http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/13/opinion/13KRUG.html
July
13, 2004
OP-ED
COLUMNIST
Machine at Work
By
Paul Krugman
From
a business point of view, Enron is a smoking ruin. But there's important
evidence in the rubble.
If
Enron hadn't collapsed, we might still have only circumstantial evidence that
energy companies artificially drove up prices during California's electricity
crisis. Because of that collapse, we
have direct evidence in the form of the now-infamous Enron tapes -- although
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the Justice Department tried to
prevent their release.
Now,
e-mail and other Enron documents are revealing why Tom DeLay,
the House majority leader, is one of the most powerful men in America.
A
little background: at the Republican convention, most featured speakers will be
social moderates like Rudy Giuliani and Arnold Schwarzenegger. A moderate
facade is necessary to win elections in a generally tolerant nation. But real
power in the party rests with hard-line social conservatives like Mr. DeLay, who, in the debate over gun control after the
Columbine shootings, insisted that juvenile violence is the result of day care,
birth control and the teaching of evolution.
Here's
the puzzle: if Mr. DeLay's brand of conservatism is
so unpopular that it must be kept in the closet during the convention, how can
people like him really run the party?
In
Mr. DeLay's case, a large part of the answer is his
control over corporate cash. As far back as 1996, one analyst described Mr. DeLay as the "chief enforcer of company contributions
to Republicans." Some of that cash has flowed through Americans for a
Republican Majority, called Armpac, a political
action committee Mr. DeLay
founded in 1994. By dispensing that money to other legislators, he gains their
allegiance; this, in turn, allows him to deliver favors to his corporate
contributors. Four of the five
Republicans on the House ethics committee, where a complaint has been filed
against Mr. DeLay, are past recipients of Armpac money.
The
complaint, filed by Representative Chris Bell of Texas, contends, among other
things, that Mr. DeLay laundered illegal corporate
contributions for use in Texas elections. And that's where Enron enters the
picture.
In
May 2001, according to yesterday's Washington Post, Enron lobbyists in
Washington informed Ken Lay via e-mail that Mr. DeLay
was seeking $100,000 in additional donations to his political action committee,
with the understanding that it would be partly spent on "the redistricting
effort in Texas." The Post says it has "at least a dozen"
documents showing that Mr. DeLay and his associates
directed money from corporate donors and lobbyists to an effort to win control
of the Texas Legislature so the Republican Party could redraw the state's
political districts.
Enron,
which helped launch Armpac, was happy to oblige,
especially because Mr. DeLay was helping the firm's
effort to secure energy deregulation legislation, even as its traders boasted
to one another about how they were rigging California's deregulated market and
stealing millions each day from "Grandma Millie."
The
Texas redistricting, like many of Mr. DeLay's
actions, broke all the usual rules of political fair play. But when you
believe, as Mr. DeLay does, that God is using you to
promote a "biblical worldview" in politics, the usual rules don't
apply. And the redistricting worked -- it is a major reason why anything short
of a Democratic tidal wave in November is likely to leave the House in Republican
hands.
There
is, however, one problem: a 100-year-old Texas law bars corporate financing of
State Legislature campaigns. An inquiry is under way, and Mr. DeLay has hired two criminal defense lawyers. Stay tuned.
But
you shouldn't conclude that the system is working. Mr. DeLay's
current predicament is an accident. The party machine that he has done so much
to create has eliminated most of the checks and balances in our government.
Again and again, Republicans in Congress have closed ranks to block or emasculate
politically inconvenient investigations. If Enron hadn't collapsed, and if
Texas didn't still have a campaign finance law that is a relic of its populist
past, Mr. DeLay would be in no danger at all.
The
larger picture is this: Mr. DeLay and his fellow
hard-liners, whose values are far from the American mainstream, have forged an
immensely effective alliance with corporate interests. And they may be just one
election away from achieving a long-term lock on power.
Copyright
2004 The New York Times Company
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