to deflect
blame from the Bush administration and dump it onto the Clinton
White House includes some major inaccuracies, such as the claim
that "the Enron chairman stayed at the White House 11 times"
during President Bill Clinton's tenure in office. But as Brendan
Nyhan revealed in a 2002 article, Enron CEO Kenneth Lay was
never an overnight visitor at the White House during the Clinton
adminstration — although, according to Nyhan, "Lay did, however,
stay at the White House when George H.W. Bush was president."
As well, given the General Accounting Office's investigation
into connections between Enron and Vice President Dick Cheney's
planning of Bush administration energy policy, "the
corporation's access to the administration at its highest
levels" apparently continued well after Bill Clinton left the
White House. According to USA Today:
Enron spent nearly three times as much money lobbying the Bush
administration in the first half of 2001 as it initially
reported.
The collapsed energy-trading company spent at least $2.46
million on efforts to influence energy and budget decisions and
support its international ventures, according to an amended
lobbying report Enron filed with the House and Senate on March
1.
As for the supposedly shocking monetary figures bandied about
("Enron gave $420,000 to the [Democratic] president's party over
three years. It donated $100,000 to the president's inauguration
festivities."), those numbers don't come close to matching what
was reported about Enron's contributions to George W. Bush and
the Republican party in The Hartford Courant:
Since 1989, the Houston-based energy broker and its employees
have made more than $5.7 million in contributions to federal
candidates and political parties, nearly three-quarters of it to
Republicans. Enron was George W. Bush's biggest contributor in
the 2000 presidential campaign.
Nor do they match what The New York Times uncovered:
Enron, Arthur Andersen and Vinson & Elkins, a Houston law firm,
are among the most generous contributors to Mr. Bush's 2000
presidential campaign. Enron has given more than $700,000 to Mr.
Bush since 1993; no company has given him more. In addition,
Enron's chairman, Kenneth L. Lay, was one of the "pioneers,"
raising more than $100,000 for Mr. Bush's e-mail campaign, and
he and his wife gave a total of $10,000 to Mr. Bush's Florida
recount fund. Enron and Mr. Lay also contributed a total of
$200,000 to Mr. Bush's inaugural festivities.
Last updated: 30 March 2006
The URL for this page is
http://www.snopes.com/politics/clintons/enron.asp
Enron: What Should Cheney Do?
The GAO sues for access to White House documents. We talk to
experts about the scandal — and Cheney's choices
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,197899,00.html
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ENRON-BUSH-HARVARD-WTC-OIL-CONNECTION - May 25
The Harvard-Bush Connection
http://www.apfn.org/enron/harvard2.htm
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/bush-cheney.htm
GOOGLE UPDATES:
Enron sends California garbage ...