Reading the MSM's coverage of Ken Lay's testimony -- side by
side with its
coverage of George Bush's latest bleating about
energy -- I've been struck by how little discussion there is
of Lay's and
Enron's deep connections to Bush, Cheney, and the White House's energy
company-dictated energy policy.
It would be like flash-forwarding four years to some future trial of
Jack Abramoff
and hearing nothing about Tom DeLay.
It's another symptom of the media's long-term memory disorder.
Suffering from
Attention Deficit Disorder, they can only focus on the thing in front
of them --
and even then not for very long before moving on to the next shiny
bauble (Tony
Snow called Bush "impotent"! Natalie Holloway's still missing -- and
still getting
airtime on Larry King).
So instead of reminding us of all the reasons why Enron was even more
of a
political scandal than a business scandal, the media narrative has
turned the case
into a simple he said/he said story pitting "folksy" Ken Lay against
repentant
Raptor boy, Andy Fastow.
We
hear about Lay's "folksy preacher style," "country charm,"
and efforts to
portray himself as "a pious family man with humble origins" and Fastow
as "a liar
and a crook". But not about the millions Lay and Enron donated to Bush
and the GOP
or the secret meetings Lay had with Cheney regarding energy policy
(more on these
in a bit).
But even when focusing on the present, the media seem to be having
memory
lapses.
Thus, the
New York Times
tells us that Lay testified that he is "very, very anxious
and trying to do all
that I can to get the truth out" but doesn't point out that Lay has
helped keep
that truth from coming out for over four years by invoking his Fifth
Amendment
rights back in 2002
in order to avoid questions from congressional and Securities
and Exchange
Commission questions.
And, of course, Lay is having his own memory problems. He told jurors
that if he
had only retired
when he originally planned, "I wouldn't be sitting here" --
as if that
$20 million signing bonus he got for staying on had nothing
to do with his
decision.
A witness stand highpoint was hearing Lay echo the prior testimony of
his
partner-in-crime-
Jeffrey
Skilling -- as both men painted themselves as "
optimistic." As if being a glass-half-full kind of guy
excused the despicable
deception Lay engaged in,
urging
his
employees to invest more and more of their hard earned money
in Enron stock
even though he knew the company was in deep trouble -- and that he and
Skilling had
already cashed in stock worth $162 million ($100 mil
for Lay, $62 mil
for
Skilling). I wonder
if the
20,000
Enron
employees who saw their retirement nest eggs cracked and turned sunny
side down
appreciated Lay's optimism.
But, as I said, the Enron scandal was about so much more than mere
corporate greed
-- and that's the context we're not getting. What made Enron so
significant was
what it revealed about the corruption of our political system -- about
the unseemly
link between big money donations and the influence those donations buy.
And Bush
and Cheney are standing smack dab in the middle of this neglected
aspect of the
story.
So, as a reminder, here's what we must not forget:
Lay didn't become "Kenny Boy" and an intimate FOG (Friend of George)
because of his
folksy charm. Enron and its executives doled out
$2.4
million to
federal candidates and parties in the 2000 election -- including
$113,000
to the
Bush/Cheney campaign. Lay and his wife
also
gave $100,000 to
Bush's 2000 inaugural fund (Skilling chipped in $100,000 of his own),
and another
$5,000 each to the Bush-Cheney 2000 Recount Fund to help assure there'd
be an
inauguration. What's more, Lay even gave
W's
folks a
ride to their son's 2000 inauguration on an Enron plane.
It was money well spent, buying Lay and his company what Rep. Henry
Waxman
has
called "extensive access" to the epicenter of American
political power. Access
and influence.
For instance, in the early days of the Bush administration, while Enron
was still
flying very high, Lay and his company were given unprecedented input on
the makeup
of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), the agency charged
with
regulating Enron's core business. Lay was allowed to personally put the
screws to
FERC chair Curtis Hebert in an effort to change his views on
electricity
deregulation. Hebert resisted, and
was soon replaced by Pat Wood, Lay's handpicked choice.
Representatives of Enron also had
at
least six
meetings with Cheney and his staff as part of the VP's
secretive Energy Task
Force., the last of which occurred just six days before the company
revealed it had
vastly overstated its earnings, signaling the beginning of the end for
the energy
giant. These meetings included at least one between Cheney and Lay.
It was at this meeting that Lay handed
Cheney a
memo that gave the administration its marching orders on how
to handle the
2000-2001 California energy crisis -- a crisis that we now know was
largely rigged
by Enron and other energy companies. The crisis cost the state an estimated
$45 billion.
Lay's memo called on the administration to "reject any attempt to
re-regulate
wholesale power markets by adopting price caps." Just a few weeks after
literally
getting the memo from Lay, Cheney said of price caps: "We
think
that's a mistake." Bush followed suit, announcing:
"I oppose price caps". This cozy relationship allowed Enron traders to
rip off the
people of California with impunity.
Who (other than the reporters covering the Lay trial, that is) can
forget those
tapes where Enron
traders joked about cashing in on the crisis they
manipulated? Both "folksy"
Ken Lay and his cover-providing pals in the White House bear
responsibility for the
California debacle.
So as Ken Lay continues to plead his case on the stand deep in the
heart of Texas,
never forget that this scandal is not just about the crooks who cooked
the books at
Enron, it's about how the White House gave the crooks a prominent seat
at the
policy table.
Whatever the outcome of Lay's trial, when it comes to being key players
in the
culture of corruption, Bush and Cheney are guilty as charged.
The incidents you mention were at the very beginning of the administration, showing that they were planning on looting the country long before they were trying to protect it.
While I do my best to be skeptical about conspiracy theories, seeing how the steal-billions-in-oil cabal worked out, I have to wonder if Cheney had a hand in 9/11. I truly believe that he is that evil.
- misterb, 04.26.2006