Abramoff Met with Bush Administration 200
times in first 10 months
USA Today/AP
January 7, 2006
WASHINGTON (AP) — In President Bush's first 10 months, GOP fundraiser
Jack Abramoff and his lobbying team logged nearly 200 contacts with the new
administration as they pressed for friendly hires at federal agencies and
sought to keep the Northern Mariana Islands exempt from the minimum wage and
other laws, records show.
The meetings between Abramoff's lobbying team and the administration ranged
from Attorney General John Ashcroft to policy advisers in Vice President Dick
Cheney's office, according to his lobbying firm billing records.
Abramoff, a $100,000-plus fundraiser for Bush, is now under criminal
investigation for some of his lobbying work. His firm boasted its lobbying team
helped revise a section of the Republican Party's 2000 platform to make it
favorable to its island client.
In addition, two of Abramoff's lobbying colleagues on the Marianas won
political appointments inside federal agencies.
"Our standing with the new administration promises to be solid as several
friends of the CNMI (islands) will soon be taking high-ranking positions in the
Administration, including within the Interior Department," Abramoff wrote in a
January 2001 letter in which he persuaded the island government to follow him
as a client to his new lobbying firm, Greenberg Traurig.
The reception Abramoff's team received from the Bush administration was in
stark contrast to the chilly relations of the Clinton years. Abramoff, then at
the Preston Gates firm, scored few meetings with Clinton aides and the lobbyist
and the islands vehemently opposed White House attempts to extend U.S. labor
laws to the territory's clothing factories.
The records from Abramoff's firm, obtained by The Associated Press from the
Marianas under an open records request, chronicle Abramoff's careful
cultivation of relations with Bush's political team as far back as 1997.
In that year, Abramoff charged the Marianas for getting then-Texas Gov.
George W. Bush to write a letter expressing support for the Pacific territory's
school choice proposal, his billing records show.
"I hope you will keep my office informed on the progress of this
initiative," Bush wrote in a July 18, 1997, letter praising the islands' school
plan and copying in an Abramoff deputy.
White House spokeswoman Erin Healy said Thursday that Bush didn't consider
Abramoff a friend. "They may have met on occasion, but the president does not
know him," she said.
As for the number of Abramoff lobbying team contacts with Bush officials
documented in the billing records, Healy said: "We do not know how he defines
'contacts.'"
Andrew Blum, a spokesman for Abramoff, declined comment.
The Greenberg Traurig firm, where Abramoff worked between late 2000 and
early 2004, is investigating Abramoff's work and cooperating with government
investigations.
"Greenberg Traurig accepted Jack Abramoff's resignation from the firm,
effective March 2, 2004, after Mr. Abramoff disclosed to the firm personal
transactions and related conduct which are unacceptable to the firm and
antithetical to the way we do business," spokeswoman Jill Perry said.
Abramoff is now under federal investigation amid allegations he overcharged
tribal clients by millions of dollars, and his ties to powerful lawmakers such
as House Majority Leader Tom DeLay are under increasing scrutiny.
The documents show his team also had extensive access to Bush administration
officials, meeting with Cheney policy advisers Ron Christie and Stephen Ruhlen,
Ashcroft at the Justice Department, White House intergovernmental affairs chief
Ruben Barrales, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick, Deputy Interior
Secretary Steven Griles and others.
Most of the contacts were handled by Abramoff's subordinates, who then
reported back to him on the meetings. Abramoff met several times personally
with top Interior officials, whose Office of Insular Affairs oversees the
Mariana Islands and other U.S. territories.
In all, the records show at least 195 contacts between Abramoff's Marianas
lobbying team and the Bush administration from February through November
2001.
At least two people who worked on Abramoff's team at Preston Gates wound up
with Bush administration jobs: Patrick Pizzella, named an assistant secretary
of labor by Bush; and David Safavian, chosen by Bush to oversee federal
procurement policy in the Office of Management and Budget.
"We have worked with WH Office of Presidential Personnel to ensure that
CNMI-relevant positions at various agencies are not awarded to enemies of
CNMI," Abramoff's team wrote the Marianas in an October 2001 report on its work
for the year.
Abramoff's team didn't neglect party politics either: There were at least
two meetings with Republican National Committee officials, including
then-finance chief Jack Oliver, as well as attendance at GOP fundraisers.
In 2000, Abramoff and his team were connected enough to both political
parties to boast of obtaining early drafts of the platforms each adopted at its
presidential nominating convention.
"In the case of the Republican platform, the team reviewed and commented on
sections dealing with insular territories to ensure appropriately positive
treatment. This was successful," the Preston Gates firm wrote to Marianas.
"In the case of the Democratic Party platform, the team assisted in drafting
early versions of neutral language relating to the territories," the firm
wrote. "However, heavy intervention by the White House eventually deleted
positive references to the CNMI."
The access of Abramoff and his team to the administration came as the
lobbyist was establishing himself as a GOP fundraiser.
Abramoff and his wife each gave $5,000 to Bush's 2000 recount fund and the
maximum $1,000 to his 2000 campaign. By mid-2003, Abramoff had raised at least
$100,000 for Bush's re-election campaign, becoming one of Bush's famed
"pioneers."
Money also flowed from the Marianas to Bush's re-election campaign: It took
in at least $36,000 from island donors, much of it from members of the Tan
family, whose clothing factories were a routine stop for lawmakers and their
aides visiting the islands on Abramoff-organized trips.
Two Tan family companies gave $25,000 each to the National Republican
Senatorial Committee for the 2002 elections. Greenberg Traurig, too, was a big
GOP giver. Its donations included $20,000 to the Republican National Committee
for the 2000 elections and $25,000 each to the GOP's House and Senate
fundraising committees in 2000 and again in 2002.
The Marianas' lobbying paid off — it fended off proposals in 2001 to
extend the U.S. minimum wage to island workers and gained at least $2 million
more in federal aid from the administration.
Abramoff's team bragged to the cash-strapped Marianas government that the
taxpayer money would cover its lobbying bill: "We believe that this additional
funding — along with other funds we expect to secure by the end of the
year — will make clear to even our biggest critics that we pay for
ourselves," Abramoff teammate Kevin Ring wrote in October 2001, copying in
Abramoff.
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not
be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|