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The Clintons, The High Priest And Conflicting Interests

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  • The Clintons, The High Priest And Conflicting Interests

    THE CLINTONS, THE HIGH PRIEST AND CONFLICTING INTERESTS
    by Sam Sedaei

    Huffington Post, NY
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sam-sedaei/the-cl intons-the-high-pr_b_77298.html
    Dec 18 2007

    While he was in China in the past summer to meet with potential
    clients, he allegedly met with individuals from the Turkish
    government. The meeting was about an upcoming bill in the U.S. House
    that would have called on President Bush to declare that the killing
    of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks after World War I
    constituted genocide. The Turkish government was adamantly against
    the bill and had already hired multiple American lobbying groups
    to lobby the Congress against the bill. Following the meeting, he
    called his firm back in Washington DC to asked them to begin writing
    a preliminary proposal to pitch an offer to the Turkish government to
    lobby the Congress to kill the genocide bill. The name of his company
    was Burson-Marsteller - the 5th largest PR and lobbying firm on earth
    - and he was its worldwide president and CEO. His name is Mark Penn,
    and he is now serving as Hillary Clinton's top political strategist.

    Senator Clinton is the only top tier candidate on the democratic
    side who openly receives money from lobbyists for her campaign. While
    many seem outraged about this fact, most people are not aware of the
    extent of influence and history of relationships and dealings between
    the Clintons and lobbyists, and the inevitability of their continued
    influence in policymaking should Hillary become president.

    It is important to briefly review how Penn rose to his current
    position. After the democrats lost the House and Senate in 1994,
    Hillary asked Bill to bring in Dick Morris, a controversial friend
    from their time in Arkansas, to help repair Bill's image. Morris knew
    Mark Penn from when he was a pollster in New York and brought him
    to the White House to help with the effort. They pushed the Clintons
    to the right and caused the origination of the term "triangulation,"
    the idea of strategically adopting certain aspects of your opponent's
    position on issues, not necessarily because of the merits of those
    policies but in order to immune oneself from criticism on that
    particular issue. But Morris's career was cut short after he let a
    prostitute, Sherry Rowlands, listen in on a conversation with the
    President. That left Penn as "the high priest," as the Washington
    Post called him, in a White House where triangulation and polling
    had become a religion. Following the Clinton presidency, Penn also
    became the architect of Hillary Clinton's victories in 2000 and 2006,
    receiving $1 million from Hillary for the latter service.

    But Penn's involvement in Hillary's campaign is inconsistent with the
    party's stated mission. He has been intimately involved in running
    or lobbying for big corporations on issues that are directly contrary
    to the interest of consumers and average Americans throughout his life.

    Before he came to the White House in the 90s, he worked for Texaco -
    a major oil company - and Eli Lilly, which is a major pharmaceutical
    firm.

    After moving to DC, he worked both at the White House and also
    continued to expand his own polling firm, Penn, Schoen and Berland
    (PSB), which served Microsoft as its biggest client. During his time
    at PSB, Mark Penn has tuned out any sense of integrity and care for
    the wellbeing of the general public from the process of deciding whose
    interests to serve. Public welfare is naturally irrelevant to what he
    does and why he does it. His firm defended Proctor and Gamble when the
    latter's fat substitute product, Olestra, was criticized for having
    disturbing side-effects and put the blame for Texaco's bankruptcy on
    the greed of jurors.

    Throughout the past seven years, Mark Penn has continued to keep
    one foot in his corporate lobbying firm and another foot in Hillary
    Clinton's campaigns. Under his leadership, Burson-Marsteller has
    followed the same corporate mentality of not including the public's
    wellbeing as a factor in deciding what projects to undertake. B-M
    boasts in its website that the company recognizes its "obligations to
    all who have a stake in our success, including shareowners, clients,
    employees, and suppliers." (Notice that even the firm admits by
    implication that the "public," "consumers" or "national interests"
    don't have a stake in the firm's success.)

    Burson recently lobbied the Texas legislature for TXU energy - a widely
    despised energy company in Texas - in support of an initiative that
    would secure the company's ability to build three more coal plants
    at a time when we are trying to put the usage of fossil fuels behind
    us. This is hardly the first time that Burson has put the company's
    bottom-line ahead of the environment. The firm has served TXU for
    almost a decade now on multiple projects, all aimed at multi-level
    lobbying to push for company's plans to continue to build coal
    plants. In 1993, Burson led a $1.8 million campaign to successfully
    defeat President Clinton's proposed BTU tax on fossil fuels. Burson is
    also behind a group called "Foundation for Clean Air Progress," which
    has been deceptively named as it was specifically formed to hinder -
    not help as the name implies - measures to control air pollution and
    designed to pressure the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency not to
    adopt tougher pollution controls. The Washington Post reported on June
    17, 1997 that the group had participated in a "multimillion-dollar
    campaign to turn back EPA regulations for smog and soot."

    Burson was also hired by Blackwater USA to help Erik Prince with his
    testimony to Congress two months ago about his employees' killing of
    17 Iraqi civilians.

    One of the lobbying methods that Penn's Burson employs is phone
    campaigns to constituents of legislators who are the "targets."

    Constituents receive a phone call, sometimes from a group artificially
    created with an innocent-sounding name. Caller explains the reason for
    the call and the issue in debate, tries to convince the constituent
    why he or she should support a certain position and asks whether he
    or she would be willing to write a letter to the target in support of
    that position. If the constituent agrees to the one-sided argument,
    the caller then asked for some personal information to compose a
    personalized letter on the constituent's behalf. The unique letter
    is then written and sent to the constituent along with a pre-stamped
    envelope and pre-addressed to the legislator. All the constituent has
    to do is to sign the letter, put it in the envelope and throw it in
    outgoing mail.

    Burson also seeks to influence policy through its political action
    committee. According to SourceWatch and the Center for Responsive
    Politics, Burson's federal PAC raised more than $69,000 for the 2004
    election cycle. Of that amount, 37% went to democrats while 58% went
    to republicans. Notice the firm's role in helping to secure a larger
    republican majority in Congress in 2004.

    Lobbying and PACs have been a part of a long tradition of participatory
    democracy in this country. But the involvement of Mark Penn as the
    top strategist for the Clinton campaign is inapt for several reasons:

    1) Burson-Marsteller - both through its lobbying efforts as well as
    its PAC - pushes for policies that are often significantly detrimental
    to progressive values and directly designed to serve the interest of
    multinational corporations to the detriment of the American consumers
    and workers. These policies are also contrary to many of Hillary
    Clinton's stated position on issues.

    2) There was a great deal of criticism of the Armenian genocide bill,
    the strongest of which was that it wasn't the right time for the
    bill because of our geopolitical interests. But the fact is that the
    Congress has been intending to formally recognize this historically
    unchallenged event for two decades. But every time the bill reaches
    the floor, the lobbyists help to kill it. The inability of congress
    to pass this important legislation contributes to hurting our image.

    This is because each failure sends a message to the world that we
    are willing to keep quiet on a human rights matter and pander to
    a foreign government that refuses to accept responsibility for its
    history because we need them as an "ally." Burson's interest to lobby
    the U.S. Congress on behalf of foreign governments and companies
    with little or no transparency or accountability with regard to the
    impact of their lobbying efforts on distorting our foreign policies
    is extremely inconsistent with who we believe should or should not
    have influence on our international relations.

    3) Penn's method of running his firm in the most secretive manner and
    his position as a major strategist for Hillary Clinton is likely to
    lead to a secretive presidential administration as well.

    4) Mark Penn used his position in the White House to expand his own
    wealth and business interests and strike a close friendship with
    the Clintons in the 1990s. If Hillary is elected, Penn will have
    even better access to the inner White House circle and be in the
    unique position of lobbying the president personally from within
    the Oval Office on behalf of his clients, which most often include
    multinational corporations, labor-union busters, foreign governments,
    and more republicans than democrats.

    There has not been enough discussion about whether a politician
    can be considered progressive if she has closely associated herself
    with someone who has a consistent record of serving the interests of
    oil, pharmaceutical and other major corporations as well as foreign
    interests, often at the expense of Americans' interests. In a recent
    interview with Charlie Rose, President Clinton agreed that voting
    for Obama - who doesn't get money from lobbyists and whose campaign
    lobbyists are not running - would be like "rolling the dice." But
    Mark Penn's life-long commitment to special interests, his intimate
    involvement with the Hillary Clinton campaign and the influence he will
    have to push his corporate agenda from within a Clinton White House
    should be yet another factor to lead any sensible voter to realize
    that supporting Hillary would be equivalent to raising the bet in
    the middle of the game knowing you are holding the losing set of cards.
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