[Dialogue] Enron's Enablers Go Unpunished

Harry Wainwright h-wainwright at charter.net
Fri Oct 27 11:56:09 EST 2006


AlterNet

Enron's Enablers Go Unpunished

By Robert Scheer, AlterNet
Posted on October 25, 2006, Printed on October 27, 2006
http://www.alternet.org/story/43490/

No, I'm not thrilled over Jeffrey Skilling getting 24 years in prison for
his role in the Enron scandal. While he and fellow Enron honcho Kenneth Lay
were clearly guilty as charged, the handling of this case by the Bush
Justice Department is a functional coverup of the Bush family's role in
enabling these crimes.

The thousands of Enron employees who lost their jobs, as well as $2 billion
in pension money and $60 billion in share value, deserve better. By focusing
on narrowly drawn criminal charges and the public's wrath against Skilling
and his late partner in crime--"Kenny Boy" Lay, as President Bush referred
to his onetime chief campaign benefactor--the culpability of the president's
family in this sordid saga is being whitewashed.

How convenient to close the book without considering the ties between the
Enron perps and those in two Bush presidencies whose actions enabled these
hustlers. The Enron crooks would never have been more than petty thieves
were it not for the political support they received from their fellow Texas
oil buddies. They knew that, and they paid for it: Over the years, Lay and
Enron gave the Bush family politicians $3 million in contributions, as well
as lending the campaigning George W. a jet on at least eight occasions.

They did so because, without the deregulation of the energy industry pushed
by the first President Bush, Enron would have remained a minor company
without the capacity to swindle. At the time, Lay wrote a column supporting
the elder Bush's reelection by praising him as "the energy president"
because "just six months after George Bush became president, he directed ...
the most ambitious and sweeping energy plan ever proposed."

Specifically, Enron benefited mightily from a key ruling by Wendy Gramm,
head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission under George H.W. Bush,
permitting Enron to trade in highly profitable energy derivatives. A mere
five weeks after rendering that ruling, Gramm, the wife of then-Sen. Phil
Gramm (R-Texas), abruptly resigned to join the Enron board of directors,
where she served on the company's now-infamous see-no-evil audit committee.
Secretary of State James Baker and Commerce Secretary Robert Mosbacher also
rushed to work for Enron after their White House tenures.

Dubya first got involved with Enron's Lay when they both worked on his
daddy's campaign, and the relationship flowered during his years as the
governor of Texas. There is, in fact, a long paper trail of "Dear Ken" and
"Dear George" exchanges that have come to light, thanks to Freedom of
Information Act requests. The correspondence exposes the active support
given by Bush to Enron's expansion into markets ranging from Uzbekistan to
Pennsylvania. As Lay wrote to Bush 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 view our
proposal."

In payback for Bush's support, Lay became a Bush "pioneer" fundraiser,
dumping in more than $2 million in contributions from himself and Enron
executive funds. Lay's influence with Bush extended well into the first year
of the Bush administration, when Bush stonewalled California while it was
being extorted through a manufactured "power crisis" by Enron and other
energy companies to buy energy at grossly inflated prices.

The Enron boss also became a principal architect of the new Bush energy
policy in the months before his downfall, completely undermining the spirit
of democracy. In fact, the public has still been denied access to the six
secret conversations Lay had with Vice President Dick Cheney when the vice
president was quarterbacking the Bush administration's response to the
California energy crisis, which saw the prosperous state preposterously hit
by rolling blackouts. Lay provided Cheney with a key memo opposing price
caps that would have mightily aided California consumers.

Lay also played a major role in the dismissal of Curtis Hebert Jr. as
Federal Energy Commission chairman. Hebert was too independent for Enron's
taste, while his replacement was far more amenable to the company's agenda.

Without the specific energy policies pursued through two Bush presidencies,
Skilling and Lay would have remained two-bit Texas hustlers going nowhere
fast. But thanks to their presidential sponsors, who in turn received lavish
campaign contributions, the biggest corporate swindle in U.S. history was
allowed to unfold.

Why were the dots between the Enron swindlers and their government sponsors
never connected by a Bush Justice Department that seemed more interested in
containing the damage than exploring the true ramifications of this case?
Getting to the bottom of this story is one compelling reason to hope that
the Democrats gain control in this election of at least one branch of
Congress, thus permitting a serious investigation of the political
machinations behind the Enron swindle. 

Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Five
<http://www.alternet.org/fivelies/>  Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq.
See more of Robert Scheer at TruthDig <http://Truthdig.com> . 

C 2006 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/43490/

 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: /pipermail/dialogue_wedgeblade.net/attachments/20061027/6ed125fb/attachment-0001.html 
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: not available
Type: image/gif
Size: 1533 bytes
Desc: not available
Url : /pipermail/dialogue_wedgeblade.net/attachments/20061027/6ed125fb/attachment-0001.gif 


More information about the Dialogue mailing list