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To: oioiman; rwfromkansas; all
"Under Clinton, the Commerce Department was proud that it was finally using the might of the U.S. government to assist favored firms. ..... all but three of the recipients of OPIC aid during Brown's tenure were substantial Democratic donors."

Do any of you remember back around 1992 to 1994 when Newt Gingrich and many of the Republicans were talking about wanting to "do away with the Commerce Department". I know I have some of those quotes somewhere, but so far haven't found them.

In 1995, on page 122 in Newt Gingrich's book, "To Renew America", he says this: "David Dreier ... led the task force ...to eliminate and alter several committees that he concluded were no longer necessary, while others needed to be reorganized or renamed. [One of these (no longer necessary) was] The Energy and Commerce Committee, which John Dingell had turned into an empire ....".

We might do a little more digging into the one SNL dubbed, "Long John Dingell", and see what we find. :D

89 posted on 01/13/2002 11:33:02 AM PST by Matchett-PI
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To: oioiman; all
On page 14 under the heading, "Sleaze Factor" in the April 1995 issue of The Limbaugh Letter, is this item:

Ron Brown (Commerce Secretary)
Brown, the millionaire former chaiman of the DemocRAT National Committee, is no longer being considered to run Clinton's '96 campaign due to the emergence of a series of odd financial dealings, as well as Brown's business relationship with Texan Nolanda Hill, owner of Washington and Boston TV stations. Brown and Hill were partners in a company called First International Communications Corp.

According to The Washington Post: "Though [Brown] put no money into the business and it never had a successful venture, Hill paid Brown more than $400,000 for his part of the partnership after he became Commerce Secretary."

That's right --- after.

Corridor Broadcasting Corp., another company Hill owned, defaulted on debts to the FDIC and Resolution Trust Corporation of more than $40 million.

Although Brown claimed he was unaware of any business connection between First International and Corridor, The Washington Post got hold of documents which "show that a promissory note from Corridor was First International's *major asset* and interest on the note was its *only source of income in 1993*."

90 posted on 01/13/2002 12:00:25 PM PST by Matchett-PI
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