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Smoking Gun in Enrongate
Let the impeachment begin?
By : Mike Hersh - 01/24/02
If Curtis Hebert is Right, Bush Broke the Law--Again.
Former Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chairman Curtis Hebert, Jr.
is going public with explosive allegations. Hebert says Enron CEO
Ken Lay--the largest contributor to George Walker Bush--made improper demands.
When Lay threatened that his close friend Bush, would fire Hebert unless
he obeyed, Hebert refused. Lay ordered Bush to fire Hebert, and Bush
complied in August 2001. Hebert has been on record about all of this
for months, but he recently made a new, even more explosive charge. Hebert
says Bush also let Lay INTERVIEW him and other candidates for FERC Chairman
in the first place!
In a nutshell: Enron gave Bush $millions to sponsor his rise from a losing
Candidate for the US House to the "leader of the free world."
In return, Bush gave Enron "hire and fire" authority over the
FERC, and performed other favors in return for money. This directly
and personally ties Bush to the Enrongate scandal in all its illegality.
Bush betrayed his oath to the American people when he let Ken Lay hand pick
regulatory watchdogs we entrusted to prevent the massive meltdown that cost
Americans $billions. This makes letting the fox guard the hen house look
like tender loving fiduciary care.
This is nothing new for Bush, who fired Texas Funeral Service Commission
(TFSC) director Eliza May in retaliation for her investigations of Service
Corporation International and its CEO Robert Waltrip. Waltrip--like
Enron's Lay--is a longtime Bush patron.
Bush lied under oath regarding this political quid-pro-quo, then he and
SCI settled a lawsuit to keep May quiet. Texas taxpayers picked up
$155,000 of the hush money tab, while SCI paid May the other $55,000, according
to a Dallas Morning News story published 11/09/2001. Texans know this
scandal as "Funeralgate."
The Rule of Law requires that Bush testify under oath about Funeralgate,
his and his Brother John Ellis Bush's Votergate activities during the 2000
election in Florida, and Enrongate. We already know George Walker Bush has
an established pattern of helping his friends and backers evade regulation
and possibly even criminal charges!
We must demand action now, because Enron and its
accountants at Anderson have been destroying evidence by
the box-load. We must know what Bush did, and why
he did it.
Enrongate is not just a Bush scandal: this is a
Republican scandal. Other top GOP officials like VP Dick
Cheney, White House advisor Karl Rove, House Leader Dick
Armey and Sen. Phil Gramm also helped Enron plunder and
evade regulation. They helped Enron rip off consumers,
investors and employees.
Ignore Republican and media efforts to spin this as a
business scandal or a bipartisan scandal. This is
not about the generous, but legal contributions Enron
made: 73% to Republicans, 27% to Democrats. This is a GOP
political scandal because Republicans helped Enron pay no
taxes in four out of five years, while hiding profits in
offshore accounts. Despite the hype, no Democrat
did anything of the sort.
Even with all these special favors, golden boy Ken Lay
ran Enron into the ground. Adding insult to injury,
if not perfidy to perjury, the Republican "stimulus
porkage" aims to give Enron and Lay even MORE of
your tax money.
This Republican scandal exposes GOP corruption at the
highest levels, but more profoundly, it reveals the
bankruptcy of the GOP "government is the problem"
ideology. It blows the lid off Bush's Enronomics,
and his plan to Enronitize Social Security, energy and
other policies.
I am currently working on another article concerning
these fundamental failures in Republican philosophy. For
now, back to the immediate scandal. Already, Armey
and Gramm are quitting politics to escape Enrongate, but
ending their careers to enjoy tax-paid pensions may not
be enough to satisfy justice and the Rule of Law.
These top Republicans--all outspoken critics of President
Clinton's conduct in office--should welcome full-scale
investigations into their own apparent influence pedaling.
As should House Whip Tom DeLay, VP Cheney, George Walker
Bush, and other GOP leaders. As should Ken Lay, Sen.
Gramm's wife Wendy--a former regulator turned Enron board
member.
If they broke the law, they should pay the penalty.
That's been the Republican mantra for nearly a decade.
Let them prove they meant it by volunteering to testify
before the US Senate--under oath, on national television.
If they're innocent, what do they have to fear?
They should welcome the opportunity to come clean or set
the record straight.
Despite their nonstop pontificating about others' lacking accountability,
I'm not confident these Republicans will step up and do the right thing.
We must take it upon ourselves to demand justice and uphold the Rule of
Law. Call the media and your elected officials NOW to make sure they
understand the real issues in Enrongate, Funeralgate, and Votergate. Let
the investigations, perhaps even impeachment begin!
Mike
Hersh is a contributing writer for Liberal Slant
The Dallas Morning News:
Texas/Southwest
Ex-funeral agency chief settles suit 11/09/2001.
By GEORGE KUEMPEL / The Dallas Morning News.
www.dallasnews.com/texas_southwest/STORY.
ea0f50d542.b0.af.0.a4.c348f.html
CNN.com - Former regulator: Enron tried to manipulate policy ...
Curtis Hebert, Jr., FERC chairman in the Bush Administration
www.cnn.com/2002/LAW/01/15/enron.probes/?related
Votergate information: http://www.gregpalast.com/
Theft of the Presidency
http://www.gregpalast.com/columns.cfm?subject_id
=1&subject_name=Theft%20of%20Presidency
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