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Republican vice-presidential nominee gets $20 million payoff
from US oil company
By Patrick Martin
18 August 2000
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Halliburton Corporation, the world's largest oilfield services
company, confirmed August 16 that Republican vice presidential
nominee Richard Cheney will receive a golden handshake
worth up to $20 million upon his retirement as chief executive
officer of the firm.
Although Cheney did not fulfill the terms of his contract as
CEO, which requires that he serve until age 62, another three
years, in order to collect full benefits, Halliburton's Board
of Directors has decided to waive all penalties and give him the
maximum severance and pension package, the bulk of which is in
the form of stock options.
The waiver means that Cheney will not forfeit options to buy
400,000 ordinary shares of Halliburton stock at a favorable price.
The Board also decided to lift the restrictions on another 140,000
shares of restricted stock, allowing Cheney to convert these into
regular shares.
The company valued the two waivers at $7.7 million, a calculation
that is deliberately low, since it assumes a stock price of $42.25
per share, the closing value on July 25, the day after George
W. Bush announced Cheney's selection as his running mate. At current
prices the waivers amount to a gift of $13.6 million, and the
value could rise even higher if Halliburton's stock price continues
to climb.
Some of the 400,000 options will not vest for Cheney until
December of this year, before he takes office if elected vice
president. Other options will not vest until December 2001 or
December 2002, meaning that Cheney would retain a substantial
personal interest in Halliburton well into his term of office.
According to a Halliburton officer, the options cannot be transferred
or donated to charity except after Cheney's death, by his heirs.
Cheney denied that the options meant that his actions as vice
president would be influenced by his oil industry holdings. A
spokesman quoted him as saying: I will do whatever the law
requires. I will do whatever I need to do to avoid any conflict
of interest. As it happens, however, according to experts
in the field, there is no legal requirement that Cheney dispose
of assets such as stock options before or after taking office.
George W. Bush defended Cheney against criticism that the gargantuan
payoff was excessive and that it demonstrated the subservience
of the Republican ticket to the oil industry. His spokesman Ari
Fleischer said Cheney's retirement package was a reflection
of how successful a businessman he's been.
Perhaps the most revealing comment came from Gary Morris, the
chief financial officer of Halliburton, who confirmed in press
interviews that Cheney would also receive a bonus for the year
2000 if the company met certain undisclosed financial goals. It
will be roughly in the neighborhood of $1 million, Mr. Morris
said of the bonus. It is not a big number.
This sum is more than most workers in the United States make
in their entire working lives, but in the world of corporate CEOs
and their political servants, it is considered small potatoes.
Even without the pension and severance payments Cheney would
leave Halliburton a wealthy man. He already owns stock worth more
than $25 million, although he has never personally invested a
penny in the company. Just last May he cashed in stock options
that netted him a profit of $3 million, after he had already taken
on the job of helping Bush select a vice-presidential candidate.
He also made $1.3 million in salary in 1998 and again in 1999,
and similar amounts in salary as well as bonuses of between $1
and $2 million in 1996 and 1997.
Cheney was named CEO of Halliburton in August 1995, despite
his lack of previous experience in the oil industry, because company
officials expected that his overseas and Washington contacts would
prove advantageous. This judgment proved accurate, especially
in the Middle East, where the oil sheiks remember Cheney as US
secretary of defense during the Persian Gulf War.
As one industry expert told USA Today, Managers
at Halliburton are absolutely amazed. Before Dick Cheney, they
would fly over and meet some third cousin twice removed. Now,
they meet the king of the country.
Since Cheney became CEO, the percentage of Halliburton's revenues
from overseas operations rose from 32 percent to 70 percent. Besides
the Middle East, Cheney has been instrumental in obtaining lucrative
contracts in the Balkans, where Halliburton provides support services
for the NATO military occupation in Kosovo, including functions
that were privatized during Cheney's tenure at the Pentagon.
Cheney's Washington contacts also proved invaluable in obtaining
a $500 million loan guarantee from the US Export-Import Bank to
a Russian oil company last April. The bulk of the money is being
paid to Halliburton for its services in increasing output in the
Siberian oilfield.
Halliburton's generous payoff to Cheney is in sharp contrast
to the treatment of its own workers, both active and retired,
and its attitude to those who have been injured or poisoned as
a byproduct of the company's industrial activities.
During Cheney's five years as CEO, Halliburton cut 9,000 jobs,
many in conjunction with the company's merger with Dresser Industries,
its principal US rival. Halliburton also reduced medical benefits
for retirees, citing cost pressures.
According to an August 4 report by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer,
Cheney and Halliburton gave more than $150,000 in campaign contributions
to members of Congress who sponsored legislation that would have
limited the ability of workers to sue the company for illness
due to asbestos exposure.
Halliburton and its subsidiaries have spent $99 million fighting
273,000 lawsuits filed against them over the past 25 years by
workers suffering from asbestosis, cancer and other asbestos-related
disease. More than 100,000 of these damage claims are still pending,
including 46,400 new suits filed in 1999.
See Also:
The Bush-Cheney ticket: the
politics of plutocracy
[26 July 2000]
Bush addresses the Republican convention:
social reaction in "compassionate" garb
[6 August 2000]
Big money flaunts its power at Republican
convention
[3 August 2000]
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