THINK PROGRESS by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Satyam Khanna, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, and Ryan Powers
The Progress Report
ETHICS
Corruption Up North
Yesterday, a jury convicted Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK) on all seven counts
of making false statements on his financial disclosure form
regarding $250,000 in home renovations and other gifts he
received
from an oil contractor. "The verdict, coming
barely a week before Election Day,
added further uncertainty to a closely watched Senate race," where he
is facing a tough reelection campaign against Anchorage mayor Mark
Begich. Stevens was accused of accepting $110,153.64
in materials, labor and other renovation expenses
to his home in Girdwood, Alaska, as well a $2,695 massage
chair
for his home in Washington, D.C. "Other gifts prosecutors said he
accepted include a new tool cabinet with tools, a new professional
Viking gas grill and a stained glass window." Stevens' conviction is
the latest shoe to drop in the wide-ranging investigation into
corruption in Alaska, which has already
seen 11 people
-- including former Veco Corp. head and Stevens' close friend Bill
Allen -- charged, convicted, or pleaded guilty. Leaving the court
house, Stevens defiantly declared, "It's
not over yet!" He plans to resume
his
reelection campaign on Wednesday.
JURY
DIDN'T BUY IT: Stevens'
defense was largely built on the notion that many of the goods
and
services he received were not asked for, and were things for which he
had
no use. In the case of the massage chair, he testified
that it was not a gift, but rather a loan
-- "even though the chair
has remained in his Washington home for more than seven years." "Clearly
the
jury did not buy that,"
NBC's Pete Williams said. As the prosecution showed, employees
of
Veco, Alaska's largest
oil-field services company, were working on Steven's Girdwood
home daily. "Prosecutors also showed that the project's two
supervisors...were being paid by Veco and that the company provided
much of the material for the renovation and all the later additions and
some repairs and furnishings. There was not evidence in the case that
Stevens or his wife ever
paid Veco a penny for the work."
Allen himself testified that
Stevens' office told him "explicitly
and coarsely to ignore"
Stevens' notes asking for bills, "saying that they were sent only to
provide a false record to protect the senator." Allen said he was told
by the office,
"'Bill, don't worry about getting a bill, Ted's just worried
about covering
his a--.'"
BUYING
INFLUENCE WITH FAVORS: The
trial revealed the extensive relationship between Stevens and the
powerful Veco Corp. Allen's testimony "outlined how he or his
firm
solicited Stevens and his office for assistance
with
government contracts and lobbied Stevens as well as Alaska state
legislators on issues including an oil pipeline." In
1999, Stevens even wrote to the World Bank president to secure
favorable terms for Allen on a Pakistan oil pipeline project. In May,
Allen pled
guilty to bribery after bribing
Stevens' son Ben, among others. An
editorial in the Anchorage Daily News today writes that Stevens showed "astonishingly
bad
judgment"
in associating with Allen and Veco. Stevens took over $150,000 in
campaign
funds from the Veco pipeline controlled by Allen, and Allen's
conviction revealed that "when Veco executives made 'personal' campaign
donations, they used laundered money from Allen and Veco." "Bill Allen
asked for and got Ted Stevens' help in getting federal contracts," the
Anchorage Daily News writes. "Ted
Stevens was
scratching Bill Allen's back
while Bill Allen was scratching his."
PALIN
WON'T CONDEMN STEVENS: Reacting
to
the verdict yesterday, Gov. Sarah Palin (R-AK) vaguely condemned a
"culture of corruption" in Alaska, and said she was
"confident" Stevens "will
do the right thing
for the state of Alaska" -- without naming what that "thing" might be.
She has studiously avoided condemning the senator; when asked in
September whether she
would endorse his reelection, she said, "we'll
see where [the
trial] goes." "Palin wants to be
a reformer, but seems
to have a hard time distancing
herself too much from Stevens," ABC News reports. In fact, the two have
a long and close history. During her 2006 gubernatorial race, Palin
featured Stevens' endorsement of her in a campaign ad. Just this
past July, "Stevens and Palin held a joint news conference, denying
that there was any political distance
between them." After his indictment, she refused to call for his
resignation, and in turn Stevens provided political cover for Palin by
declaring that that she "was
never really behind"
the Bridge to Nowhere. Even before she was governor, Palin served as
one of three directors of a political 527 group called "Ted
Stevens Excellence in Public Service."
ALASKA
CONSERVATIVES CIRCLE THE WAGONS:
In a written statement, Stevens blamed his conviction on "the
repeated instances of prosecutorial misconduct in this case" and
declared, "I
will fight this unjust verdict
with every ounce of energy I have." Alaska's entrenched
conservative power stands strongly behind him. Sen. Lisa Murkowski
(R-AK) insisted Stevens "is an
honorable, hard-working Alaskan," and said of Stevens' pending
appeal, "I
look
forward to having justice served."
Rep. Don Young (R-AK), who is facing
legal problems himself, insisted
"this was not a jury of his peers" and said Stevens was
convicted of "a trumped up charge." He heartily endorsed Stevens'
reelection campaign, calling him "the
best thing...for
the Senate."
Senate conservatives, however, seem to have had enough of Stevens'
courtroom drama. Sen. John Ensign (R-NV), head of the National
Republican Senatorial Committee, declared Stevens' career will now "end
in disgrace." Senate Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said, "As a result of his conviction,
Sen. Stevens will be held accountable so
the public trust can be restored."
Though Stevens faces up to five years in prison for each of the seven
counts, he is unlikely to serve any jail time and could legally return
to the Senate if he is reelected. Two-thirds of the Senate would have
to vote
to
expel Stevens, something that
has never happened before. Otherwise,
he could continue as the longest-serving
Republican senator in history.
Under the Radar
ENVIRONMENT
-- WHITE HOUSE FOR WEAKER
POWER PLANT POLLUTION REGULATIONS: The
Wall Street
Journal reported
yesterday that the Bush administration "is moving to adopt rules that
would loosen pollution controls on power plants" allowing them to "increase
emissions without adding
controls." One person familiar with the
Environmental Protection Agency's internal deliberations said that
"work on the rule has sped up
noticeably in recent weeks." However, McClatchy reports
that some EPA officials are arguing against the rule change
because the rule would allow more power plants to be built near
national parks and wilderness areas. The rule change, which was sought
by power companies, will judge the plants "on their hourly rate of
emissions rather than their total annual output" and will "make it
easier for older power plants to extend their life span and upgrade
without installing costly new equipment." As the Journal noted, "As
long as a power plant's hourly emissions stay at or below the plant's
historical maximum, the plant would be treated as if it were running
more cleanly, even if its total
annual emissions increased as
plant operators stepped up
operations." The proposed rules were originally part of Vice President
Cheney's 2001 energy plan.
VETERANS -- 15 PERCENT OF
FEMALE VETERANS REPORT SEXUAL
HARASSMENT: A new study
finds that "[a]bout
one out of seven
female veterans of Afghanistan or Iraq who visit a Veterans Affairs
center for medical care report being a victim of sexual assault or
harassment during military duty." By contrast, just under 1
percent of male veterans
reported being sexually assaulted. More than half of the women who
reported being sexually assaulted are now suffering from post traumatic
stress disorder. Dr. Kaye Whitley, who heads the Pentagon's Sexual
Assault Prevention and Response Office, remarked,
"There is concern about the number of sexual assaults, and we're
working very hard to prevent them." Whitley's efforts, however, have
been the subject of some controversy. In the course of a recent House
Oversight Committee investigation, the Pentagon ignored
a subpoena and blocked Whitley
from publicly testifying about the
Pentagon's response to reports of widespread
sexual assault.
Instead, the Pentagon sent Deputy Undersecretary of
Defense Michael Dominguez to the committee." Oversight
Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-CA) responded by asking Dominguez,
"What is it you're trying to hide?" The committee
members were said
to be "infuriated
by slow progress on the
military's response to sexual assault."
Whitley finally
testified before the committee
in early September.
MEDIA
-- REPORT: WASHINGTON POST UNDERCOUNTS BALLS IRAQI DEATH COUNT: "The
Washington
Post's
weekly Saturday feature on 'Iraq War Casualties' has consistently
listed a 'maximum
count' of Iraqi civilian deaths
that is dramatically
lower than the likely civilian death tolls assessed through surveys of
the Iraqi public," journalism watchdog Fairness and Accuracy in
Reporting (FAIR) reports.
The Post
feature on Oct. 25 claimed that the "maximum count" of Iraqi
civilian deaths was 96,719.
The source for the Post's
tally, Iraq Body Count,
is
"much lower than the death tolls assessed through surveys of the Iraqi
public -- the standard method for assessing casualties of large-scale
wars or disasters." For example, a recent Lancet
estimate
found 601,027 "excess"
deaths from violence in Iraq. An August 2007 by the British polling
firm Opinion Research Business estimated 1.2
million excess violent deaths in
Iraq since the U.S. invasion.
The U.N.'s World Health Organization and the Iraqi Health Ministry
found
that "151,000 Iraqis died from violence in the three years following
the U.S.-led invasion of the country." As FAIR observed, "The paper seems to be
opting to
use the lowest range it can find."
Think Fast
According to senior Bush administration officials, the U.S. is "actively considering talks with elements of the Taliban" -- "a major policy shift that would have been unthinkable a few months ago." The officials said that "the recommendation calls for the talks to be led by the Afghan central government, but with the active participation of the U.S."
"Nine of 10 American workers are losing sleep over financial worries," according to a survey released yesterday by ComPsych Corporation. In addition, thirty percent of those surveyed "reported worrying about the cost of living while 29 percent cited credit-card debt."
Politico reports that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) "is quietly preparing to ease 90-year-old Sen. Robert C. Byrd from his perch as chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee." Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-HI), the committee's second-ranking Democrat, would assume the chairmanship. Byrd, who suffers from health ailments, would become chairman emeritus.
IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei said yesterday that "the number of reports of nuclear or radioactive material stolen around the world last year was 'disturbingly high.'" "Equally troubling is the fact that much of this material is not subsequently recovered," ElBaradei said. Experts noted that if all the stolen material were lumped together, "it would not be enough to build even one nuclear device."
The Bank of England (BoE) today estimated that the global financial crisis will likely cost the world $2.8 trillion. "The instability of the global financial system in recent weeks has been the most severe in living memory," said BoE Deputy Governor John Gieve.And finally: The "pardoned" White House turkeys: Where are they now? Many of these birds capitalized on their 15 minutes of fame and are now living the good life. Marshmallow and Yam, who were in the pardoning class of 2005, went to Disneyland. May and Flower (class of 2007) went to Disney World in Florida, "where they were flown by a United Airlines flight that was renamed 'Turkey One' for the occasion." This year’s turkeys will also be going to Disneyland, "where you will be able to visit them at Big Thunder Mountain Ranch."
Good News
"A military judge has ruled that defense lawyers can inspect the mysterious Camp 7 at the detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, puncturing the secrecy surrounding a facility where some of the major al-Qaeda suspects are being held."
State Watch
WASHINGTON:
"Hate crime incidents decreased slightly around the nation last year,
but spiked in Washington state."
COLORADO:
Fourteen
ballot initiatives are in play this year, raising concerns about "voter
fatigue" on Nov. 4.
FLORIDA:
The name
of a majority African-American high school named after a KKK
leader may be changed.
Blog Watch
THINK
PROGRESS: Senate conservatives
would "welcome" Sen. Joe Lieberman
(I-CT) "with open arms" next Congress.
WONK
ROOM: The true consequences of
so-called consumer-driven health
care.
YGLESIAS:
Former White House official Peter Wehner wants the conservative
movement to get "cocoonier."
GLENN
GREENWALD: Former Bush Justice
Department official Ed Whelan's
fact-free right-wing victimhood.
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