TPJ News Release NVRI News Release Analysis of 312
New Pioneers
List of All
Known Pioneers
Top Pioneer Pledgers
Deposition 1
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Deposition 2
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Bush Campaign
Pioneer Spreadsheet
Lawsuit Smokes Out 312 More
Bush Pioneer Fundraisers 

 A federal lawsuit has smoked out 312 previously unknown individuals who volunteered to become part of George W. Bush’s record-breaking 2000 “Pioneer” presidential fundraising effort. This new information more than doubles the previously known list of participants in the Pioneer program, which the campaign once shrouded in complete secrecy.

The new disclosure also provides some data on the total amount of money that some previously known Pioneers delivered to the campaign. Topping this list are business partners William DeWitt and Mercer Reynolds, whom the new records reveal supported Bush to an extent rivaled perhaps only by Enron. Sharing the same Pioneer tracking number, these two men (who bailed out Bush’s hemorrhaging Bush Oil Co. in 1984 and invested in the Texas Rangers venture that made Bush a millionaire 15 times over) delivered a minimum of $605,082 in Pioneer money.1

The largest known single individual Pioneer fundraiser was Michigan real estate magnate Ronald Weiser, who delivered a minimum of $588,309. Weiser apparently got illicit help in this effort in 1999, when then-Michigan House Speaker Chuck Perricone used his state staff and office to coax colleagues to attend a fundraiser featuring Bush and Weiser. 

Super Pioneers Who Raised $200,000 or More
Pioneer Names
State
Minimum Amount
Raised
William Dewitt/Mercer Reynolds
OH
$605,082
Ronald Weiser
MI
$588,309
Howard Leach/ Kristen Hueter
CA
$429,610
Roger Williams
TX
$388,266
Rudy Boschwitz
MN
$388,193
Charles Cawley
DE
$369,156
Katherine Boyd
CA
$344,415
Bill Owens
CO
$332,683
Jennifer Dunn
WA
$309,568
C. Michael Kojaian/Heinz Prechter/J.C. Huizenga
MI
$301,760
Raul Romero/Karen Johnson/Thomas Johnson
TX
$290,281
Bradford Freeman
CA
$273,025
Tom Ridge
PA
$251,550
Daniel Branch
TX
$249,950
Lee Bass
TX
$236,150
R. Steven Hicks
TX
$220,700
Thomas Marinis/Joe B. Allen/Robert Whilden
TX
$217,550
Joseph Bogosian/ Jose Fourquet
VA/NY
$212,861
Robert Wood Johnson
NY
$212,100
Alexander Spanos
CA
$209,350
Frederick Webber
VA
$206,104
 
 Total:
$6,636,664

After a July 1999 Texans for Public Justice disclosure request, the Bush campaign began revealing the names of those Pioneers whom it said successfully raised $100,000 or more. By the time Bush became the Republican Party’s official nominee in the summer of 2000, his campaign had disclosed the names of 226 Pioneers who collectively had raised a minimum of $22.6 million. After his nomination, Bush accepted federal campaign funds, which barred him from raising any more private campaign money.

With the new disclosure list there are 538 individuals known to have answered the Pioneer call. If these Pioneers raised an average of $100,000 each, they would have delivered a staggering $53.8 million to the Bush campaign. The Bush campaign claims that it does not know the total amount raised by each participant or the program as a whole. The new disclosure contains actual contribution data on just 212 Pioneers, who individually raised between $7,000 and $588,309 (Weiser). The incomplete records indicate that these 212 Pioneer volunteers raised $25 million. The records indicate that ex-Enron chief Ken Lay raised a minimum of $112,050.

Observers long suspected that Bush’s disclosures on his Pioneer program were incomplete—if not selective. Bush Pioneer coordinator Jim Francis told the media that almost 400 individuals already had taken the Pioneer pledge by July 1999. An April 2000 article reported that the campaign had revealed just one-third of the names that appeared on campaign Pioneer lists obtained by The Nation. In fact, six of the eleven new Pioneers that the Nation reported by name still have not been disclosed by the campaign as of its latest disclosure. As it happens, all six of these missing names have worked the corporate lobby.2

As with the corporate-lobbyist Pioneer volunteers whom only the Nation disclosed, the campaign may have been reluctant to reveal some of the newly disclosed names. These include: 


States Known To Produce
Multiple New Pioneers
State Count
TX
201
CA
18
DC
16
CT
9
PA
9
Unknown 
9
NY
7
FL
7
VA
5
MD
4
OH
3
LA
3
MA
3
GA
2
IA
2
MI
2
  • Lonnie “Bo” Pilgrim, chair of Pilgrim’s Pride poultry, which owns a meat plant that is a suspect in a federal probe of a listeria outbreak that killed eight people in the summer of 2002;
  • Jeffrey Barbakow, CEO of Tenet Healthcare, which federal prosecutors are investigating following excessive Medicare billing allegations;
  • Resigned Dynegy CEO Chuck Watson and El Paso Energy CEO William Wise, whose companies have been battered by Enronesque allegations of accounting fraud and “round-trip trading;”
  • Ray Hunt, whose Hunt Oil has teamed up with Halliburton to build a gas pipeline through a Peruvian rain forest that is home to remote indigenous tribes (seven workers have died on this job, which the Peruvian government recently fined $1 million for environmental violations);3
  • The Hunt Building Corp. of Woody Hunt (unrelated to Ray Hunt) paid $8.8 million in 1999 to settle federal charges that shoddy Air Force housing it built in South Dakota could not withstand strong wind gusts;
  • Maxxam, Inc. Chair Charles Hurwitz, who recently settled federal banking charges related to the $1.6 billion failure of his S&L for a mere $206,000 (a Hurwitz-owned redwood forest became a pawn in this match);
  • U.S. Tobacco Vice President Ed Kratovil and tobacco lobbyist and former Republican National Committee Chair Haley Barbour;
  • Raymond Hemmig, chair of ACE Cash Express, which fleeces the working poor with high fees and interest rates on bank-like services;4
  • While corporate takeover king T. Boone Pickens is not listed, he appears to be the paterfamilias of a remarkable five-Pioneer family;5
  • Political consultant Mark J. Block, who paid $15,000 in 2001 to settle charges that he illegally coordinated the campaign of Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Jon Wilcox with a school-choice organization (fined $10,000 himself, Justice Wilcox cast the deciding vote upholding Milwaukee’s school-choice program);
Known Interest Categories
Of 252 New Pioneers
Useful Cateogry Count
Lawyers & Lobbyists
49
Energy & Natural Resources 
44
Miscellaneous Business
37
Finance
34
Real Estate
14
Communications
14
Health
12
Electronics
11
Construction
10
Transportation
7
Other
7
Insurance
7
Agriculture
5
Ideological
1
TOTAL:
252
The strangest Pioneer bedfellows are previously disclosed Pioneer Ken Lay and newly disclosed Sandra Stein, an attorney at Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes & Lerach, which is leading the private litigation charge against Enron and Lay. Other notable new disclosures include Texas Congressman Mac Thornberry, current House Majority Whip family lobbyist Randy DeLay and presumptive next Texas House Speaker Tom Craddick.

With the home states of nine Pioneers still unidentified, Bush’s home state produced 201 new Pioneers, or almost two-thirds of the fundraising program’s new names. California was a distant second (16 new names), followed by Washington, DC (16), Connecticut and Pennsylvania (nine each) and New York and Florida (seven each).


So far, sufficient data have been collected to categorize 252 of the new Pioneers by the industry of their employers. Lawyering and lobbying employs 49 of the newly released Pioneer volunteers. The Energy & Natural Resources industry, in which Bush once dabbled, was the runner up, producing 44 new Pioneer participants.

The incomplete contribution data just released reveals that 15 Super Pioneers raised more than $200,000 apiece. The campaign credited more than $200,000 to nine other tracking numbers that appear to have been shared by two or three individuals in an apparent Pioneer buddy system.

Six newly disclosed Pioneer volunteers were rewarded with pajama parties at the White House, including Bush’s Texas Rangers partner Tom Bernstein, golfer Ben Crenshaw and Katherine Idsal, daughter of Richard Nixon advisor Anne Armstrong.
 

New Pioneers Who Slept in the Bush White House
Pioneer Employment Industry City State
Tobin Armstrong Armstrong Ranch owner Agriculture Armstrong TX
Tom Bernstein Chelsea Piers president Entertainment Riverdale NY
Neil Bush Ignite! Inc. CEO Education Houston TX
Ben Crenshaw Pro golfer Entertainment Austin TX
Katherine Idsal UICI Insurance executive's wife Insurance Dallas TX
Adair Margo Adair Margo Art Gallery Art El Paso TX



1  Tom Hicks (who bought the Rangers from Bush) and his partner John Muse of the takeover firm Hicks Muse Tate & Furst also appear in the new disclosures. Previously the campaign just identified brother R. Steven Hicks as a Pioneer.
2  Charlie Black (Phillip Morris); Nick Calio (who is again exiting the White House lobby’s revolving door), C. Boyden Gray (Citizens for a Sound Economy) J. Steven Hart (AT&T, DuPont and Genentech), W. Henson Moore (American Paper & Forest Assoc.) and Deborah Steelman (health care industry lobby).
3  Evironmentalists are opposing the project’s request for U.S. funding through the Export-Import Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank (where the U.S. representative is fellow Pioneer Jose Forquet).
4  Previously disclosed Pioneers Marshall Payne and Edward Rose were big ACE investors, as well as business partners with Bush in the Rangers deal.
5  The previously disclosed Robert H. Pickens is now joined by Bryan, John, Mike and William Pickens, all of Dallas.



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