|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Bush administration stonewalls on energy task force documents
By Alden Long and Patrick Martin
4 September 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The Bush administration continues to rebuff demands by the
General Accounting Officean arm of Congress headed by a
Republicanfor documents about the formulation of the energy
plan that was announced last May. Vice President Richard Cheney
headed the task force and consulted closely with the oil, coal
and nuclear power industries that are the main beneficiaries of
the plan.
The GAO escalated its effort to obtain documents by sending
a demand letter to the president on August 18, an action which
the agency has been compelled to take only five times in the past
20 years. The move came after Cheney flatly rejected a similar
demand letter a month earlier, the first time such a request had
ever been submitted to a vice president.
In his letter to Bush, Comptroller-General David Walker, a
Republican selected by then-Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott,
declared that the GAO has ample authority to conduct this
review, and may go to court to get the documents if they
are not provided within 20 days. The agency dropped its demand
for Cheneys personal schedule during the energy task force
deliberations, but it seeks a list of those who attended the energy
groups meetings, who was hired and who was consulted.
A front-page article published by the Los Angeles Times
August 26 gives a glimpse of the kind of information that the
Bush administration is trying to conceal. The Times reports
that many of the oil and nuclear power executives who attended
the meetings of the energy task force were generous donors
to the Republican Party, and some of their key lobbyists were
freshly hired from the Bush presidential campaign. Among
the companies involved was Halliburton, the oilfield services
firm that Cheney headed from 1995 to 2000, and several electricity
generating companies whose chief lobbyist is former Republican
National Committee chairman Haley Barbour.
One extraordinary conflict of interestrather blatant
even for an administration notoriously subservient to the energy
industryis the role of Peabody Energy. According to the
Times account, the final report of the energy task force,
issued May 17, called for additional coal production, and
five days later the worlds largest coal company, Peabody
Energy, issued a public stock offering, raising about $60 million
more than expected... While Peabody was preparing to go public,
its chief executive and vice president participated in a March
1 meeting with Cheney.
While Cheney has claimed that he is defending the principle
of confidentiality in relation to advice given to the executive
branch, he showed no such concern in the handful of meetings which
he and his aides held with environmental groups and advocates
of geothermal and solar power. These were well-publicized affairs
to which the media was invited. It was the consultations with
oil, coal and electricity bosseswho stand to profit enormously
from the administrations energy planthat were kept
secret.
The two Democratic congressmen who triggered the GAO request
for documents, John Dingell of Michigan and Henry Waxman of California,
sent a letter to Cheney August 29, citing the news report, saying
that it implied that special interests not only received
unique access to the energy task force, they also wielded extraordinary
influence in shaping the final energy policy.
If the White House refuses to comply with the GAO request,
as expected, the next step for the agency would be to seek a federal
court order. The Bush administration can block such a request
by certifying that the documents sought are part of the
executive branchs deliberative process and that releasing
them would impair the government from functioning.
In that event the issue would be dead unless the Republican-controlled
House or the Democratic-controlled Senate issues a subpoena for
the documents. The House is clearly unlikely to actonly
House Democrats have pushed the issuewhile Senate Democrats
have shown no enthusiasm for a conflict with the White House that
could escalate to a constitutional showdown in federal court.
The energy task force was run by two former aides of Frank
Murkowski, Alaskan Republican Senator, the ranking Republican
on Senate Energy Committee and a strong supporter of drilling
for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. During a three-month
period, the task force met with more than 400 people from over
150 groups, mostly representing energy corporations, and their
lobbyists.
Cheney has ordered all records, minutes, and transcripts of
the task force to be kept secret, including the names and attendees
at meetings and what company or organization they represent. The
GAO is also seeking the names of the people whom Cheney met with
personally, what was discussed and the background of the task
forces staff members.
Cheney rebuffed the GAOs previous request for information
in June when his attorney claimed Constitutional privilege and
said the GAO lacked jurisdiction to make such an inquiry. In rejecting
the July 18 demand letter, Cheney wrote a formal reply to the
House and Senate, informing both bodies of certain actions
undertaken by an agent of the Congress, Comptroller General David
M. Walker, which exceed his lawful authority and which, if given
effect, would unconstitutionally interfere with the functioning
of the executive branch.
While the identities of the individuals who contributed to
the report are still secret, the corporate interests they served
are obvious. At the heart of the energy plan is the deregulation
of the US energy markets that will benefit the giant energy monopolies
like Exxon-Mobil and various middlemen. The losers in these plans
are working people who will pay the costs in many ways, as the
debacle in California is revealing.
The report made over 100 recommendations for national lawmakers,
regulatory agencies, and foreign and military policy. Among them
were: drilling for oil and gas in the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge and other national preserves; reviving nuclear power generation;
weakening environmental and pollution laws and regulations to
stimulate energy production, along with deregulating energy production
with no supply mandates or price controls to protect consumers.
Many of the Task Forces recommendations were contained
or incorporated into the comprehensive energy bill that was passed
last month by the House of Representatives in a 240-189 vote.
The House bill suggests that the energy industries were even more
successful lobbying congressmen than they were in lobbying Cheney,
since the tax breaks for big corporations are tripled from the
initial Bush plan, coming to $33.5 billion over the next 10 years
for the oil, coal, and nuclear industries.
Cheney and the Bush administration are stonewalling on this
issue to conceal the extraordinary extent to which corporate power
and money dominate this government. The degree of corporate control
can be seen in two incidents relating to the energy task force.
The first is the menacing revival of the nuclear power industry.
The second is the role played by the Enron Corporation, a very
powerful player in the buying and reselling of energy.
The New York Times reported that the nuclear power industry
felt it was being shut out of the national energy policy discussions.
Therefore, in mid-March, the industry sent a delegation of seven
nuclear power executives for a one-hour meeting with Karl Rove,
Bushs chief political advisor. Top economic adviser Lawrence
Lindsey and Andrew Lundquist, executive director of Cheneys
task force, were also present at the meeting. The nuclear power
executives were told that the Vice President was absent because
he was conferring with legislators on Capitol Hill who were supporters
of nuclear power.
The nuclear power industry in the United States has been in
decline for over twenty years. The last nuclear power plant to
be brought on line was in 1973. Since then a large number of operating
plants were closed down. One hundred and three nuclear power plants
still operate in the US today. The near catastrophe at the Three
Mile Island nuclear power plant in 1979 has not been forgotten,
and the number one corporate producer and maintainer of nuclear
power plants, Westinghouse Electric Company, has been broken up
and no longer exists. Moreover, no safe means has ever been found
to dispose of spent nuclear fuel.
Despite this record, on the day after the energy plan was released
Cheney was extolling the virtues of nuclear power in a CNBC television
interview. In addition, Cheney spoke at the Nuclear Energy Institute
and told the gathering that the administration was in favor of
expediting the certification of new nuclear plant construction
and renewing the Price-Anderson Act to limit the liability of
plant operators in case of nuclear catastrophes.
Christian Poindexter, one of the leaders of the nuclear power
executives delegation reacted to what has happened saying, In
my wildest dreams, when I was over at the White House in March,
I couldnt imagine them getting so behind us.
An even more egregious manifestation of corporate influence
involves Enron Corporation and its Chairman Kenneth Lay. Once
a medium-sized pipeline company, Enron has vaulted into the top
ranks of corporate America through huge profits as the nations
leading speculator in gas and electricity supplies. It specializes
in manipulating the natural gas and electricity markets so as
to sell supplies during price spikes caused by weather fluctuationsand
by some accounts, deliberately rigged shortages of supply.
Enron is the largest corporate donor to the political career
of President George W. Bush, and gave more to the Republican Party
in 2000 than any other energy company. Enron, along with Cheney
when he was CEO of Halliburton, built the Enron field Baseball
Park for the Houston Astros, and Kenneth Lay was the chief fundraiser
for the Bush inaugural.
Cheney broke his vow of silence in relation to the energy task
force deliberations on only one occasionto single out Lay
for special mention as one of those he consulted, and to note
that the Enron boss has a unique understanding of
the issues.
There is considerable irony in Cheneys adamant defense
of what has been called, in other contexts, executive privilege.
In 1993-94, the Clinton administration attempted to keep secret
the records and minutes of the health care task force chaired
by Hillary Rodham Clinton, citing the right of confidentiality.
Republican congressmen and senators demanded full disclosure,
claiming a cover-up, and eventually induced a Republican federal
judge to order release of the documents.
The campaign against the secrecy of the health care task force
contributed to its political defeat in Congress. But the overriding
purpose was to find a legal weapon for the right-wing campaign
to destabilize the Clinton administration. Once the documents
were released and proved to be useless for that purpose, the issue
was dropped.
In 1998 special prosecutor Kenneth Starr went to the Supreme
Court against another claim of executive privilege, seeking the
notes of Clintons own lawyers from meetings discussing Whitewater
and other Starr investigations. The Republican-controlled court
ordered the notes turned over, but again, when they did not provide
the hoped-for smoking gun, Starr and his media acolytes
dropped the subject unceremoniously.
Now the Bush administration has rediscovered the need for privacy
in executive branch discussions which it claimed, during the anti-Clinton
campaign, to be a pretext for covering up criminal activity in
the White House.
See Also:
Bush's nominee to head Joint
Chiefs promotes militarization of space
[30 August 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |