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That’s Where the Money Is (John Boner )

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dtotire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-05-10 07:44 AM
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That’s Where the Money Is (John Boner )
That’s Where the Money Is
By BOB HERBERT
Published: October 5, 2010


It’s beyond astonishing to me that John Boehner has a real chance to be speaker of the House of Representatives.

I’ve always thought of Mr. Boehner as one of the especially sleazy figures in a capital seething with sleaze. I remember writing about that day back in the mid-’90s when this slick, chain-smoking, quintessential influence-peddler decided to play Santa Claus by handing out checks from tobacco lobbyists to fellow Congressional sleazes right on the floor of the House.

It was incredible, even to some Republicans. The House was in session, and here was a congressman actually distributing money on the floor. Other, more serious, representatives were engaged in debates that day on such matters as financing for foreign operations and a proposed amendment to the Constitution to outlaw desecration of the flag. Mr. Boehner was busy desecrating the House itself by doing the bidding of big tobacco.

Embarrassed members of the G.O.P. tried to hush up the matter, but I got a tip and called Mr. Boehner’s office. His chief of staff, Barry Jackson, was hardly contrite. “They were contributions from tobacco P.A.C.’s,” he said.

When I asked why the congressman would hand the money out on the floor of the House, Mr. Jackson’s answer seemed an echo of Willie Sutton’s observation about banks. “The floor,” he said, “is where the members meet with each other.”

Mr. Boehner is the minority leader in the House and would most likely become speaker if the Republicans win control in next month’s elections. He has stopped funneling corporate money to his colleagues on the House floor. (It is now illegal.) But nothing else has changed, except that his already outsized influence-peddling has grown. The amount of democracy-destroying money that manages to make its way into the sleazy environs of what is now known as Boehner Land has increased to a staggering degree.

The Times’s Eric Lipton, in an article last month, noted that Mr. Boehner “maintains especially tight ties with a circle of lobbyists and former aides representing some of the nation’s biggest businesses, including Goldman Sachs, Google, Citigroup, R.J. Reynolds, MillerCoors and UPS.


“They have contributed hundreds of thousands of dollars to his campaigns, provided him with rides on their corporate jets, socialized with him at luxury golf resorts and waterfront bashes and are now leading fund-raising efforts for his Boehner for Speaker campaign, which is soliciting checks of up to $37,800 each, the maximum allowed.”

The hack who once handed out checks on the House floor is now a coddled, gilded flunky of the nation’s big-time corporate elite.

When House Democrats were preparing for the first floor vote on financial regulatory reform, Mr. Boehner and other Republican leaders summoned more than 100 industry lobbyists and conservative activists to a private strategy session. One could be forgiven for thinking that behind those closed doors they may not have had the public’s best interests in mind. According to Mr. Lipton, Mr. Boehner told the gathering, “We need you to get out there and speak up against this.”

Both major parties have, with great enthusiasm, turned more and more of the government over to corporate and banking interests. But the G.O.P., with Mr. Boehner currently the point person, is fanatical about it, has barely tried to hide its willingness to offer up the government wholesale, no questions asked.

Just this past July, Mr. Boehner called for a moratorium on new federal regulations, saying it would be “a wonderful signal to the private sector that they’re going to have some breathing room.” Talk about an invitation to a nightmare. Try imagining how the public would be treated by banks, energy companies, food processors and myriad other powerful entities if the federal government were forced by law to ignore even more of their predations.

That’s Mr. Boehner, for you — always willing to stick his neck out for the elite. When it comes to policies of particular concern to ordinary individuals and families, however, his generosity of spirit and passionate willingness to help vanishes. He believes, for example, that Americans who are at least 20 years away from retirement should be unable to receive Social Security before they are 70, and that Social Security benefits should be means-tested.

Mr. Boehner and his pals also opposed the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection created by the Wall Street financial overhaul. Protect the public? You must be kidding.

The U.S. is in terrible shape right now because far too much influence has been ceded to the financial and corporate elites who have used that influence to game the system and reap rewards that are almost unimaginable. Ordinary working Americans have been left far behind, gasping and on their knees.

John Boehner has been one of the leaders of the army of enablers responsible for this abominable state of affairs.


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/05/opinion/05herbert.html?ref=opinion
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Sinistrous Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-05-10 08:00 AM
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1. Kick.
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Stuart G Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-05-10 10:08 AM
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2. K and R
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starroute Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-05-10 10:21 AM
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3. Barry Jackson, Boehner's spokesman then, has his own trail of sleaze
Jackson's trail leads from low-level dirty tricks in the 80's, to serving with Boehner in the 90's, to being Roves deputy and successor in the Bush White House, and now back to Boehner again. As one of the Daily Kos posts quoted below suggests, his career provides a handy roadmap to some of the worst GOP corruption of the last 20 years.


http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0110/31653.html

1/19/10

House Republican Leader John Boehner has hired Barry Jackson as chief of staff to take over his office in the wake of Paula Nowakowski's sudden death earlier this month.

Jackson, who served as Boehner's top aide before leaving for a White House job under former President George W. Bush, is one of the Republican leader's oldest allies and most trusted confidantes. His return should help Boehner maintain continuity among his tight-knit staff.

Jackson has a long history with Boehner and was deeply involved in crafting and implementing the Contract with America in the 1990s. He was Boehner’s top aide until 2001, when he left to work for the Bush White House. . . . Jackson took over for Karl Rove in the White House after the latter left his post as Bush's top internal political adviser.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/26/AR2007032601979.html

Barry Jackson, a deputy to Rove, in 2003 used a "georgewbush.com" e-mail account to consult with Neil G. Volz, then an aide to lobbyist Jack Abramoff, about nominating one of Abramoff's Indian tribe clients for a Medal of Freedom, according to a copy of an e-mail. Abramoff is now serving a prison sentence for bank fraud, and Volz plead guilty to conspiracy charges last year.


http://www.dailykos.com/story/2006/2/3/02456/15013

From early on Jackson was GOP policy player. He helped form and sell the Contract with America. He was the Executive Director of the House Republican Conference from 1995 to 1998. This means that he has been at the table for every GOP scam over the last 16 years. He, like Boehner, was present at the birth of the K Street Project and they were both present when Jack Abramoff was chosen to be the point of the GOP spear for the Party's effort to control all Lobbying money in DC.

Back on April 17, 1996, the Hill published an article, Gallegly blasts GOP aides' trip to Saipan amid charges of labor abuses in Pacific territory, by Marcia Gelbart and Eamon Javers. The article dealt the chairman of the House Resources Subcommittee on Native American and Insular Affairs and his anger at Congressional aides taking trips to Saipan without getting his approval. . . . John Boehner's Chief of Staff, Barry Jackson, was one of the first to take a trip on Jack Abramoff's dime. . . .

By the late 1990s, Barry's patron, Rep. Boehner, has been replaced by JC Watts in a post 1998 election power struggle. That's when Barry finds a new patron: Karl Rove. . . . Over the year's Jackson has mostly kept to the shadows, but he did take the lead on pushing through the Medicare Part D Drug bill. . . . And he was a lead on the failed effort to privatize Social Security.


http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/3/28/122458/646

Jackson had a crew of college buddies that came along with him. When I saw the name Mike Connell, it caught my attention. . . . Connell was part of Jackson's crew at the University of Iowa in the early 1980s. I was there and remember then them well. . . .

In 1984, Jackson was leading a College Republican dirty tricks squad against Dem Candidate Tom Harkin. The Republican incumbent, Roger Jepsen, was a joke. He was channeling funds from the South Afikan BOSS to Iowa Right-To-Life. That financed a traveling rent-a-mob and phone-bank scams through Per Mar Security and Research. They stole a student election at the University of Iowa and stripped the left groups of funding, did black bag jobs, and sent thugs to attack anti-aparthied demonstrations.

One of the funny things, they had to scramble to cover the stink when one of their guys, skipped to Bahrain with all the proceeds from the homecoming buttion sales. Little gangster do grow up.

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Hawkowl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-05-10 11:52 AM
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4. Chain smoking heart attack?
Ahh. We can only hope.
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