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The Facts About Bush and Harken
National Review Online ^ | July 10,2002 | Byron York

Posted on 07/12/2002 3:11:27 PM PDT by Lady In Blue

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FYI and Discussion.
1 posted on 07/12/2002 3:11:27 PM PDT by Lady In Blue
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To: Lady In Blue
I just checked to see if this article has been already posted but I didn't see it. Sorry if this is a duplicate.
2 posted on 07/12/2002 3:12:38 PM PDT by Lady In Blue
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To: Lady In Blue
Bump for TRUTH!!

GRRRRRollin'

3 posted on 07/12/2002 3:29:58 PM PDT by GRRRRR
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To: GRRRRR
Thanks,GRRRR! There's nothing like the truth!
4 posted on 07/12/2002 3:33:02 PM PDT by Lady In Blue
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To: Lady In Blue
Good post. The smearers will continue their smearing although they know the truth, and those who delight in Bush being smeared will continue to believe anything bad whether true or not. Standard MO.
5 posted on 07/12/2002 3:44:20 PM PDT by maranatha
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To: maranatha
That's the sad truth,unfortunately!
6 posted on 07/12/2002 4:21:31 PM PDT by Lady In Blue
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To: Big Steve; deport; blackie; Deb; GUIDO; Howlin
ping
7 posted on 07/12/2002 4:22:30 PM PDT by Lady In Blue
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To: Lady In Blue
Thanks for the ping. Bryon York has done more work in detailing this entire transaction that anyone else. He did a fairly good piece back during the primary campaign entitled "Georges Road to Riches" published by the NYT.... It wasn't quite as detailed at this on regarding the Harken stock.
8 posted on 07/12/2002 4:49:31 PM PDT by deport
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To: Lady In Blue
Stop the attacks by the wacko, extreme left-wing, rat-nazis terrorist's on our Freedoms !!

Freedom Is Worth Fighting For !!

Molon Labe !!

9 posted on 07/12/2002 5:06:15 PM PDT by blackie
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To: Lady In Blue
The most important part of the Harken Oil deal and Goerge W. Bush is that he sold his stock shortly after the Emir of Bahrain announced that Harken has been awarded a contract to develop an off shore oil field in that country. The oil industry was miffed that Harken got the contract since it had never drilled a single off shore well. It appeared to be little more than a thinly disguised means for the Bahrainis to give a boost to the value of Harken stock for the benefit of Bush, whose father was then the President.

The original Wall Street Journal article discussing this strongly implied that the transaction was tainted, a thinly disguised bribe although that exact word was not used. The WSJ article I am refering was written not too long after the sale, during the first Bush Presidency.

Please do not ask me for a copy of this article since I did not clip it at the time.

Since "W" became a candidate for the Presidency, this aspect of the sale has been deeply buried, including by the WSJ itself.

10 posted on 07/12/2002 7:53:46 PM PDT by NoLongerLurker
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To: deport
Thanks for the info,deport.So much has happened since the campaign that York's original article just slipped by me I guess.I didn't realize that he had done so much work.
11 posted on 07/12/2002 8:49:57 PM PDT by Lady In Blue
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To: blackie
Don't hold back,blackie, just tell us what you think! Couldn't agree with you more!LOL!
12 posted on 07/12/2002 8:51:17 PM PDT by Lady In Blue
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To: NoLongerLurker
Please do not ask me for a copy of this article since I did not clip it at the time.


I most certainly would like to see that article before I believe anything like that! The SEC investigated this case.I'll take their word before any WSJ article, thank you very much!

13 posted on 07/12/2002 8:53:52 PM PDT by Lady In Blue
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To: Lady In Blue
Harken was awarded a contract to drill some well for the Bahrainis about the time that they bought Spectrum7. President Bush was given some stock for his holdings in Spec7 and a position on the BOD at Harken. Nothing new about all that. The Harken stock was in a long slow decline at that time if anyone wants to go look at the graphs.

I think I prolly have some articles marked somewhere that will mention the Bahrain deal. But that has never been the real controversy, it's always been the "insider trading" when he sold his stock and liquidated his loan with the Midland Bank that he had gotten when he bought his share of the Texas Rangers.

14 posted on 07/12/2002 9:08:07 PM PDT by deport
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To: Lady In Blue
Don't count on any evidence to back up these outrageous claims. Most of his(or her) posts are about some supposed "corrupt bargain" between the President's father and Bahrain for the benefit of Harken Energy - claims completely with no merit.
15 posted on 07/12/2002 9:11:19 PM PDT by Lee_Atwater
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To: deport
Thanks,deport for all of the info.I'm not at all familiar with the Bahrainis and Spectrum7 angle of it.
16 posted on 07/12/2002 9:24:49 PM PDT by Lady In Blue
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To: Lee_Atwater
Thanks Lee_Atwater for your input.I also thought those claims were outrageous!
17 posted on 07/12/2002 9:26:12 PM PDT by Lady In Blue
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To: Lady In Blue
Bookmark and Bump
18 posted on 07/12/2002 10:15:35 PM PDT by PeaceBeWithYou
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To: Lady In Blue
Has this article been posted? I could not find it but it deserves publicity.
http://www.nationalreview.com/york/york071202.asp
     
July 12, 2002 8:45 a.m.
The Group Behind the Attacks on Bush
The story of American Family Voices.

mong the many questions that have been raised about George W. Bush's business dealings with Harken Energy, there's one that has so far failed to attract the attention of journalists delving into the president's past: Why is all this coming up now? Did Bush's sale of Harken stock more than a decade ago come to the fore spontaneously as a result of public outrage over scandals at Enron, WorldCom, and Arthur Andersen? Did enterprising reporters dig up long-buried secrets? Did one of the president's former business associates come forward to expose his hypocrisy?

While anything is possible, it appears the answer to all those questions is no. There has been no Harken whistleblower. There have been few, if any, elements of the Harken story that were not previously reported — and, far more important, investigated by the Securities and Exchange Commission, which took no action against Bush. And despite public anger at Kenneth Lay, Bernard Ebbers, and other symbols of corporate criminality, the Harken story did not emerge spontaneously. Rather, a look at recent events suggests that the Harken resurrection was the result of a well-planned, well-funded, and well-executed campaign to damage the president politically at a time when his approval ratings seemed almost unchallengeably high. Those involved in the effort include former officials in the Clinton White House, veterans of liberal interest groups, sympathetic journalists, and some of the nation's richest labor unions.

SLY LIKE A FOX
Last Monday, a little-known group called American Family Voices received some notice in the press when it unveiled a television ad attacking the president on the issue of corporate corruption. The ad featured footage of a fox walking through woods, with a narration that said,


Remember the saying about foxes guarding the henhouse — well guess what's happening in Washington?

President Bush says he's getting tough on corporate fraud.

But look at the record:

Bush played a key role at Harken Energy — they used Enron-style accounting to hide losses.

Bush sold out early...

Bush thinks tough talk can hide the record.

That's sly — like a fox.


"The idea for the ad started a couple of weeks ago when Bush announced that he was going to give a speech on corporate responsibility," says Michael Lux, the man who heads American Family Voices. Lux, a former aide to President Clinton and former political director for the liberal interest group People for the American Way, says, "I was outraged at the idea that Bush was going to do a big speech and pound his chest and say he is in favor of corporate responsibility when he is closer to the corporate world than any president since Ronald Reagan. I started to think about the fox and the henhouse. I was talking to Joe Lockhart [the former Clinton press secretary who now runs an advertising agency in Washington], and he came up with the ad."

Lux has been trying to highlight the Harken story for months. He hired a writer named Stephen Pizzo, who in the 1990s wrote a story about Bush and Harken for Mother Jones magazine. Pizzo went to Lux last March, just before the president gave an earlier speech on corporate accountability, and the two discussed the allegations in Pizzo's Mother Jones piece. As a result of that talk, American Family Voices put out a press release on March 7 which "questioned the White House's credibility on this issue in light of President Bush's own actions as a Texas oil company executive prior to his career in politics." The release — which was featured on one of AFV's websites, thedailyenron.com — chronicled the stock sale as well as the story of two loans Bush received from Harken for the purpose of buying company stock.

The release attracted little attention, but in the days that followed, Lux returned to the issue several times in thedailyenron.com. On June 27, he published a report which began, "Yesterday the foxes assured Americans that they are hot on the trail of those missing chickens." After recounting the Harken story yet again, the article claimed that Bush had "pulled a Martha Stewart" when he sold his stock "on inside information."

There was no reason to expect that this release would receive any more notice than the ones that preceded it, but a short time later, Lux found his words featured in the editorial pages of America's most powerful newspaper. On June 2, five days after the American Family Voices release, New York Times columnist Paul Krugman told the story of Bush's stock sale. Krugman quoted Lux's line about the foxes and the chickens — he credited it to thedailyenron.com — and also compared Bush's stock sale, unfavorably, to Martha Stewart's financial troubles. Given a prominent place in the Times, the Harken story had new life.

AMERICAN FAMILY WHAT?
A few days later, AFV released the "like a fox" ad, and the group began to receive some media attention. There were reports on CNN, Fox News, and in several major newspapers. The most-noticed was, again, in the Times, which ran a story referring to AFV as a "small, secretive group." For many people, the stories were a first glimpse of Lux's organization. But it was not the first time that AFV played a major role in political events.

Lux founded the organization in 2000 to be "a strong voice for middle and low income families on economic, health care, and consumer issues." The group got going with $800,000 donated by the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees. To this day, the union remains AFV's largest single contributor, although Lux says the group also receives money from "other progressive groups and a wide variety of donors." In addition to the government employees, Lux says other labor unions that contribute to AFV include the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, the United Food and Commercial Workers, and the International Association of Machinists. Lux declined to name AFV's other contributors, except to say that they are "your classic progressive donors."

In the first months of its existence, AFV used its contributions from government workers to mount a furious effort to keep George W. Bush out of the White House. In September 2000, the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law, a pro-campaign finance group, cited AFV as one of the main organizations funding outside ads for Democrat Al Gore. In a study headlined, "Special Interest Groups Flood Key States With Ads For Gore; Group Spending For Bush Virtually Nonexistent," the center reported that American Family Voices spent $640,000 on pro-Gore ads between June and September 2000 (only two groups spent more for Gore: Handgun Control, with $1.3 million, and the AFL-CIO, with $1.1 million). In contrast, the group that spent the most money for Bush, the National Rifle Association, spent a relatively small $257,072.

Still, all that spending wasn't enough to win the White House for Gore, and after his defeat, American Family Voices found itself without a clear mission. Through much of 2001, Lux worked at his Washington consulting firm, Progressive Strategies, while AFV received almost no attention in the press. Then, as 2002 began, the group found a new cause.

A WORLD OF ENRON
When the energy company Enron collapsed, Lux says, he and many of his associates believed it was "a metaphor for what we saw as wrong" with much of American business. "We felt like Enron was an absolutely classic example of corporate America run amok in a deregulatory environment," Lux explains. "It was the fox guarding the henhouse. We felt the issues raised by that scandal would end up dominating the news for the rest of the year."

Lux created thedailyenron.com and another website, nomoreenrons.com, both of which began by covering the Enron matter, but later expanded to include other issues, like Vice President Dick Cheney's refusal to give the General Accounting Office information about his energy task force. The sites do the usual political stuff — they give anti-Bush activists talking points and arguments to use against the administration, and also encourage readers to sign petitions and send letters to their senators and representatives. In addition, Lux tries to spread the message by speaking frequently with reporters — "Like most groups," he says, "we give information to journalists who we've had a relationship with." When it's all added up, it is hard to say precisely what influence AFV has, but it is hard to deny that the stories and angles Lux emphasizes often find their way into the news.

For example, on Thursday both the Times and the Washington Post ran front-page stories on Bush's two loans from Harken. Both stories tied the loans to Bush's speech on Wall Street, in which he said, "I challenge compensation committees to put an end to all company loans to corporate officers." And both suggested that there was more than a little hypocrisy in Bush's position. The Times said the loans "raised the question of how [Bush's] toughened standards today would have applied to his own corporate experience," while the Post wrote that the "contrast between Bush's record as a business executive and his rhetoric in the face of corporate scandals underscores the challenge his administration faces in trying to credibly foster what he calls 'a new era of integrity in corporate America.'"

The loan story dominated news coverage all day, but, like the insider-trading allegations that had dominated coverage a few days earlier, it was not exactly new. Word of the loans was first reported by U.S. News & World Report in March 1992, as Bush's father began his presidential reelection campaign. The magazine reported that "Harken offers select executives, including [George W.] Bush, eight-year loans at five-percent interest. The loans may be used by company brass to exercise options to purchase Harken shares. Bush has borrowed $180,375."

The U.S. News story attracted a little notice in places like The Hotline. A few months later, in September 1992, Stephen Pizzo discussed the loans in his Mother Jones article. But in the decade that passed between 1992 and this week's stories in the Times and Post, it appears the loans received little, if any, attention. There was, however, one exception: The loans were prominently featured in American Family Voices's March 7 press release. Once more, Michael Lux's cause got a big boost from not one, but two, of the nation's most important papers.

THE COMING CAMPAIGN
All in all, it's been a good few months for Lux and AFV. At the same time that he was highlighting Enron and Harken, Lux also held the first public meeting of another of his creations, the Progressive Donor Network. The network aims to coordinate programs with interest groups like People for the American Way, Emily's List, and the National Abortion Rights Action League. At its first meeting, network organizers heard from Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt, Democratic National Committee chairman Terry McAuliffe, and other party leaders. The meeting also featured appearances from operative/pundits James Carville and Paul Begala. (For the record, Lux says that, contrary to some reports, Carville, who "is a friend, and as he has said, talks to us all the time," nevertheless did not play a role in creating the "like a fox" ad.)

Now, after his success with Harken, Lux senses it's time to move American Family Voices beyond what has been an essentially Enron-based critique of the Bush administration. In the next few weeks, he says, AFV plans to launch a much broader effort. "We're going to move forward with an overall campaign to build on the Enron work and corporate responsibility in general," Lux says. "It's gone so far past Enron now that we're going to do a broader campaign." The work, Lux explains, will involve "more ads, coalition building with unions and environmental groups, and work in a lot of states."

If the past is any measure, look for the campaign to have more than a little success. American Family Voices has a talented leader, rich supporters, and some important friends in the press. That's more than enough to keep making trouble for George W. Bush.




       



 
 



19 posted on 07/13/2002 5:29:28 AM PDT by maica
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To: Lady In Blue
...Please do not ask me for a copy of this article since I did not clip it at the time...

I'm not BSing about the Bahrainis' role. It was the entire reason Bush sold his stock when he did. The announcement of the off shore drilling contract had boosted the price of Harken shares.

The whole thing was a scam from beginning to end designed to put money in the pocket of President Bush's kid. In the end, the wells never even got drilled because there wasn't enough oil there to make it worth while.

The sale of the Harken shares was done legally, so there wouldn't have been an SEC problem. It was what preceded the sale that was irregular. By the way, are you naive enough to believe that the SEC would go after the President's son even if the sale had been irregular?

20 posted on 07/13/2002 2:15:17 PM PDT by NoLongerLurker
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