Guest guest Posted July 9, 2004 Report Share Posted July 9, 2004 > Thu, 08 Jul 2004 09:01:42 -0700 > Progress Report: > " Center for American Progress " > <progress > Center for American Progress - Progress Report by David Sirota, Christy Harvey, Judd Legum and Jonathan Baskin July 8, 2004 WAR ON TERRORCapture, Good; Politicization, BadCORPORATEKenny Boy SurrendersCIVIL LIBERTIESVeto Threat 'Hysteria' UNDER THE RADAR CORPORATE Kenny Boy Surrenders Former Enron-CEO Ken Lay surrendered to the FBI this morning after being indicted on criminal charges expected to include fraud, conspiracy and insider trading. The indictment focuses on " a series of optimistic statements Lay made to analysts and employees in the months before Enron's fall, which cost thousands of workers their jobs and retirement savings. " If convicted, Lay " could face many years in prison and multimillion-dollar penalties. " Eleven former Enron officials have already pled guilty or been found guilty at trial. But Lay's indictment has much broader significance. Lay is a close personal friend of the President, who calls him " Kenny Boy, " and was the first person the administration turned to on important issues of energy policy. Even as Lay finds himself in federal custody, his influence continues to guide the administration's energy policy. THE KEN LAY PLAN NOW OFFICIAL ADMINISTRATION POLICY: According to Vice President Dick Cheney, Lay met privately with him in April 2001 " to talk about energy. " Lay was " the only chief executive of a major player in the electric power industry to confer privately with Cheney as he formulated his national energy strategy. " Lay said that he was " flattered that [Cheney] decided to meet with me, and at least hear me out as to some of the things I thought were pretty important that should be considered for his report. " At the meeting, Lay handed Cheney a memo outlining " eight points spelling out Enron's case for why federal authorities should refrain from imposing price caps or other measures sought by California officials to stabilize runaway electricity prices. " At the time, Enron was manipulating the market to bilk hundreds of millions of dollars from West Coast ratepayers, with company traders caught on tape " gloating over the crisis they helped create. " Nonetheless, " seven out of eight recommendations were adopted in the administration's final energy plan. " And the president is still pushing the Ken Layplan as the solution to the nation's energy woes. BUSH APPOINTED LAY'S RECOMMENDATIONS TO FERC: According to Lay, shortly after Bush became president, he " had two or three meetings with various people in the White House on the whole issue of energy policy. " On one of those visits Lay says he " presented a list...which, in fact, had some recommendations as to people that we thought would be good commissioners [on the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)]. " The commission is an extraordinarily powerful agency that controls regulation of the nation's energy industry. Subsequently, Lay was called upon to conduct phone interviews with potential nominees to FERC. The White House has confirmed that " two people on Ken Lay's list #8211; Pat Wood and Nora Brown #8211; were in fact picked by President Bush for seats on the [five member] FERC. " FERC COMMISSIONER CLASHES WITH LAY, IS REPLACED BY BUSH: In the first months of Bush's presidency, Lay called then-Chairman of FERC Curt Hebert and asked him to force companies to grant Enron access to the electrical grid. According to Hebert, he was not " willing to do what [Lay] wanted me to do. " PBS was told Lay threatened to withdraw political support from Hebert if he didn't comply with Lay's request. By May, Vice President Cheney was already referring to Pat Wood #8211; one of the commissioners recommended by Lay who supported opening up the electrical grid #8211; as the new Chairman of FERC. In August, President Bush replaced Hebert with Wood. Wood subsequently approved Lay's request that Hebert had rejected as bad policy. LAY AND ENRON WERE BUSH'S #1 CONTRIBUTORS: All the access Lay had to the White House didn't come cheap. Enron was the #1 all-time contributor to George W. Bush #8211; contributing $550,025 to his campaigns by mid-1999. Lay himself donated $250,000 in soft money to Bush's political campaigns. He also was a Bush Pioneer in 2000, meaning he personally raised over $100,000 for the president. Lay and other Enron executives pitched in another $300,000 to pay for Bush's inauguration festivities. CIVIL LIBERTIES Veto Threat 'Hysteria' Facing the prospect of an embarrassing defeat in the House of Representatives, the White House issued a rare veto threat last night of a major spending bill should amendments pass that restrict the Patriot Act. Ignoring concerns from scores of states, cities and towns across the country, the White House is targeting an amendment sponsored by Reps. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Butch Otter (R-ID) that, if passed, would limit the Justice Department's ability to " require book dealers, libraries or others to surrender records " about ordinary Americans. The president " has not yet vetoed a bill sent to him by Congress " #8211; and the veto threat is seen as proof that the White House is worried the legislation has enough votes in both parties to pass. If the amendment passes, it will move to the Senate, where Sens. Larry Craig (R-ID) and Richard Durbin (D-IL) have sponsored similar legislation in the past. If the measure reaches the president's desk, he would have to kill it by rejecting a bill that funds the entire Departments of Commerce, Justice and State. TELL YOUR MEMBER OF CONGRESS TO RESIST WHITE HOUSE THREATS: The vote on the amendment in the House is scheduled for today. Contact your members of Congress and tell them to resist the White House's veto threats and intimidation tactics on the Patriot Act. Also, tell them to support the broader Civil Liberties Restoration Act (Senate bill S. 2528 or House bill H.R. 4591) #8211; comprehensive legislation to reform the Patriot Act by limiting the government's ability to conduct secret arrests, requiring individuals be advised of the charges brought against them, and upholding federal privacy laws. ASHCROFT'S 'HYSTERICAL' CLAIMS MISLED PUBLIC ON LIBRARY SEARCHES: When Congress first considered bipartisan legislation restricting these sections of the Patriot Act, Ashcroft " mocked " critics, accusing them of " baseless hysteria. " According to the 9/21/03 Hartford Courant, in the first eight minutes of one speech during the debate about the bill, the attorney general called his critics " hysterical " six separate times. He then deployed his top spokesman, Mark Corallo, to deny that the library provisions had ever been used, even after the 11/1/03 newsletter of the American Library Association revealed that FBI agents in the summer of 2003 formally contacted at least 14 libraries " with requests for patron-record information. " In fact, the Justice Department ultimately acknowedged that the provision has been used. Sign the petition calling for Ashcroft's immediate removal from office. DOING THEIR OWN SURVEY: Because of the Justice Department's deception, AP reports " the American Library Association plans to launch a survey of thousands of libraries to determine how many times federal agents " have used Patriot Act provisions to secretly obtain records of bookstore patrons. An earlier survey conducted by the University of Illinois suggests that by December 2001 the FBI had already approached 85 libraries concerning records searches. MILITARY #8211; CODY IS WORRIED: Gen. Richard Cody, the Army Vice Chief of Staff, made a startling admission yesterday. At a hearing of the House Armed Services Committee, he charged that " recent troop deployments have taken a toll on US readiness to deploy elsewhere, and even to replace troops currently deployed in combating US-led military efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan. " Said the general: " Are we stretched thin with our active Reserve component forces right now? Absolutely. We just did the largest move of the Army since World War II. " He then added military officials " are concerned about it. " As NBC Nightly News reports, " It's one thing to hear the media and analysts say the US forces are stretched too thin across the globe. It's quite another to hear a four-star general admit it. That's just what happened today in Washington, and it raises a lot of questions about what the US may be able to do. " IRAQ #8211; CACI'S GET-OUT-OF-JAIL-FREE CARD: Great news for misbehaving corporations! The Bush White House will not hold you accountable. The General Services Administration [GSA] told CACI International Inc. that it will not be banned from doing business with the federal government. The company was deeply involved in the scandal at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq and one employee was specifically named in Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba's report as being " directly or indirectly responsible " for encouraging the horrific abuse and torture and " clearly knew his instructions equated to physical abuse. " The company is under five separate investigations for its role in the abuse. CIVIL LIBERTIES - PENTAGON NOT FOLLOWING SUPREME COURT ORDER ON DETAINEES: The New York Times reports that the Pentagon yesterday announced a series of steps " that would let detainees at Guant#225;namo Bay, Cuba, challenge their status as enemy combatants from the war in Afghanistan and the campaign against terrorism. " The new procedure was " hastily devised to head off a possible flood of litigation after a Supreme Court ruling last week requiring that the prisoners be allowed to challenge their legal status before a neutral party, like a federal court. " However, the procedures do not satisfy the Court's ruling that detainees are entitled to access to federal courts to plead their case. The new rules also prohibit a detainee from having legal representation at the military proceedings, only allowing them to have " a non-lawyer military officer " assist them. HOMELAND SECURITY #8211; HUMAN RESOURCES CONTRACT GOES TO...: The Department of Homeland Security needed some help with human resources, so where did it go for help? You guessed it: a global defense contractor. The Washington Post reports the Department has agreed to pay Northrop Grumman Corp., a defense contractor which develops weapons technology, " as much as $175 million over three years to help develop, manage and run the new agency's personnel system. " Northrop Grumman's personnel reorganization is likely to " restrict union bargaining rights in key areas, " and union officials are calling the contract " a misuse of $175 million, saying the work could be done more cheaply in-house. 'It's amazing,' said Mark Roth, general counsel for the American Federation of Government Employees. 'They combined 22 agencies, each with their own personnel office, and they are going to a defense contractor . . .. to create and evaluate their own program. Why don't they just take the money and burn it?' " HEALTH CARE #8211; PFIZER STEPS UP: The Hill reports the drug giant Pfizer " is launching what it calls the 'pharmaceutical industry's most comprehensive initiative' aimed at reducing drug costs for Americans, in particular those without health insurance. " The move may put pressure on other drug companies to follow suit, but is also seen as a move to derail bipartisan efforts to permit seniors to purchase lower-priced FDA-approved medicines from Canada. Interestingly, Pfizer's move calls into question industry assertions that lower prices would mean devastation for drug companies. As the Medicare Rights Center's Robert Hayes says, Pfizer's discounts " show that the drug industry will continue to thrive even with dramatic price cuts. " In fact, a recent Boston University study shows that drug companies may break even or actually make more profits with lower prices because more consumers would be able to buy medicines. #160;Don't Miss DAILY TALKING POINTS: Fight Against Terrorism Pegged to President's Re-election Calendar IRAQ: The Columbia Journalism Review examines how Ahmad Chalabi played the press. SMALL BUSINESS: House of Representatives thwarts Bush attempt to slash small-business loan subsidies. CORPORATE CORRUPTION: 2002 PBS expose on Ken Lay's ties to the White House. Contact The Progress Report: pr. #160;Daily Grill " I have no ambition whatsoever to use [the war on terror] as a political issue. " #8211; President Bush, 1/24/02 VERSUS " A White House aide told [Pakistani Lieutenant General Ehsan ul-Haq] last spring that 'it would be best if the arrest of killing of [any] HVT [High Value Target] were announced on twenty-six, twenty-seven, or twenty-eight July' #8211; the first three days of the Democratic National Convention in Boston. " #8211; The New Republic, 7/7/04 #160;Daily Outrage The General Services Administration says CACI is still allowed to receive new government contracts, even though the company is currently under multiple investigations for its involvement in the Abu Ghraib torture scandal. #160;Archives Progress Report Columns Cartoons Sign up for e-mail delivery of The Progress Report Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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