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- From: nyt%nyxfer%igc.apc.org@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (NY Transfer News)
- Subject: Clinton's First Pick Has Deep Pockets
- Message-ID: <1992Dec19.080659.13553@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Resent-From: "Rich Winkel" <MATHRICH@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu>
- Date: Sat, 19 Dec 1992 08:06:59 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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-
- Via The NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
-
- CLINTON'S FIRST BIG PICK HAS DEEP POCKETS
-
- By Andy Stapp
-
- For weeks now, President-elect Bill Clinton and his transition
- team have bragged about "the most uncompromising ethics rules
- ever seen in Washington." So naturally, the first big appointment
- to the Clinton Cabinet has to be someone famous for a degree of
- political depravity that would have astonished even President
- Warren G. "Teapot Dome" Harding.
-
- This is not to say the selection of Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen as
- secretary of the treasury has no redeeming merit. Over the
- decades he has won the universal admiration and acclaim of his
- colleagues from both parties on Capitol Hill. They fondly refer
- to him as "loophole Lloyd," a tribute to the many tax breaks he's
- bestowed upon large corporations, especially real estate, oil and
- gas interests.
-
- Senators still speak in awe about how, after taking over that
- body's Finance Committee in 1987, Bentsen invented something he
- called the Chairman's Council, a work of true genius. The
- Chairman's Council had only one purpose. It offered breakfast
- get-togethers to lobbyists who contributed $10,000 for Lloyd
- Bentsen's re-election campaign. Ten thousand dollars per
- breakfast session, that is.
-
- Why hadn't some Finance Committee boss thought of this before?
- Perhaps they feared scandal and censure, even prison.
- Nonetheless, "Eggs McBentsen" soon became a celebrated Washington
- institution, particularly for the top agents of the lords of
- petroleum.
-
- When the Chairman's Council was summoned to assemble, the skies
- over the District of Columbia would darken with Lear jets flying
- in from Dallas and Houston. One enterprising journalist counted
- more than 90 lined up wingtip to wingtip at a private airfield in
- northern Virginia on a morning Bentsen's breakfast club was
- meeting.
-
- Yes, Lloyd Bentsen was always there for the folks with generous
- cash donations for him in briefcases or even plain old brown
- paper bags. Born a multi-millionaire, he grasped all their
- desires and dreads. Did Lockheed need an advocate to get funding
- for the B-1 bomber? Who better than Lloyd? After all, he himself
- once sat on the Lockheed board of directors.
-
- Bentsen has also forged a record of unflinching patriotism
- stretching all the way back to the Korean war. He gamely pressed
- President Harry Truman to lay waste the Reds' cities with atom
- bombs.
-
- HOPE MEETS WALL STREET
-
- When Bill Clinton, "the man from a place called Hope," named
- Bentsen for the Treasury post, he cited the senator's ability "to
- command the respect of Wall Street." Oh, Wall Street respects
- Lloyd, alright.
-
- The Stock Exchange and banking community know full well what he
- has had to suffer for them as a politician in the public eye.
- They remember how as vice presidential candidate in 1988, he was
- compelled to resign from two Houston country clubs--River Oaks
- and Ramada--which are restricted to white Christians.
-
- But they also recognize Lloyd is a comeback kind of guy. He
- rejoined those clubs in 1989 and this time has vowed to keep his
- memberships.
-
- In any case, Bentsen has performed other deeds to authenticate
- his racist credentials within the old-boy network--from fighting
- against civil rights legislation in the late 1940s, all the way
- to his recent meeting with the South Africa-backed terrorist
- Jonas Savimbi.
-
- Clinton's selection for treasury secretary has been condemned in
- some quarters for lavishing government favors on the few who have
- everything, while voting against extending Social Security
- benefits for those in real need and against Medicaid assistance
- to help impoverished women terminate unwanted pregnancies.
-
- The senator's defenders, however, point to a growing sensitivity
- on his part. On Dec. 11, the New York Times noted: "Mr. Bentsen
- has been known occasionally to exit from parties by hoisting his
- wife over his shoulder and carrying her out. But last year he
- broke one of her ribs doing that and has said he has given up the
- practice."
-
- (Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted if
- source is cited. For more info contact Workers World, 46 W. 21
- St., New York, NY 10010; email: ww%nyxfer@igc.apc.org; "workers"
- on PeaceNet; on Internet: "workers@mcimail.com".)
-
-
- NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
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