ETHICS
The Frontier Of Corruption
Alaska may be the second youngest state in the country, but it's also
one of the most corrupt. The state's entire congressional delegation --
Sens. Ted Stevens (R) and Lisa Murkowski (R) and Rep. Don Young (R) --
is now embroiled in a series of scandals and criminal investigations
that threaten to topple Alaska's oil industry-friendly political
leadership. Much of the corruption involves Alaska's "largest
oil-field engineering firm," Veco Corp., which is "entwined in a
broad federal investigation that has led to the indictment of four
current and former Alaska politicians and ensnared former
Alaska Senate President Ben Stevens, son of Ted Stevens."
STEVENS'S CORRUPT HOME MAKEOVER: Ted
Stevens is "the most senior Republican in the U.S. Senate and Alaska's
most famous political figure." He's also the subject of
investigations by the FBI and a federal grand jury over an "extensive
remodeling project" done to his home in 2000. The contractors for
this major project, which added a new floor to Stevens's house,
happened to be hired by longtime Veco Corp. CEO Bill Allen. Allen and
another company executive pleaded guilty in May to federal
conspiracy, bribery and tax charges, and they are now cooperating
with authorities. "The company has been awarded
a series of federal contracts since 2000, including contracts to
provide logistics support for arctic research, among other projects."
FBI officials "recently questioned
former Stevens aides about Bill Allen," and the investigation
appears to be expanding to include the commercial fishing industry,
"including Ben Stevens' consulting clients and associates. Federal
subpoenas served on fishing companies in Seattle last year sought
records concerning both Ben and Ted Stevens." Now Stevens's
popularity is near an "all-time
low" -- plans to erect a nine-foot-tall "statuary tribute" to
Stevens at the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport were
even scrapped -- and the senator isn't taking any legal chances.
Last month, he "quietly
hired Washington’s most powerful and expensive lawyer, Brendan
Sullivan Jr., to deal with the feds."
YOUNG'S DIRTY PIG ROAST: The Wall Street Journal revealed this
week that 18-term Alaska congressman Don Young is also under
criminal investigation in the widening probe into "alleged
influence-peddling and self-dealing in Congress," and Allen again plays
a prominent role. For a decade, "Allen has held
fund-raisers for Mr. Young in Anchorage every August, known as 'The Pig
Roast.'" Veco employees and its PAC have contributed at least
$157,000 to Young between 1996 and 2006, the last year the event was
held. Young has often skated ethics rules closely. The self-proclaimed "little oinker"
has arranged several highly-suspect pork
projects, including the infamous "Bridge to Nowhere," and his
former staffer was convicted as part
of the Jack Abramoff corruption probe. Young has now "hired
a criminal-defense team and has said his campaign committee has
paid $262,000 in legal fees in the past three months."
MURKOWSKI'S FISHY LAND DEAL: Alaska's other senator, Lisa Murkowski, has come
under fire in recent weeks for buying a prime riverfront lot on
Alaska's Kenai River lot "at
a cut-rate price from a major campaign contributor." Wealthy
Alaskan real estate developer and political supporter Bob Penney sold a
1.27-acre waterfront lot for $179,000 to Murkowski's husband, Verne
Martell. "Three days after the borough recorded the Murkowskis'
purchase, the assessed value went up to $214,900. So right off the bat,
it looks like she got a discount of 20 percent." But the discount was
"probably far bigger. The online real estate listing service for Alaska
has one Kenai riverfront lot. The parcel is only one acre -- a quarter
of an acre less than Sen. Murkowski's -- but the asking price is
$399,000. Per acre, that's almost three times
what the senator paid for hers." Last month, the National Legal and
Policy Center filed
a 25-page ethics complaint against Murkowski with the Senate
committee. Murkowski's deal factors into the other scandals -- Bob
Penney, who sold her husband the lot, also testified last year before a
grand jury "about
his cozy relationship" with Stevens.

IRAQ -- MURTHA ANNOUNCES NEW IRAQ REDEPLOYMENT AMENDMENT: Yesterday, Rep. John Murtha (D-PA) announced that he will offer a new
"amendment to the annual defense spending bill demanding
that troop withdrawals begin this fall." In an attempt to garner
support for the measure from conservative members of Congress, Murtha's
amendment will "not set a final date for the withdrawal of troops," but
"he envisions troop withdrawals to start
in November and take about a year to complete." Asked by a reporter
"if any troops would stay behind to engage in counterterrorism
operations," Murtha replied, "None, zero." He argued that leaving a
"smaller force" in Iraq would leave those troops "more
vulnerable to enemy attacks because of the modern military's
considerable logistical needs." In contrast, "Murtha said some
Republicans on Capitol Hill, backed by the White House, have
advocated reducing U.S. troops in Iraq to 70,000 from the current level
of nearly 160,000." Murtha also announced plans to introduce two
other amendments to the defense spending bill next week "that would require
troops to meet certain standards before being deployed and cut in
half the $225 million budget for the Guantanamo Bay military prison."
He argued that the "requirement for better training and better
equipment for U.S. troops heading overseas would hasten the withdrawal,
because the
over-extended military can't meet those standards." "The Army is
broken. ... The Army is hurting," he said. Separately, Speaker of the
House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) reiterated her support of such measures,
saying, "Congress will go on record -- every day if necessary -- to
fight for redeployment of our forces as the central element of a new
direction strategy for Iraq."
CIVIL RIGHTS -- BUSH NOMINEE FOR EEOC
HAS A RECORD OF UNDERMINING EMPLOYMEE RIGHTS: In Sept. 2006, President
Bush nominated David Palmer, then-Chief of the Employment
Litigation Section of the Civil Rights Division at the Justice
Department, to serve a five-year term on the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission,
the federal agency tasked with ending employment discrimination in
America. Palmer, who was renominated in January, is facing
stiff opposition to Senate confirmation of his appointment. In a letter to Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-MA) and Sen. Mike Enzi (R-WY), the respective
chairman and ranking member of the Senate Committee on Heath,
Education, Labor, and Pensions, eight former members of the Justice
Department's Civil Rights division "strongly" urged the senators "to
oppose Senate confirmation of Mr. Palmer." The former employees,
including three ex-deputy chiefs of the section, noted that "at least
one internal complaint of discrimination or other improper activity has
been filed against Mr. Palmer since he became Section Chief," a first
for the division. "Marian Thompson, who worked in the section for 18
years as a statistician, said that after becoming section chief in
2002, Palmer
fired a veteran attorney with whom he had had a romantic relationship and that the woman filed a complaint against him." In an effort to push
his confirmation through, "Republicans have turned up the pressure by
threatening to pair Palmer's nomination with the nomination of Democrat
Stuart Ishimaru for a second five-year term."
VETERANS -- PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION URGES 'OVERHAUL' OF VETERANS
HEALTH CARE SYSTEM: Following up in the wake of the damaging
revelations of the Walter Reed scandal, a "presidential commission examining the
care given to wounded U.S. service members yesterday recommended "fundamental
changes" aimed at streamlining the military's health care
bureaucracy and overhauling the veterans disability system. The
proposals include creating "recovery coordinators" to help injured
service members navigate through the system, giving the Department
of Veterans Affairs (VA) responsibility for determining payments to
wounded veterans, and preventing and treating post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury. Only recently has the
VA added mental health counselors and 24-hour suicide prevention
services to all facilities, "after high-profile
incidents of veterans committing suicide," despite 20 percent of Iraq war veterans reporting symptoms of PTSD. The Iraq and
Afghanistan Veterans of America responded to the commission's
findings: "Last week the Secretary of the VA resigned. This week
disabled Iraq veterans are suing the VA. Our veterans' health care
system is facing tremendous challenges at every level and the Department
of Defense and the VA are not ready to respond." "We don't
recommend merely patching the system, as has
been done in the past," said former senator Bob Dole, who chaired
the commission.
|

In a letter to the Washington Post, Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid (D-NV) responds to the paper's opposition to the Senate's recent
all-night debate on Iraq. "On reading the July 21 editorial 'The
Phony Debate,' it became clear why The Post's editorial writers
have been such eager cheerleaders for the Bush
administration's flawed Iraq policies -- the two share the same
disregard for the facts en route to drawing dubious conclusions,"
Reid writes.
"In a little-noticed addition to legislation requiring the July and
September assessments on Iraq from the White House, Congress
mandated a third report" from the Government Accountability
Office, which has "quietly done the most work to track the missteps,
miscalculations, misspent funds and shortfalls of both the United
States and Iraq since the 2003 invasion."
As part of the debate over the farm bill, "House Democrats proposed
legislation that would make it harder for overseas companies to use
tax havens to avoid taxes on U.S. profits, drawing
immediate opposition from the Bush administration."
"The commanding general at Fort Lewis, Wash., the third-largest Army
base in the nation, on Wednesday rescinded a
plan calling for a once-a-month collective memorial service rather than individual ones for soldiers killed in action."
"One of the largest American contractors working in Iraq,
Bechtel National, met its original objectives on fewer
than half of the projects it received as part of a $1.8 billion reconstruction contract, while
most of the rest were canceled, reduced in scope or never completed as
designed, federal investigators have found in a report released
yesterday."
And finally: The new "CQ's Politics in America 2008: The 110th
Congress" is "an intriguing compilation of trivia."
One tidbit is that three congressmen -- Sen. Judd Gregg (R-NH), Rep.
James Sensenbrenner Jr. (R-WI), and Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) -- are
all lottery winners.
Gregg "donated a portion of his $853,492 in winnings to a charity,"
Sensenbrenner "put his $250,000 toward charities and investments," and
McCarthy used his $5,000 to "open Kevin O's Deli."
|
|
|

Yesterday, the Forest Service announced "that it will be the first
federal agency to offer
personal carbon offsets through an initiative called the Carbon
Capital Fund."

VERMONT:
State legislature creates commission to gauge Vermonters' thoughts on
expanding marriage rights to gay couples.
MISSOURI:
Conservative political operatives team up with the KKK to place an anti-affirmative
action initiative on the 2008 ballot.
KENTUCKY:
The Southern Poverty Law Center files suit against the nation's
second-largest KKK group.

THINK
PROGRESS: New document demonstrates "clear case" of Attorney
General Alberto Gonzales's perjury on spying program.
THINK
PROGRESS: Despite Congress's thrashing of Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales, White House spokesperson Tony Snow claims nobody "really laid
a glove on him."
OPEN LEFT:
Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) speaks to the netroots about crafting better
broadband legislation.
HUFFINGTON
POST: "Rapture Ready: The Unauthorized Christians United For Israel
Tour," starring Former Rep. Tom DeLay (R-TX) and Sen. Joe Lieberman
(I-CT).

"I'm going to remind the people in the audience today that troop levels
will be decided by our commanders on the ground, not by political
figures in Washington, D.C."
-- President Bush, 7/10/07
VERSUS
"When it comes to the troop surge in Iraq, a bunch of arm chair
generals in Washington are influencing the Bush Administration as much
as the Joint Chiefs or theater commanders. A group of military experts
at the American Enterprise Institute, concerned that the U.S. was on
the verge of a calamitous failure in Iraq, almost single handedly
convinced the White House to change its strategy."
-- D.C. Examiner, 7/25/07
|