Political Accountability: |
June 05, 2002 |
WorldCom-mies Penetrated
Texas State Government!
Under the nose of Texas’ Homeland Security Task Force, rogue WorldCom Corp. openly bought influence with Texas politicians through an Austin PAC and 11 hired guns.
WorldCom recently decapitated its top management after admitting that it bamboozled investors by inflating its profits by $3.8 billion since 2001. The company now says new audits are likely to shave another $1 billion off its reported profits.
The non-federal campaigns of Texas statewide and legislative candidates took more than $135,000 from MCI WorldCom’s PAC and executives since 1997, when MCI and WorldCom announced their merger. MCI WorldCom TEXPAC moved most of this money. The PAC’s donors include newly fired WorldCom CFO Scott Sullivan and current Chief Operating Officer Ronald Beaumont—who just stepped down as host of a U.S. Senate fundraiser for John Cornyn. The top recipients of MCI WorldCom money are Governor Rick Perry and Attorney General John Cornyn (see table 2).
WorldCom also paid 11 lobbyists up to $675,000 in the last legislative session. Its hired guns include former Bush gubernatorial aides Roy Coffee and Reggie Bashur (Bashur’s move from the Governor’s Office into the lobby helped prompt Bush to adopt belated revolving-door rules for his staff). WorldCom also hired three ex-legislators and ex-Public Utilities Commissioner Marta Greytok.
WorldCom-mies In Texas' Lobby (12/31/01)
Lobbyist | Background | Max. Value of Contract |
Min. Value of Contract |
Reggie Bashur | GOP consultant/lobbyist | $100,000 |
$50,000 |
Marta Greytok | Ex-PUC Commissioner | $100,000 |
$50,000 |
*†Neal Larsen | Top MCI Austin staff lobbyist | $100,000 |
$50,000 |
*Jamie P. Luby | WorldCom TEXPAC Treasurer | $100,000 |
$50,000 |
Roy C. Coffee | Gov. Bush's top D.C. lobbyist | $50,000 |
$25,000 |
Richard G. Hardy | Hardy & Assoc. lobby firm | $50,000 |
$20,000 |
*Mark Seale | Ex-aide to Ex-Sen. Jerry Patterson | $50,000 |
$25,000 |
Hector Uribe | Ex-Legislator | $50,000 |
$25,000 |
Hilary B. Doran Jr. | Ex-Legislator | $25,000 |
$10,000 |
*Alfred R. Herrera | MCI Senior Counsel | $25,000 |
$10,000 |
William E. Siebert | Ex-Legislator | $25,000 |
$10,000 |
TOTAL: |
$675,000 |
$325,000 |
|
Donor to MCI WorldCom TEXPAC; † Gave $5,000 to Rick Perry on 9/2/99. |
Since its merger, one of MCI WorldCom’s main objectives has been to get the Texas Legislature and Public Utility Commission (PUC) to lower the fees that other phone companies must pay to access Southwestern Bell’s local phone lines. While lower fees stimulate competition, lawmakers and regulators have been slow to embrace this reform as a result of Southwestern Bell’s vastly superior clout. Its parent company, SBC Corp., spent up to $6.9 million on 96 Texas lobby contracts in 2001.
Whether it was criminal intent or extraordinary negligence that prompted WorldCom to bilk investors out of billions of dollars has little effect on the misfortunes of its victims. So far, just a few Texas politicians have elevated WorldCom to Enron-scandal status by returning this money or donating it to WorldCom victim funds.
Yet the top recipients of this money say they will return just pennies on the dollar. Governor Perry, who took at least $32,500 from WorldCom’s PAC and executives, has said he will return $10,000. Cornyn, whose attorney general campaign took $15,000, said he will return just the $5,000 received by his U.S. Senate campaign.
In contrast, Comptroller Carole Keeton Rylander has said she will return $4,500 in WorldCom money. That is more than the $2,000 reported here because her campaign says it went all the back to 1994 contributions to purge itself of this dirty money.
After WorldCom bamboozled investors with accounting tricks that disclosed just a fraction of its actual business expenses, politicians should not try to bamboozle voters by returning just a fraction of their total WorldCom receipts. The public deserves a full accounting when it comes to the politics of business and the business of politics.
Candidate | Amount Since '97 |
Rick Perry | $32,500 |
John Cornyn | $15,000 |
David Sibley | $7,500 |
Steven Wolens | $7,000 |
John Carona | $6,000 |
Ken Armbrister | $4,500 |
Jeff Wentworth | $4,500 |
Greg Abbott | $3,000 |
Kip Averitt | $3,000 |
Gonzalo Barrientos | $3,000 |
Fred Hill | $3,000 |
James 'Pete' Laney | $3,000 |
Florence Shapiro | $3,000 |
Juan J. Hinojosa | $2,500 |
Kyle Janek | $2,500 |
David Bernsen | $2,000 |
David H. Cain | $2,000 |
Frank Madla | $2,000 |
Rene Oliveira | $2,000 |
Carole K. Rylander | $2,000 |
Todd Staples | $2,000 |
Barry Williamson | $2,000 |
Buster Brown | $1,000 |
George W. Bush | $1,000 |
David Counts | $1,000 |
Robert Duncan | $1,000 |
Craig Estes | $1,000 |
Troy Fraser | $1,000 |
Mario Gallegos, Jr. | $1,000 |
J.M. Jackson | $1,000 |
Mike Jackson | $1,000 |
Jon Lindsay | $1,000 |
Eduardo Lucio | $1,000 |
Jim Mattox | $1,000 |
Michael Moncrief | $1,000 |
Jane Nelson | $1,000 |
Steve Ogden | $1,000 |
Bill Ratliff | $1,000 |
Eliot Shapleigh | $1,000 |
John Sharp | $1,000 |
Leticia Van De Putte | $1,000 |
Royce West | $1,000 |
John Whitmire | $1,000 |
TOTAL: |
$135,000 |
Note: Covers Jan. 1997 through April 1, 2002. |