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Lawmaker helped brother's lobby clients (Chris Cannon)
Associated Press ^ | August 17, 2006 | Ted Bridis

Posted on 08/22/2006 7:16:36 AM PDT by EternalVigilance

WASHINGTON - Three times this year, a lobbyist sought help from Rep. Christopher Cannon for his clients and got it. The lobbyist was the congressman's brother, Joseph Cannon.

The Utah lawmaker acknowledges helping his brother's clients, including pressing Congress last month to intervene in a business dispute over an Internet contract estimated to be worth as much as $1.3 billion.

"If my wife decided to lobby, then we would probably say, 'No talking to my office.' I just don't see my brother in the same category," Cannon, R-Utah, told The Associated Press.

Cannon has a financial interest in his brother's success: The lobbyist owes him more than $250,000, according to the lawmaker's financial disclosure reports.

There are no U.S. laws prohibiting relatives from lobbying lawmakers. House ethics rules require lawmakers to behave in ways that "reflect creditably" on Congress, avoid any special favors for family members and avoid the appearance of conflicts of interest.

"A lot of people I know are lobbyists," said Rep. Cannon, who has been elected five times. "I would put Joe in that category, not as a family member."

Some ethics experts rejected Cannon's distinction.

"It's an obvious conflict of interest," said Wendell Rawls Jr., acting executive director at the Washington-based Center for Public Integrity, a nonpartisan watchdog group. "It's an obvious use of an insider position to further the best interest of a family member."

Fred Werthheimer, head of the Democracy 21 group that endorses lobbying and campaign finance reforms, said Cannon has created appearance problems — months before midterm elections — inside a Congress already tainted by lobbying scandals and bribery investigations.

"When a member of Congress starts taking action based on the requests of a brother or spouse, you create the impression that the action may be taking place to provide a financial benefit for the family rather than to carry out proper public policy," he said. "This is the kind of appearance problem no member needs."

Dozens of Republican and Democratic lawmakers have children, siblings or spouses who work as lobbyists. Some told the AP they prohibit relatives, even siblings, from lobbying them or anyone working for them.

Rep. Nick Rahall (news, bio, voting record), D-W.Va., whose sister is a lobbyist for nuclear and energy interests, does not allow her to lobby his office. Likewise, former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay limited access to his office by his estranged brother, Randy, after 1996, when Randy DeLay's lobbying activities prompted an ethics complaint that later was dismissed. DeLay, R-Texas, left Congress earlier this year under an ethics cloud.

Joseph Cannon, who also is chairman of the Utah Republican party, is his congressman-brother's one-time business partner. He leads a team of 10 lobbyists at Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP, a law and lobbying firm. He represents nearly a dozen lobbying clients and specializes in environmental cases.

In the Internet dispute, Rep. Cannon joined with three other lawmakers last month at his brother's urging to press for a congressional hearing. They signed a letter that expressed concerns about a proposed contract — which is subject to approval by the Bush administration — between the Internet's primary oversight body and VeriSign Inc., a $4.2 billion California company.

Joseph Cannon is a lobbyist for a competing company, Network Solutions Inc. That company sells Web addresses and opposes price increases it would pay to VeriSign under the pending agreement.

"My job was to talk with Chris," the lobbyist brother told AP. "After I talked with him, the fact is, we hardly ever talked about it after that. I don't spend much time lobbying my brother on things. I can't use him just because he's my brother to go do something; it's got to be something he's got a legitimate interest in."

Rep. Cannon, chairman of the House Judiciary commercial law subcommittee, said he has closely followed Internet issues. "He had a client. I had an interest," the lawmaker explained.

Joseph Cannon's lobbying firm helped draft the July 7 letter his brother signed asking Rep. Lamar Smith (news, bio, voting record), who heads the House Judiciary Internet subcommittee, to hold a hearing. Smith, R-Texas, said he has not yet decided whether to conduct such an oversight hearing.

Joseph Cannon said he has lobbied his brother on other occasions, twice involving higher education issues. Rep. Cannon's home district in Provo, Utah, includes Brigham Young University, which last year paid Joseph Cannon roughly $70,000 as its Washington lobbyist. Both brothers graduated from the university.

Joseph Cannon sought his brother's help earlier this year establishing a "complexity center" involving Brigham Young and the University of Utah. Joseph Cannon said it was to be run by a defense contractor, System of Systems Analytics Inc. of Chantilly, Va.. The contractor employs Joseph Cannon's Utah-based company, The Western Standard Publishing Company Inc., as a subcontractor.

Joseph Cannon said he disclosed his own business relationship with the project, which both he and Rep. Cannon said was scuttled in its early stages.

Rep. Cannon also favored a bill earlier this year to exempt religious colleges from certain accreditation guidelines, such as rules on discriminating against gay students and teachers and requirements for courses that conflict with the schools' philosophy.

Joseph Cannon said he sought his brother's support on behalf of Brigham Young. The House bill passed on a voice vote.

Joseph Cannon said he also introduced leaders of the Israel Policy Forum, a pro-Jewish group, to his brother and other Republicans the day fighting broke out in Lebanon earlier this summer.

"It doesn't make sense not to approach him just the way I would approach anybody else," Joseph Cannon said. "I believe his response would have been exactly the same if ... someone else from my firm had talked with him."

As for the unpaid debt to his brother, Joseph Cannon said it stems from his own unsuccessful campaign for the U.S. Senate 14 years ago.

Joseph Cannon said he approached his brother about the Internet agreement as part of a behind-the-scenes campaign to convince lawmakers on some Senate and House committees the deal would be bad for consumers.

The agreement would permit VeriSign to increase the wholesale price it charges companies like Network Solutions for each Internet dot-com address from $6 per year to $7.86 — or more if it can justify further price increases.

In the weeks after Network Solutions hired the lobbying firm, two lobbyists there — both Democrats — contributed a combined $1,500 to Rep. Cannon's Republican campaign.

One of those lobbyists, Thomas O'Donnell, worked closely with Rep. Cannon's office on behalf of Network Solutions after June 15. O'Donnell gave $1,000 to Rep. Cannon on May 17.

O'Donnell said he gave the money because Rep. Cannon was his lobbying partner's brother and because he supports Rep. Cannon's moderate views on immigration reform, a key issue in Cannon's primary. O'Donnell said Joseph Cannon did not solicit the contribution.

Network Solutions said it was unaware of Joseph Cannon's family ties when it hired his firm in April to rally opposition to the Internet agreement.

"I, personally, and no one at Network Solutions had any idea," said the company's chief counsel, Jonathon Nevett. "I had never heard of Chris Cannon or Joe Cannon."

Nevett has publicly praised the lawmakers' request for a congressional hearing.

Network Solutions spent $80,000 on lobbying last year; VeriSign spent at least $440,000 over the same period, Senate records show.

VeriSign's Washington lobbyists include former Attorney General John Ashcroft and Ashcroft's former chief of staff, David Ayres. VeriSign's political action committee donated $1,000 to Rep. Smith in April and $1,000 to Cannon in November.

Rep. Cannon said his relationships with his brother's clients can be discerned by reviewing congressional lobbying reports. He did not mention in his July 7 letter that he was acting at his brother's request.

"The rules really come down to disclosure," the lawmaker said. "It's easy to make the connections you made between me and my brother."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Front Page News; Government; US: Utah
KEYWORDS: cannon; govwatch; libertarians; rinowatch
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To: phoenix0468
The problem isn't even necessarily that he is his brother:

Cannon has a financial interest in his brother's success: The lobbyist owes him more than $250,000, according to the lawmaker's financial disclosure reports.

101 posted on 08/22/2006 9:45:29 PM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Torie

I'm thinking maybe their office suite is some small box at some Mailboxes Etc. somewhere.


102 posted on 08/22/2006 9:45:30 PM PDT by BigSkyFreeper (There is no alternative to the GOP except varying degrees of insanity.)
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To: onyx; EternalVigilance
To be fair, is it standard operating procedure for "non profits" to request extensions, the way many for profit privately held corporations do, and many individuals with complex returns, or is it not? In other words, is this outfit an outlier, among its peer group?
103 posted on 08/22/2006 9:46:43 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Ms. AntiFeminazi
That's not an answer and I still see no effort on your part to correct any "misinformation" that has been posted about you.

I'm not going to be baited into revealing personal information just so you can satisfy your malicious curiousity. Too many kooks on the internet. Shame you're joining in with them these days.

104 posted on 08/22/2006 9:50:19 PM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: EternalVigilance

Of course they are going to say this. So he owes his brother money. There are loads of politicians who owe lobbyists who aren't their brother money and do them the same kind of favors. I think what needs to be scrutinized here is if his involvement unfairly helped his brother's client. I.E. is there any reason to believe that the client did not deserve this contract. If that's the case then yes, there is impropriety. If not, then what harm was done other than some influence peddling. Something that goes on between more than just brothers in DC.


105 posted on 08/22/2006 9:51:47 PM PDT by phoenix0468 (http://www.mylocalforum.com -- Go Speak Your Mind.)
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To: EternalVigilance
Cannon has a financial interest in his brother's success: The lobbyist owes him more than $250,000, according to the lawmaker's financial disclosure reports.

As opposed to:

According to the Federal Elections Commission (FEC), 28 campaign committees have been formed by or for Keyes since the mid-1990s, but most of them have closed down. Alan Keyes for U.S. Senate, which handled his 1992 Maryland bid, was terminated in January 2003 after a debt-reconciliation plan allowed the committee to pay $22,000 of $54,000 it had long owed to four companies. Two other active committees—Alan Keyes for President ’96 and Keyes 2000—are laden by combined debt exceeding $500,000 and have a grand total of only $4,000 cash on hand. To make matters worse, Keyes 2000 was assessed a total of $2,250 in FEC fines for this year and last for failing to file required disclosure reports. It looks like Keyes will be starting from scratch in Illinois.

Nearly half of the combined debt of Keyes’ two presidential campaign committees—about $225,000—is owed to Politechs Inc., of the same Alexandria, Va., address as Keyes 2000. Another $52,000 is owed by Keyes 2000 to its own treasurer, William Leo Constantine, an accountant based in Reston, Va. Thus, like the 1992 U.S. Senate committee, Keyes’ 1996 and 2000 presidential campaign committees may be headed toward debt reconciliation—though at least two of the major debtors are close to the campaigns, and thus presumably agreeable to taking pennies on the dollar.

Politechs is indeed close to Keyes. Its president and CEO, Mary Parker Lewis, is also Keyes’ longtime chief of staff.

“I’m not worried about what is owed to me by the committees,” Lewis said over the phone on Aug. 6. “No one has ever been substantially harmed financially” by the shoddy record of payments by Keyes’ committees, she explains, adding that “these things have always gotten out ahead of him,” and that “now we’re better at” managing campaign finances.

106 posted on 08/22/2006 9:52:39 PM PDT by Howlin (Pres.Bush ought to be ashamed of himself for allowing foreign countries right on our borders!!~~Zook)
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To: EternalVigilance; MineralMan; onyx; Howlin; Registered; mosquewatch.com; HiJinx; La Enchiladita; ...
Having said that, I think that both Keyes and the Minutemen have done quite a lot for the movement, and for grassroots conservatism.

It is a fact that Keyes and the various MM groups have called attention to social Conservative issues and the overall national sovereignty/border/law enforcement/immigration mess. I pray that this attention will result in the victory of moral libertarianism/social conservatism vs. social liberalism/amoral libertarianism regarding the former -- and in enforcement of mostly adequate existing laws regarding the latter.

Sorry you've had a bad experience with fungible mailing lists. I hate that myself. But, you are going too far when you call the sale of mailing lists "fraudulent". It's standard practice...the same people who you are pointing a finger at vis a vis Keyes also work for the RNC, the NRA, NRTL, Heritage, etc., etc., etc. If it was fraud, they'd have all gone to jail decades ago. You might not like that fact. I may not like that fact. But it remains a fact.

The whole online scene is fraught with Privacy Policy statements that are clear as mud. Long before the Web, offline list usage was far from a noble proposition, in many cases. Fund-raising of all political persuasions indeed is involved with list rentals in a big way, for the most part. Some organizations offer an opt-out or assurance of privacy. But corruption can thwart even the best intentions by organizations (witness the theft of AOL's list a few months ago).

EV, perhaps it's too much to expect Army Corps of Engineers levels of productivity on the border, with mostly volunteers, literally being shot at from the Mexican side, with enormous ambivalence and political resistance from the U.S side. I want to believe you and Keyes and Simcox are all on the level. I pray you all are. Do what you can to get the border wall up and the books open. I've seen these people stand up for what I consider important principles and so I'm withholding judgment for the moment. Please do keep me posted on verifiable progress. Thanks.
107 posted on 08/22/2006 9:52:53 PM PDT by The Spirit Of Allegiance (Public Employees: Honor Your Oaths! Defend the Constitution from Enemies--Foreign and Domestic!)
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To: Torie
In other words, is this outfit an outlier, among its peer group?

Most file on time.

108 posted on 08/22/2006 9:53:21 PM PDT by Howlin (Pres.Bush ought to be ashamed of himself for allowing foreign countries right on our borders!!~~Zook)
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To: BigSkyFreeper
No, of course not. Unlike you, I don't steer a handful of shady organizations with all the appearances of a PAC, set up for the express purpose of fleecing good, decent, hardworking Americans.

Ridiculous libel.

109 posted on 08/22/2006 9:53:36 PM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Howlin
Then we have a bit of a problem, and it is fair to ask why the outfits in questions are outliers.
110 posted on 08/22/2006 9:54:50 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Torie
and it is fair to ask why the outfits in questions are outliers.

It's not fair to ask that at all; we dare not question "those in the know," you know?

This is not the first time some of Keyes' "organizations" have had this problem. In fact, it's pretty well SOP with most of them.

111 posted on 08/22/2006 9:55:57 PM PDT by Howlin (Pres.Bush ought to be ashamed of himself for allowing foreign countries right on our borders!!~~Zook)
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To: EternalVigilance; Registered
Personal information?! LOLOLOLOLOL Oh my! Since when are PUBLIC WEBSITES considered "personal information"? You are the one who has often boasted of your affiliation with DF and Keyes. What's so personal and secret about that? Baiting? I think you meant to say "switch and bait" - I would think that's the only baiting you're truly familiar with.

You know what EV? I don't care what you have to say anymore because everything you've already said tells me and everyone else here all we need to know. You don't want the truth out because it's not a pretty story. I don't blame you. I'd be horrified to think the truth might come out too, if I was you.

Registered was right. Thanks for the confirmation.

Please ignore my previous remark about having time for you. Life is too short to waste on losers.

112 posted on 08/22/2006 9:56:07 PM PDT by Ms. AntiFeminazi (Keyes Akbar!)
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To: phoenix0468
Something that goes on between more than just brothers in DC.

To borrow a phrase, that is an "understatement of epic proportions"! ;-)

113 posted on 08/22/2006 9:56:32 PM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: EternalVigilance

EV are you working for the Constitution Party candidate in Utah or have any connection to him?


114 posted on 08/22/2006 9:56:34 PM PDT by Texasforever (I have neither been there nor done that.)
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To: EternalVigilance

Call it what you want, the fact of the matter is, you're heavily involved in at least one organization which you yourself are the founding member of.


115 posted on 08/22/2006 9:56:43 PM PDT by BigSkyFreeper (There is no alternative to the GOP except varying degrees of insanity.)
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To: EternalVigilance

yeah well, ok.


116 posted on 08/22/2006 9:57:42 PM PDT by phoenix0468 (http://www.mylocalforum.com -- Go Speak Your Mind.)
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To: Ms. AntiFeminazi

Don't go away mad. Just go away.


117 posted on 08/22/2006 9:57:58 PM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: EternalVigilance
Too many kooks on the internet.

You, for example.

118 posted on 08/22/2006 9:58:47 PM PDT by Howlin (Pres.Bush ought to be ashamed of himself for allowing foreign countries right on our borders!!~~Zook)
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To: Torie
To be fair, is it standard operating procedure for "non profits" to request extensions, the way many for profit privately held corporations do, and many individuals with complex returns, or is it not? In other words, is this outfit an outlier, among its peer group?

I have no idea.

But, I could easily understand how an underfinanced startup grassroots org, especially one that is enjoying a measure of success, could have a hard time meeting deadlines. It's not like they're an org that has been around for decades and has tens of millions flowing in every year. They don't have the luxury of having an office building in DC full of accountants and lawyers.

Remember, the FEC and IRS rules are constructed by incumbents and established lobbyists. One of their primary goals is to restrict the competition.

119 posted on 08/22/2006 10:07:10 PM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Texasforever
EV are you working for the Constitution Party candidate in Utah or have any connection to him?

No. Are you? What's his or her name?

120 posted on 08/22/2006 10:10:01 PM PDT by EternalVigilance
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