Robert Scheer: Bush Links Energized Enron
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20060530_robert_scheer_enron_bush_lay/
Posted on May 30, 2006
By Robert Scheer
The Bush family consistently acted to put Enron and its longtime
CEO, Ken Lay, into a position to rip off investors and
taxpayers. Why is the mass media ignoring that fact now that Lay
has been convicted in arguably the most egregious example of
white-collar fraud in U.S. history?
Until he hooked up with the Bushes, Lay was just another
mid-level energy trader complaining endlessly about being hemmed
in by onerous government regulations and those terrible consumer
lawyers who prevent free market hustlers from doing their thing.
But after he and his company became top supporters of the Bushes
— eventually giving $3 million in total to various Bush
electoral campaigns and the Republican Party — doors opened for
them in a big way. In particular, once Bush the father got rid
of key energy industry regulations, Lay was a made man and
Enron’s fortunes soared.
This program of corporate welfare led Lay to dub the first
President Bush “the energy president” in a column supporting his
reelection because “just six months after George Bush became
president, he directed … the development of a new energy
strategy,” which, in effect, compelled local utility companies
to carry Enron electricity on their wires. It was, Lay crowed,
“the most ambitious and sweeping energy plan ever proposed.”
Another huge gift from the first Bush regime came in the form of
a ruling by Wendy Gramm, head of the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, that permitted Enron to trade in energy derivatives,
making possible the company’s exponential growth. Five weeks
after that ruling, Gramm resigned and joined the Enron board of
directors, serving on its subsequently much criticized audit
committee. Six years later, Gramm’s husband, U.S. Sen. Phil
Gramm (R-Texas), further enabled Enron greed by pushing through
additional anti-regulation legislation.
Related Links
Check out the dozens of personal letters President Bush and Ken
Lay exchanged over the years
“Once a Friend and Ally, Now a Distant Memory"
The Washington Post was one of the few major media organizations
to remind its readers of the Bush-Lay connection.
A long list of members of George H.W. Bush’s Cabinet and inner
circle, including Secretary of State James A. Baker III and
Commerce Secretary Robert A. Mosbacher, went to work for Enron
after his 1992 defeat. An even greater number of Enron officials
returned the favor by joining the George W. Bush administration
in 2001 shortly before the Enron scandal exploded.
The close connections between President Bush and Lay began when
they both worked on the 1992 Bush père presidential reelection
campaign. In fact, a long paper trail of their friendly and
collaborative correspondence has been made public through
Freedom of Information Act requests. “Dear Ken, one of the sad
things about old friends is that they seem to be getting older —
just like you!” wrote then-Texas Gov. Bush in April 1997. “Thank
goodness you have such a young beautiful wife.” In Lay’s typed
responses — some are handwritten — he sometimes crossed out
Bush’s formal titles to scrawl a friendly “George,” emphasizing
their personal history before he urged the governor to, for
example, help Enron secure foreign energy contracts with regimes
in Romania and Uzbekistan, or called for so-called tort reform
designed to protect corporations from lawsuits.
Typical was Bush’s role in Enron lobbying of Pennsylvania’s
governor to permit Enron to enter his state’s energy market. As
Lay wrote in a letter dated Oct. 7, 1997: “I very much
appreciated your call to Gov. Tom Ridge a few days ago. I am
certain that will have a positive impact on the way he and
others in Pennsylvania view our proposal.” After the Enron
crash, Bush attempted to distance himself from the “Bush
pioneer,” who had sent more than $2 million in Enron funds
George W.’s way, as well as supplying him with the Enron company
jet on at least eight occasions. “I have not met with him
personally,” Bush said after the scandal broke.
What Bush left out was not only his hundreds of personal
encounters with Lay before he assumed the presidency but, more
important, Lay’s key role in drafting the Bush administration’s
energy policy. Lay met with energy task force chairman Dick
Cheney at least six times. It was Lay who submitted a key memo
opposing price caps in response to the energy crisis in
California that Enron had helped engineer. Lay was also
instrumental in the abrupt dismissal of Curtis Hebert Jr. as
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission chairman. The neutered FERC
later conveniently refused California’s loud pleas for help.
So far, California has recouped some of the billions in taxpayer
and pension funds it lost, and several of Enron’s top dogs are
looking at hard time. Perhaps, after this November, if the
opposition party can retake at least one branch of government,
the connections between these corporate criminals and their
buddy in the White House can be more fully investigated as well.

From The Smoking Gun
Then-Texas Gov. George W. Bush wrote this letter to then-Enron
Chairman Ken Lay in 1997. Personal letters like this one,
obtained by The Smoking Gun, lay waste to Bush’s claim to be
only a distant acquaintance of the disgraced energy trader.
================
The Bush-Lay Letters
Correspondence suggests chummy President-Enron boss relationship
JULY 8--With the FBI slapping handcuffs on Kenneth Lay this
morning, let's take a stroll down memory lane, when the
disgraced former Enron boss wasn't under indictment and had a
cozy pen pal relationship with George W. Bush. Below you'll find
an assortment of correspondence exchanged during the years Bush
was governor of Texas and Lay ran the Houston-based energy
giant. The letters, released by the Texas state archives in
response to Freedom of Information requests, touch on personal
matters like Bush's knee surgery, Christmas gifts, birthday
greetings, and even a Lay heads-up regarding a Thomas Friedman
story about globalization. Enron, in case anyone forgot, was
Bush's biggest Lone Star political contributor. (8 pages)
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/0708042lay1.html
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