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The Bush cabinet: a government of the financial oligarchy
By Shannon Jones
16 May 2001
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No US administration in nearly a century has been dominated
to such an extent by personnel drawn directly from the executive
suites of American big business as that of George W. Bush. Not
only is the White House pursuing an agenda dictated by corporate
America, the men and women who occupy top posts in the new administration
have intimate ties to giant firms that stand to profit to the
tune of billions of dollars from its policies, and they personally
can expect their fortunes to grow by millions and tens of millions
of dollars.
In the case of proposed tax cuts for the rich, the relationship
between Bush's policy, the interests of big business in general
and the corporate elite personified by his cabinet, in particular,
is transparent. To take one key plank of the administration's
tax plan, Bush's cabinet members will, according to one estimate,
save $5 million to $19 million apiece in estate taxes if the proposal
to abolish the inheritance tax is enacted.
Recent financial disclosures by Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney
and cabinet officers reveal a government packed with corporate
executives rolling in wealth. Tax returns for 2000 show that Cheney
and his wife had $36,086,635 in reported income last year. Some
$34 million of Cheney's income came from stock options and other
perks received from Haliburton, the oil services firm where Cheney
was CEO. Another $443,730 was paid to Cheney as a corporate director
and consultant by Electronic Data Systems, AT&T, Media One
and US West. Mrs. Cheney received $948,738 writing and speaking
as a right-wing cultural commentator.
Bush reported $744,682 in income for 2000. The bulk of this
amount, $549,236, came from interest on his investments. Bush
personally represents the increasingly parasitic character of
American capitalism and the social layer that has grown rich by
clipping coupons over the course of the speculative stock market
boom of the 1990s.
Bush never made a go of any business that he personally ran.
Instead he benefited from his family ties, getting an inside track
on a part-ownership of the Texas Rangers baseball team, which
he sold in 1998 for a windfall profit of $18 million.
Meanwhile, Bush's father, the former president, has been exploiting
his government connections to solicit investments on behalf of
the Carlyle Group, a $12 billion private equity company. The activities
of the Carlyle group underscore the revolving door between the
US government and the corporate world. The company buys businesses
and then resells them. Using the connections provided by former
President Bush and other Washington insiders, such as former Secretary
of State James Baker, Carlyle has expanded over the past decade,
transforming itself from a virtual unknown to major player on
the world stage, with extensive holdings in the defense industry
and global communications. (See the accompanying article, The
Carlyle Group: ex-government officials cash in as corporate hustlers.)
Here is a profile of some other top figures in the administration
of George W. Bush:
* Commerce Secretary Donald Evans, a longtime friend of George
W. Bush, holds 940,000 options in Tom Brown, a Denver-based oil
company that he headed before his cabinet appointment. Evans'
financial disclosure statement listed his options to be worth
between $5 million and $25 million.
* Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill is another extremely wealthy
former CEO with a leading role in the Bush administration. The
former head of aluminum maker Alcoa initially balked at selling
off his $100 million in company stock and stock options, claiming
he saw no potential conflict of interest. However, in an action
that could directly benefit Alcoa, the Treasury Department recently
decided to allow the financially pressed Bonneville Power Administration,
which supplies electricity to Alcoa smelters in the Pacific Northwest,
to reduce its payments to the government for dams and other infrastructure.
* Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, who was chief executive
at the pharmaceutical company G.D. Searle and later headed General
Signal Corp., has financial holdings in stocks and other investments
that are worth between $50 million and $210 million, according
to his financial disclosure statement. Nearly half his fortune
is tied up in private investment partnerships, including venture
capital funds that invest in health care, energy, the Internet
and biotechnology.
* Colin Powell, Bush's secretary of state, was a former board
member of America Online. His stock portfolio is worth between
$18 million and $65 million. He has agreed to sell his stock in
31 companies, including holdings in General Dynamics and Brocade
Communications Systems worth more than $1 million each. He is
also divesting holdings in Cisco, JDS, Uniphase and EMC worth
between $500,000 and $1 million. Powell's son, Michael, head of
the Federal Communications Commission, voted to approve the merger
between AOL and Time Warner.
* Mitch Daniels, Bush's director of the Office of Budget and
Management, was a top executive at the pharmaceutical giant Eli
Lilly. He listed the value of his Lilly stock at between $5 million
and $25 million.
* Condoleezza Rice, Bush's national security adviser, served
on the board of directors of Chevron Oil from 1991 to 1993. The
company named an oil tanker after Rice.
Other former corporate executives holding top posts in the
Bush administration include: Anthony Principi, secretary of veteran's
affairs, a former executive at the military contractor Lockheed
Martin; White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card, who headed the
American Automobile Manufacturers Association before becoming
a vice president of General Motors; Joseph Hagin, deputy chief
of staff for operations, a former executive at Chiquita Brands
and Federated Department Stores.
Particularly illustrative of the incestuous relationship between
the Bush administration and corporate interests are Bush's defense
appointments. The White House has nominated top executives of
major defense contractors to be the civilian heads of both the
navy and air force. Gordon England, executive vice president of
General Dynamics, is to be secretary of the navy. James G. Roche,
corporate vice president of aircraft manufacturer Northrop Grumman,
is Bush's pick to be secretary of the air force. Retired Brigadier
General Thomas White, vice chairman of Enron Energy Services,
will head the army.
Bush's appointments to the commission for the so-called reform
of Social Security are also highly characteristic. The 14-member
panel includes several top corporate executives, including its
co-chair, Richard Parsons, co-chief operating officer of AOL-Time
Warner. Another member of the commission is Robert Pozen, vice
chairman of Fidelity Investments and one of the most powerful
financial executives in the United States.
Pozen, like all members of the panel, is a supporter of the
partial privatization of Social Security and the pouring of billions
of dollars of workers' retirement money into the stock market.
Fidelity Investments stands to reap a fortune should Congress
vote to partially or fully privatize Social Security.
In another case of the Bush administration appointing the fox
to watch the hen house, the White House says it will nominate
Linda Fisher, a lobbyist for the chemical and agribusiness company
Monsanto, to be deputy director of the Environmental Protection
Agency. She was in charge of Monsanto's lobbying operation aimed
at preventing regulation of genetically engineered crops.
Bush also plans to nominate a mining lobbyist to be deputy
secretary of the interior. J. Steven Griles works for Environmental
Strategies, whose clients include the National Mining Association
and Occidental Petroleum. He was a former executive at the United
Company, a coal, oil and gas development firm.
The connection between the right-wing agenda of the Bush administration
and the business interests of its personnel is clear and direct.
This is particularly true in relation to the administration's
policy on oil and gas.
President Bush has repeatedly refused to intervene to block
profit gouging by power generating companies involved in the California
energy crisis. Cheney and other Bush administration officials
have stated that they want to open the Arctic Wildlife Refuge
in Alaska and other protected lands to oil and gas exploration,
while rolling back environmental rules related to the burning
of coal, the construction of oil and gas pipelines and the building
of refineries. Early on, the Bush administration shocked world
opinion by announcing that it would not honor the terms of the
Kyoto protocol on global warming. Bush also reneged on a campaign
pledge and rejected controls on carbon dioxide emissions from
power plants.
The packing of the Bush administration with personnel drawn
directly from the financial elite is a stark indication of the
government's hostility to democratic and egalitarian principles.
How can genuine democracy be said to exist in a society where
all important decisions are made by and for the wealthiest one
percent of the population?
This state of affairs did not fall from the sky. The anti-democratic
installation of the Bush administration by a 5 to 4 vote of the
US Supreme Court was the product of decades of decay of capitalist
democracy in the United States. The past 25 years have seen an
enormous social polarization. Incomes have fallen or stagnated
for the majority of working people while corporate profits and
the salaries of top executives have skyrocketed.
At the same time both the Democratic and Republican parties
have abandoned policies aimed at softening the impact on working
people of the drive by US big business for ever greater profits.
With the Bush administration this process has reached a new
stage. The White House is run by two wealthy oil men who have
staffed their administration with oil executives and other corporate
multimillionaires. The White House openly pursues policies in
the interests of big business and the rich. This has evoked no
significant outcry from the news mediaitself owned by corporate
giantsor the Democrats, the supposed opposition party.
Marxists have defined the state as an instrument of the ruling
class. In the case of the Bush administration, the relationship
between the capitalist state and the social interests it serves
is direct and obvious. American democracy has become little more
than a fig leaf for the rule of a financial oligarchy. The enormous
contradiction between the policies and actions of this government
and the aspirations of the vast majority, must, sooner or later,
provoke a new period of social upheavals.
See Also:
The Carlyle Group: ex-government officials
cash in as corporate hustlers
[16 May 2001]
Bush cabinet choices set stage
for mass social, political struggles
[5 January 2001]
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