http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/041/oped/This_Cabinet_is_full_of_corporate_America+.shtml
This Cabinet is full of corporate America
By Molly Ivins, 2/10/2001
AUSTIN, Texas
JIM HIGHTOWER, an invaluable public citizen, once
suggested that politicians be forced to wear the corporate logos of their
biggest donors in the fashion of NASCAR race drivers so we’d know whom they’d
sold out to.
Hightower once again has his eye on the shell with the pea
under it when it comes to President Bush’s Cabinet.
The pundit corps has been swooning over the diversity of
Bush’s picks - four women, a Cuban-American, two African-Americans, a
Japanese-American, a Lebanese-American, a Chinese-American, and a Democrat.
President Inclusive chooses a Cabinet that looks like
America. Just one catch: Every member is a corporate creature. In fact, the
corporations have just taken over the government. Why hire lobbyists when your
CEOs and board members are running the show? Who’s left to lobby?
Until recently, Real President Dick Cheney was CEO of
Halliburton Inc., the giant oil field services firm that has been making money
and trading with Iraq despite the sanctions through its subsidiaries Dresser-Rand
and Ingersoll-Dresser Pump.
Courtesy of the Hightower newsletter, here are some of
those now running the country:
Elaine Chao (Labor): an investment banker and corporate
director, former vice president of Bank of America and board member for
Northwest Airlines, Dole Food, Clorox, and Columbia//HCA Health Care.
Norman Mineta (Transportation): corporate VP for Lockheed
Martin; also former chairman of the House Transportation Committee, where his
major contributors were the American Trucking Association, Boeing, General
Electric, Greyhound, Lockheed, Northwest Airlines, UPS, Union Pacific, and
United Airlines.
Paul O’Neill (Treasury): CEO of Alcoa, the aluminum giant,
previously CEO of International Paper Co., and on the boards of Eastman Kodak
and Lucent Technologies.
Gale Norton (Interior): formerly with the Mountain States
Legal Foundation, an anti-environmental group funded by oil companies.
Prominent member of “property rights” groups funded by Boise Cascade, Du Pont,
and Louisiana Pacific; national chairwoman of the Coalition for Republican Environmental
Advocates, funded by the American Forest Paper Association, Amoco, Arco, the Chemical
Manufacturers Association, and Ford.
John Ashcroft (attorney general): sponsor of last year’s
Senate bill to extend the patent on the superprofitable allergy pill Claritin,
owned by the giant pharmaceutical firm Schering-Plough, which gave him $50,000
for his last Senate campaign. He also got $1.7 million from oil, chemical, and paper
companies that were grateful for Ashcroft’s opposition to funding environmental
enforcement, voting for rollback of clean water protections and letting mining companies
dump cyanide and other wastes on public land.
As Hightower has observed, if you wonder why these issues
didn’t come up in his confirmation hearings, consider the state of the
Democratic Party and the effects of campaign contributions.
Rod Paige (Education): formerly Houston school
superintendent, where he promoted corporatization - food service went to
Aramark Inc., payroll to Peoplesoft, and accounting to SAP.
Last year he cut an exclusive marketing deal with
Coca-Cola to put machines in the school hallways. He also brought in Primed
Corp.’s Channel One, the (so-called) “educational channel” that spends two out
of every 10 minutes of broadcast time selling M&M/Mars, Pepsico, Reebok, and
Nintendo.
Colin Powell (State): on the board of America Online and
recipient of $100,000 a speech to a list of corporations too long to believe.
Anthony Principi (Veterans Affairs): heir to family-owned
real estate company, also former president of QTC Medical Services Inc.; later
with Lockheed Martin and most recently president of the airless technology firm
Federal Network.
Donald Rumsfeld (Defense): formerly CEO of General
Instrument Corp. and drug giant G.D.
Searle & Co., also on the boards of Asea Brown Boveri,
a huge Swedish engineering firm, and the Rand Corp. Also on the advisory board
of Salomon Smith Barney, the Wall Street investment firm.
Ann Veneman (Agriculture): lawyer with a firm specializing
in representing agribusiness giants and biotech corporations. On board of
Calgene Inc., a subsidiary of Monsanto, the first firm to market genetically
altered food. Also a participant in the International Policy Council of
Agriculture, Food and Trade, a group funded by Monsanto, Cargill,
Archer-Daniels-Midland, Kraft, and Nestle.
Tommy Thompson (Health and Human Services): former
governor of Wisconsin whose major contributors were HMOs, hospital chains,
nursing homes, clinics, doctors, and insurance companies. Philip Morris gave
him $72,000 in campaign contributions.
Spencer Abraham (Energy): one-term senator from Michigan
who sponsored a bill to abolish the Energy Department. Active in fight over
requiring greater fuel efficiency from SUVs, giving him brownie points with the
energy and auto industries.
Mel Martinez (HUD): no corporate connections; formerly the
top manager of Orange County, Fla.
That’s Orlando/Disney World, and if you have visited, you
know that ending urban sprawl is not his specialty.
Molly Ivins is a syndicated columnist.
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