Printed from Urbana-Champaign IMC : http://127.0.0.1/
UCIMC Independent Media 
Center
Media Centers

[topics]
biotech

[regions]
united states

oceania

germany

[projects]
video
satellite tv
radio
print

[process]
volunteer
tech
process & imc docs
mailing lists
indymedia faq
fbi/legal updates
discussion

west asia
palestine
israel
beirut

united states
worcester
western mass
virginia beach
vermont
utah
urbana-champaign
tennessee
tampa bay
tallahassee-red hills
seattle
santa cruz, ca
santa barbara
san francisco bay area
san francisco
san diego
saint louis
rogue valley
rochester
richmond
portland
pittsburgh
philadelphia
omaha
oklahoma
nyc
north texas
north carolina
new orleans
new mexico
new jersey
new hampshire
minneapolis/st. paul
milwaukee
michigan
miami
maine
madison
la
kansas city
ithaca
idaho
hudson mohawk
houston
hawaii
hampton roads, va
dc
danbury, ct
columbus
colorado
cleveland
chicago
charlottesville
buffalo
boston
binghamton
big muddy
baltimore
austin
atlanta
arkansas
arizona

south asia
mumbai
india

oceania
sydney
perth
melbourne
manila
jakarta
darwin
brisbane
aotearoa
adelaide

latin america
valparaiso
uruguay
tijuana
santiago
rosario
qollasuyu
puerto rico
peru
mexico
ecuador
colombia
chile sur
chile
chiapas
brasil
bolivia
argentina

europe
west vlaanderen
valencia
united kingdom
ukraine
toulouse
thessaloniki
switzerland
sverige
scotland
russia
romania
portugal
poland
paris/ãŽle-de-france
oost-vlaanderen
norway
nice
netherlands
nantes
marseille
malta
madrid
lille
liege
la plana
italy
istanbul
ireland
hungary
grenoble
galiza
euskal herria
estrecho / madiaq
cyprus
croatia
bulgaria
bristol
belgrade
belgium
belarus
barcelona
austria
athens
armenia
antwerpen
andorra
alacant

east asia
qc
japan
burma

canada
winnipeg
windsor
victoria
vancouver
thunder bay
quebec
ottawa
ontario
montreal
maritimes
london, ontario
hamilton

africa
south africa
nigeria
canarias
ambazonia

www.indymedia.org

This site
made manifest by
dadaIMC software
&
the friendly folks of
AcornActiveMedia.com

Comment on this article | View comments | Email this Article
News :: Miscellaneous
Bush's past business dealings come back to haunt him Current rating: 0
09 Jul 2002
Modified: 12 Jul 2002
Bush's own business career exemplifies all of the features-greed, dishonesty, recklessness, self-enrichment at the expense of shareholders, employees and the general public-that characterized the stock-market-fueled boom of the 1990s. In Bush, these are combined with ignorance and the worst forms of nepotism and cronyism.
On the eve of a much publicized speech to business executives on Wall Street, George W. Bush held an impromptu press conference Monday at which he was peppered with questions regarding his own dealings as a board member of Texas-based Harken Energy more than a decade ago.

Even as he read a prepared statement pledging to take a tough stand against corporate law-breakers, Bush could not suppress his trademark smirk. Asked about the 1991 Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) probe into his sell-off of Harken stock only weeks before the company reported massive losses, Bush continued to stonewall.

Nevertheless, he was clearly on the defensive. Bush's most significant remark came in response to a question about the growing wave of corporate scandals, which that very morning had hit yet another major US company, Merck & Co. The Wall Street Journal reported Monday that the drug giant had recorded $12.4 billion in revenue over the past three years that it had never collected.

"[I]'m very worried about a country that could conceivably lose confidence in the free enterprise system," Bush told reporters.

This admission was a stark expression of a growing sense of crisis within the Bush administration, concerning not only the short-term stability of the Republican White House, but also the long-term future of the profit system itself. The fear that the exposure of corporate criminality could fuel popular anger over the growth of social inequality and lead to the emergence of a political movement against the so-called "free enterprise" system is increasingly gripping the corporate and political establishment.

It is one of the major factors behind the sudden proliferation of press reports and commentaries on Bush's personal business practices. White House spokesmen keep repeating that these are old issues that they thought had been settled long ago. These questions have reemerged, however, because the bursting of the stock market bubble and the collapse of corporate empires based on the wild inflation of share values and various forms of swindling and fraud have created a new climate of political crisis.

The attacks on Bush's business record by sections of the media and influential economic commentators manifests a central aspect of this crisis: the emergence of sharp divisions within the upper reaches of the ruling elite over the policies of the Bush administration on a whole host of questions. Behind the scenes, conflicts are raging over the reckless and incendiary nature of Bush's initiatives, both at home and abroad.

Concerns are mounting over the dangerous implications of Bush's military interventions, his increasingly provocative posture toward Europe, and the domestic implications of his policy of removing all restrictions on corporate profit-making. Powerful sections of the corporate establishment fear that the policies of the administration could lead to a crisis of catastrophic proportions. They have seized on Bush's personal misdeeds as a means of waging this covert political war in the public arena.

This, however, does not diminish the intrinsic significance of the corrupt business dealings that are being exposed. What is involved in the record of Bush's corporate career is not some manufactured scandal, like the Whitewater affair. That relatively small-time real estate venture, which lost money, was seized on by right-wing opponents of the Clinton administration as the pretext for a political conspiracy aimed at bringing down the government.

Bush's insider trading, on the other hand, was a real violation of securities laws, and it typified the type of practices that have become synonymous with Enron, Global Crossing, WorldCom and a string of other companies.

Bush goes to Wall Street to lecture executives on business ethics under conditions in which a mountain of evidence demonstrates that he and virtually every other leading member of his administration personify in their own corporate careers the very methods he intends to denounce.

White House spokesmen have said the president will use his Wall Street speech to reiterate his recent calls for corporate law-breakers to be prosecuted and for the worst offenders to be sent to a jail. The purpose of such statements is to placate growing popular anger over the systematic looting of the economy by the corporate elite. The idea is to make an example of a few swindlers, in order to divert attention from the pervasive thievery that has come to characterize American "free enterprise."

If Bush were serious, he might begin with his own Army Secretary, Thomas White, who was vice chairman of Enron Energy Services when it concealed hundreds of millions of dollars in losses and plunged California into a devastating energy crisis by manipulating the electricity market. Next in line could be the lawyer he appointed to head the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC), Harvey Pitt, who previously represented the big accounting firms, including the convicted Arthur Andersen, and the major investment houses. Not long ago Pitt held private meetings with Xerox and KPMG executives while their firms were under investigation by his commission.

Higher up is Bush's vice president Dick Cheney, the éminence grise of the administration. Cheney's former firm, the Dallas-based energy services company Halliburton, is under investigation by the SEC for falsely reporting cost-overruns as revenues to the tune of $100 million. As chairman and CEO of the company, Cheney oversaw the implementation of this particular form of accounting fraud in 1998.

Bush's own business career exemplifies all of the features-greed, dishonesty, recklessness, self-enrichment at the expense of shareholders, employees and the general public-that characterized the stock-market-fueled boom of the 1990s. In Bush, these are combined with ignorance and the worst forms of nepotism and cronyism.

Bush's sale of two-thirds of his stake in Harken Energy in June of 1990 for $848,000 has by now been widely reported, following an accusatory piece July 2 by New York Times economics columnist Paul Krugman. Bush's dumping of his own company's stock was a classic case of insider trading.

As a director of the company and a member of its audit board and a special restructuring committee, Bush was privy to information that the firm faced mounting losses and the prospect of bankruptcy. He had received memos that the company was facing a "liquidity crisis" and was "in a state of non-compliance" with its lenders.

Just two months after Bush sold off most of his company stock, Harken reported quarterly losses of $23 million. Its share price nose-dived, falling from $4 at the time of Bush's divestiture to little more than $2 a share. By the end of the year Harken stock had plummeted to $1.

Under securities laws, Bush, as a company official, was required to file a report of his stock sale with the SEC within ten days of the transaction. It took him 34 weeks to make the filing.

Harken exemplified the type of executive corruption and accounting tricks that have since been exposed at Enron and other companies. In 1989 it concealed mounting losses by orchestrating the "sale" for $10 million of a subsidiary, Aloha Petroleum, to a group of Harken executives, who borrowed the money to pay for Aloha from the parent company, Harken. By means of this sleight-of-hand, Harken was able to report an additional $10 million in revenues, and thus cover up the real state of affairs from its shareholders and investors in general. In January 1991, after "discussions" with the SEC over the Aloha Petroleum caper, Harken announced that it was adding more than $9 million to its losses for 1989.

Bush personally borrowed $180,375 from the company-a loan that was later "forgiven." Such things, however, were not uncommon at Harken. In 1990 alone the Harken board forgave $341,000 in loans to its executives.

Bush owed his position at Harken, and his lucrative stake in company shares, not to any display of business acumen or personal merit, but entirely to his family connections. In 1986 Bush's tiny Texas oil firm, Spectrum 7, was losing money and hopelessly in debt. But his father was vice president in the Reagan administration.

Harken bought Spectrum 7 for the grossly inflated price of $2 million and put Bush on its board of directors and audit board because, in the words of Harken founder Phil Kendrick, "His name was George Bush."

By the time the SEC decided to investigate Bush's insider trade of Harken stock, following a Wall Street Journal exposé in April 1991, daddy was in the White House. The SEC found that Bush had violated federal laws for reporting insider trades, but decided not to prosecute the case.

Once again, family and insider connections stood Bush in good stead. Not only had his father, the president, appointed the SEC chairman, Bush's former personal lawyer, James R. Doty, was the SEC general counsel. Moreover, the lawyer who represented Bush during the investigation, Robert Jordan, was a former law partner of Doty at the Baker Botts firm.

With the windfall Bush received from his timely sale of Harken stock, Bush paid off a loan he had taken out to buy a stake in the Texas Rangers professional baseball team. The lawyer who represented him in his Texas Rangers deal was-James R. Doty.

In 1998 Bush's trust sold his stake in the Rangers for $16 million, catapulting him into the ranks of multi-millionaires. Thus Bush parlayed his family connections into a substantial fortune, with the help of friends in high places and the use of insider information to make a killing at the expense of his own company.

Bush's good fortune may well have received an even more direct boost from his father's tenure in the White House. Less than 30 days before Bush sold his Harken stock, his father's national security adviser, Brent Scowcroft, sent the president a secret memo warning that hostilities between Iraq and Kuwait were likely. At that time, Harken's only pending contract was for a drilling project in Bahrain. The outbreak of war in the Persian Gulf would therefore have ruinous implications for Harken's business prospects.

When hostilities in the Gulf broke out, less than two months after Bush sold his shares, Harken stock plummeted. Its shares lost 25 percent of their value on the day Iraq invaded Kuwait. Had Bush held onto his shares until then, he would have lost nearly $250,000.

Bush's case history is indicative of the rise to the top of American business of the most reactionary and predatory elements. This is a social layer that has amassed colossal wealth by using its position of corporate power to pilfer the assets of the companies it heads, while defrauding investors, bankrupting pension funds, bleeding dry 401K funds, slashing jobs and destroying the savings and livelihoods of tens of millions of people.

These are not simply the practices of a handful of miscreants. Their root source is not individual greed or personal immorality. Nor are they mere "excesses." They are bound up with a broader crisis of the capitalist system, and the attempts of the corporate ruling elite in the US and internationally to mask and offset the crisis through the creation of ever greater volumes of fictitious capital, combined with increasingly brutal attacks on the living standards and democratic rights of the working class.

Nor is corporate criminality a monopoly of the Republican Party and its business backers. The orgy of stock market speculation and accounting fraud reached its height under the Democratic Clinton administration. Democrats and Republicans alike are, directly or indirectly, in the pay of big business. A recent study found that business provides $3 out of every $4 raised by Republicans, and $2 out of every $3 raised by Democrats. This helps explain why the Democrats are so terrified of exposing Bush's ties to Enron and so cowardly in their dealings with corporate CEOs.

The Bush administration, however, embodies precisely those social elements most closely associated with the criminalization of American business. The present government-a government of the political underworld-is their concentrated political expression.


Copyright 2002 World Socialist Web Site All rights reserved
See also:
http://www.wsws.org/
Add a quick comment
Title
Your name Your email

Comment

Text Format
To add more detailed comments, or to upload files, see the full comment form.

Comments

More
Current rating: 0
10 Jul 2002
A very good article on Bush's hypocrisy:
http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0228/ridgeway.php
Bush Uncooperative At First in '90 Probe
Current rating: 0
12 Jul 2002
Bush Uncooperative At First in '90 Probe, SEC Memo Suggests

An internal Securities and Exchange Commission memo suggests President Bush was initially uncooperative a decade ago with investigators looking into suspected insider trading.

Back in 1990, Bush was a member of the board of Texas-based Harken Energy Corp. when he sold 212,140 shares of Harken stock shortly before the company announced huge losses and the stock price fell. The SEC looked into whether Bush, a member of Harken's audit committee, had profited from information that was not available to other investors.

Two SEC investigators said in a 1991 internal memo, released yesterday by the nonpartisan Center for Public Integrity, that they had asked Bush and Harken twice for relevant documents.

"Harken has asserted the attorney-client privilege and refused to produce documents concerning its policies covering the purchase, sale or ownership of Harken securities by officers or directors," the memo said. "Bush has produced a small amount of additional documents which provide little insight as to what Harken nonpublic information he knew and when he knew it."

Dan Bartlett, the White House communications director, said Bush "was fully cooperative, waived attorney-client privilege and made himself available for a telephone or in-person interview." Investigators did not interview Bush, he said.

SEC records show that Harken eventually produced substantial information, and a 1992 memo concluded: "Based upon our investigation, it appears that Bush did not engage in illegal insider trading because it did not appear that he possessed material nonpublic information."

Democrats have seized on a 1993 SEC letter to a lawyer for Bush, which says that "no enforcement action is contemplated" against Bush but goes on to add legal boilerplate, set off from the body of the letter as a quotation from securities law, saying that the end of the investigation "must in no way be construed as indicating that the party has been exonerated."

Bush referred to the corporate scandals while discussing the war on terrorism during a speech in Minneapolis yesterday. He said that "as a result of the evil done to America, there's going to be some incredible good here at home, too."

"I believe people have taken a step back and asked, What's important in life?" he said. "You know, the bottom line and this corporate America stuff, is that important? Or is serving your neighbor, loving your neighbor like you'd like to be loved yourself?"

Democratic leaders chided Bush after news reports said yesterday that he accepted two loans from Harken while he was on the board, a practice he condemns in his new anti-fraud agenda. Senate Majority Leader Thomas A. Daschle (D-S.D.) said that "puts him in a difficult position to criticize others." Daschle added that the White House should call for the release of the SEC's file on Bush but noted that he does not favor having an independent counsel because "oftentimes that position is abused."

House Minority Leader Richard A. Gephardt (D-Mo.) said it's "hard to lead when you haven't done the things that you're asking others to do."

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), Bush's opponent in the 2000 GOP primaries, spoke on corporate governance at the National Press Club and called on Bush to replace SEC Chairman Harvey L. Pitt, saying the times require a new leader "whose background and record will leave no question."

© 2002 The Washington Post Company