-- Bush Pioneer Donors Called the Shots, Paid the Bills & Mount the Defense
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March 29, 2004
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A presidential spokesman suggested at a March 9th briefing
that the White House has not followed Austin’s criminal probe to determine
if Tom DeLay’s Texans for a Republican Majority (TRM) PAC spent illegal
corporate funds to elect a GOP majority to the Texas House in 2002.
“This president is strongly committed to fighting corruption,” Scott
McClellan told a reporter. “But in terms of a specific case in the state
of Texas…you need to direct your questions elsewhere. I don’t know the
specifics of that case.”
Bush’s reelection campaign political director Terry Nelson testified
10 days later before a Travis County grand jury. It presumably was interested
in what this national GOP official knew about the $190,000 in corporate
money that TRM PAC contributed to the Republican National State Election
Committee (RNSEC) in 2002, shortly before RNSEC gave that same amount to
TRM-backed House candidates.
If the White House wants specifics, it can follow the grand jury’s lead
by questioning some of the elite “Pioneer” donors who pledged to raise
at least $100,000 for the Bush campaign. Taken together with money contributed
by their employers, 25 “Pioneer” volunteers gave a total of $242,500 to
TRM PAC in 2002. This Bush Pioneer money—including possibly illegal corporate
funds—accounts for a hefty 16 percent of the $1.5 million that TRM PAC
raised. (Elite Bush donors who gave to TAB are unknown because TAB will
not identify its donors.)
At least 17 of Bush’s other Pioneer volunteers are players in the scandal
or have close ties to such players. These include such major protagonists
as Tom Craddick, Louis Beecherl and Bill Ceverha.
DeLay, Inc. Pioneers
Driving what the Austin Chronicle dubbed the ‘Tomstown’ scandal
are allegations that TRM PAC and the Texas Association of Business (TAB)
spent as much as $2 million dollars in illegal corporate money to help
elect a GOP House majority in 2002. The top beneficiaries of the TRM- and
TAB-backed House takeover are the two Toms: Bush Pioneer volunteer Tom
Craddick and his pal, House Majority Leader Tom DeLay. The GOP House takeover
led to Craddick becoming Texas speaker and redrawing Texas’ congressional
districts to Tom DeLay’s specifications. Someday these new districts may
help DeLay become speaker of a more powerful House.
Bush Pioneer volunteer Randy DeLay cashed in on his elder brother’s
influence by becoming a lobbyist after the 1994 Republican takeover of
the U.S. House. Pioneer-linked TRM donor Union Pacific railroad
hired the younger DeLay in 1996, when the elder DeLay was a strong supporter
of that railroad’s controversial merger with Southern Pacific, which raised
anti-trust concerns. Six years later, Union Pacific had Tom Craddick personally
deliver checks that it wrote to TRM-backed House candidates.
Pioneer-tied Reliant Energy is another Randy DeLay client. Then-Reliant
staff lobbyist Bruce Gibson (now the lieutenant governor’s chief
of staff) agreed to give $25,000 in Reliant corporate money to TRM PAC
in September 2002 after being solicited by TRM fundraising consultant Susan
Lilly and Rep. Beverly Woolley, a TRM board member.
Elite Bush Donors
With TRM-Scandal Links
| |
Pioneer
Volunteer |
|
| Bush Pioneer |
2004 |
2000 |
TRM Connection |
| *Tom Craddick |
|
X |
TRM courier and beneficiary |
| Randy DeLay |
|
X |
Lobbyist brother of TRM creator &
beneficiary |
| *G.W. 'Bill' Ceverha |
|
X |
TRM Treasurer & Craddick transition-team
member |
| Louis Beecherl, Jr. |
X |
X |
TRM Treasurer's boss; TRM donor |
| Congressman Joe Barton |
|
X |
Stumped for TRM candidate Dan Flynn; redistrictor |
| Union Pacific's Richard Davidson/Drew
Lewis |
X |
X |
Company used Craddick's donation courier
service |
| Akin Gump's Bill Paxon/Jim Langdon/Alan
Feld |
X |
X |
*Akin lobbyist sent TRM checks c/o Craddick |
| Jimmy Westcott |
|
X |
TRM donor Primedia bought out her company |
| Texans for Lawsuit Reform's Karen Overbeck |
|
X |
*TLR PAC gave TRM candidates $686,920 |
| †Vinson & Elkins' Joe Allen/Tom Marinis |
X |
X |
Allen pledged V&E PAC money to TRM
candidates |
| Tom DeLay's lobbyist pal Jack Abramoff |
X |
|
His client the Choctaw tribe gave TRM
$1,000 |
| Hance Scarborough's Kent Hance |
X |
X |
Partner represents TRM & Ceverha |
| Loeffler Jonas' Tom Loeffler |
X |
X |
Partner represents TRM's Susan Lilly |
* Subpoenaed
† Pioneer Joe Allen left
Vinson & Elkins in 2003 to form his own firm.
A memo on this Houston fundraising trip obtained by the Houston Chronicle
and Texas Observer reveals that Lilly and Wooley got financial commitments
from three other Pioneer-linked donors. Sometimes, they jotted down the
political agendas of these donors, linking the solicitations to specific
public policies.
Pioneer volunteer and corporate raider Charles Hurwitz of Maxxam,
Inc. agreed to give $5,000 to the TRM fundraisers, who wrote “horseracing,
#1” next to his name. Hurwitz has been lobbying to legalize more gambling
activities at his Sam Houston Race Park. The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp.—headed by Bush Pioneer Donald Powell—also dropped efforts to make
Hurwitz repay millions of dollars for a failed savings and loan after DeLay
decried that Hurwitz was a victim of regulatory abuse.
Woolley and Lilly got $1,000 out of EOG Resources President Ed
Segner III, whom they noted was concerned about energy severance taxes.
Formerly Enron Oil and Gas, EOG went independent from Enron in 1999—four
months after Enron head Ken Lay volunteered as a Bush Pioneer.
The same memo suggests that Bush Pioneer Joe Allen, who then
controlled Vinson & Elkins’ PAC, promised TRM’s fundraisers to give
$7,500 of V&E PAC money to TRM-backed candidates. In an infamous opinion
that it issued shortly before Enron declared bankruptcy in 2001, V&E
concluded that Enron’s fraudulent off-balance-sheet partnerships were “aggressive”
but not “inappropriate.”
Rep. Dianne Delisi accompanied Lilly on a similar fundraising trip to Dallas two days later. They scored $35,000 for TRM, including $5,000 from
Bush Pioneer Fred Meyer, chair of Aladdin Industries.
The Travis County grand jury has subpoenaed lobbyist Demetrius McDaniel
of Pioneer-linked Akin Gump to learn why he put a cover note to
Craddick on some of the $7,500 in corporate contributions that McDaniel
made to TRM PAC on behalf of his clients Lexmark and Primedia. In
1996 Primedia, which boasts a Bush Pioneer executive, bought a media company
started by the family of Bush Pioneer Jimmy Westcott.
Elite Bush Donors Who
Contributed To TRM PAC
| |
|
|
Pioneer
Volunteer |
| TRM Contributor |
TRM
Amount |
Pioneer
Link |
2004 |
2000 |
| El Paso Energy |
$50,000 |
William Wise (Ex-Chair & CEO) |
|
X |
| Louis Beecherl, Jr. |
$35,000 |
Self (Beecherl Investments) |
X |
X |
| Burlington Northern Santa Fe |
$26,000 |
Matthew Rose (CEO) |
X |
|
| Reliant Resources, Inc. |
$25,000 |
R. Steve Letbetter/Don Jordan (Ex-CEOs) |
|
X |
| Robert B. Rowling |
$25,000 |
Self (Chair of TRT Holdings) |
X |
X |
| Charles Wyly |
$20,000 |
Self (Ranger Capital Group) |
|
X |
| Charles Miller |
$10,000 |
Self (Chair of Meridian Advisors) |
|
X |
| *Vance C. Miller |
$10,000 |
Self (COO of Henry S. Miller Co's) |
|
X |
| Ray Hunt |
$5,000 |
Self (Chair & CEO of Hunt Consolidated) |
|
X |
| Maxxam, Inc. |
$5,000 |
Charles Hurwitz (Chair & CEO) |
|
X |
| Fred Meyer |
$5,000 |
Self (chair of Aladdin Industries) |
X |
X |
| S. Reed Morian |
$5,000 |
Self (President of DX Service Co's) |
|
X |
| Pickens Co. |
$5,000 |
Owners Robert and William Pickens |
|
X |
| RDM Enterprises |
$5,000 |
Robert McLane's McLane Group controls
RDM |
X |
X |
| Silver Eagle Distributors |
$5,000 |
John L. Nau III (President & CEO) |
|
X |
| Primedia, Inc. |
$2,500 |
Jeffrey Ballabon (Publicity Vice President) |
X |
|
| Sam Barshop |
$1,000 |
Self and Patrick Oles of Barshop &
Oles |
|
X |
| Jack Knox |
$1,000 |
Self (Chair & CEO of Sixx Holding
Co.) |
|
X |
| †Ed Segner (EOG president) |
$1,000 |
Ken Lay joined Pioneers when Enron ran
EOG |
|
X |
| Locke Liddell & Sapp |
$500 |
Partner Jeff Love |
X |
X |
| Patrick C. Oxford |
$250 |
Self (Bracewell & Patterson managing
partner) |
|
X |
| John Woodhouse (Sysco) |
$250 |
Bill Lindig is CEO of Woodhouse's ex-company |
|
X |
| TOTAL: |
$242,500 |
|
|
|
*Subpoenaed
†Enron Oil & Gas (now EOG) went solo
four months after Ken Lay volunteered as a Bush Pioneer in 1999.
Tom DeLay’s advisory “kitchen cabinet” includes Pioneer Akin Gump lobbyist
Bill Paxon and Pioneer lobbyist Jack Abramoff, whose firm
recently fired him in another DeLay scandal. Congress is investigating
how Abramoff and an ex-DeLay aide took a staggering $45 million in lobby
and publicity fees from three Indian tribes in the past three years. One
Abramoff Indian client—the 8,000-member Mississippi Choctaw—gave
TRM PAC $1,000.
Craddick, Inc. Pioneers
Texas Speaker Tom Craddick himself volunteered as a 2000 Bush Pioneer,
as did key powers behind his throne. Chief among them is Pioneer Louis
Beecherl, Jr. The $35,000 that Beecherl gave to TRM PAC made him its
top individual donor. The wealthy former head of Texas Oil & Gas Corp.,
Beecherl sat on the board of Texans for Lawsuit Reform (TLR). This
subpoenaed business lobby gave $686,920 to TRM-backed House candidates
in 2002 and employed Pioneer volunteer Karen Overbeck.
Beecherl Pioneer lobbyist Bill Ceverha served as TRM PAC treasurer
before Craddick appointed him to his speaker transition team. TRM and Ceverha
are represented in the scandal by attorney Terry Scarborough, the Hance
Scarborough Wright partner of Bush Pioneer Kent Hance.
Loeffler Jonas & Tuggey attorney Jonathan Pauerstein represents
subpoenaed TRM fundraising consultant Susan Lilly. Pauerstein’s Pioneer
partner, Tom Loeffler, threw a 2001 reception for Cradduck’s speaker candidacy.
Pauerstein opposed the 2003 efforts of Democratic lawyers to depose Tom
DeLay and Pioneer Congressman Joe Barton about their Texas redistricting
roles. The Texas Attorney General paid Pauerstein to vet state redistricting
plans.
With 41 members of his elite Pioneer donor network tied to the Tomstown
scandal, President Bush can help “fight corruption” by grilling his top
donors about their roles in the Tomstown scandal.
|