GOVERNMENT / THE ELITE - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
What Cheney's blast revealed: A new White House lobbying scandal |
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from Attytood
Entered into the database on Thursday, February 16th, 2006 @ 11:08:40 MST |
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''I'm going to have lunch with Secretary of State Rice, talk a little
business; Mrs. Bush, talk a little business; we've got a friend
from South Texas here, named Katharine Armstrong; take a little
nap. I'm reading an Elmore Leonard book right now, knock off a little Elmore
Leonard this afternoon; go fishing with my man, Barney; a light dinner and
head to the ballgame. I get to bed about 9:30 p.m., wake up about 5 a.m. So
it's a perfect day.'' -- President George W. Bush, as quoted in the Aug. 22, 2005, New
York Times. For months now, reporters and bloggers have been digging for a picture
that would show President Bush with disgraced lobbyist and felon Jack Abramoff.
Maybe they've been looking for the wrong picture. Because there's a lobbyist
out there who has access to both Bush and Dick Cheney that Abramoff (or at least
his pals in Queens) might kill for. Her name is Katharine Armstrong -- whose family owns the Texas ranch where
Cheney shot his 78-year-old friend, Harry Whittington, on Saturday. What has
received virtually no attention in all the shooting hoopla is that the wealthy
ranch heiress is also a lobbyist -- a lobbyist who goes quail hunting with the
vice president and spends leisurely summer days with the leader of the free
world at his ranch in Crawford. Armstrong became a lobbyist just three short years ago. She had no prior experience
in lobbying, nor does she have a law degree. Her recent governmental experience
consists of her recent stint as chair of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission.
In recent years, the divorcee has been raising her three kids and been involved
in philanthropic causes around Dallas. So how's Armstrong doing in her new career? Quite well, thank you. In fact, companies are paying big bucks for the Texas-based Armstrong to lobby
the federal government in Washington -- including, yes, the White House. NBC
News' Aram Rostom is reporting tonight that Houston law firm Baker
Botts -- the favorite American law firm of the Saudi royal family, among
many international clients -- paid Armstrong $160,000 in 2004 to lobby the Bush
White House: The records indicate she was paid the money after she "communicated
with the White House on behalf of Baker Botts clients." In a phone interview, she told NBC News that in return for the money in one
case, she set up a meeting at the White House for a Baker Botts client, although
she said she felt she could not release the client’s name. "A meeting for doing something with one of their clients," she
said, describing the event. "I’m not at liberty to say which."
She says she cannot remember which White House official the meeting was with.
She also said that during the inauguration proceedings, she got Karl Rove
to speak at a Baker Botts function. "I got them Karl Rove," she
said. She insists that she never lobbied Bush or Cheney directly. But records reviewed last night by Attytood also show that the family-owned
King Ranch in Texas has paid Armstrong $10,000 to lobby the White House, as
well as the U.S. Department of Agriculture and lawmakers. And Baker Botts and the King Ranch are not the new lobbyist's only clients,
nor the only ones doing well with the Bush administration. In the first half of 2004, a pharmaceutical company called Prionics, which
specializes in testing for mad cow disease and related animal diseases, hired
Armstrong and another Bush friend working out of Austin, Karen Johnson, to lobby
the Bush administration. In her 2004 year-end report, Armstrong said she was
paid $120,000 for that period. According to their disclosure form, they "contacted Sec. Ann Veneman at
the Dept. of Agriculture regarding using Prionics testing methods to determine
BSE," referring to Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy. On April 8, 2004,
the company made this announcement: Prionics AG, the world leader in testing procedures for bovine spongiform
encephalopathy (BSE), or "mad cow" disease, and Roche Diagnostics,
the number one in-vitro diagnostics company in the world, announced today
that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has approved the two
Prionics BSE tests, Prionics(R)-Check WESTERN, and Prionics(R)-Check
LIA, for use in the United States' enhanced BSE surveillance program. Both
tests will be distributed by Roche Diagnostics in the United States Mission accomplished. Meanwhile, a Texas company called Trajen, specializing in aviation logistics
and fueling, hired Armstrong in 2004 to represent them in a dispute with the
Department of the Navy, and paid her $80,000 over two years, according to the
records. What kind of access does Armstrong enjoy. Well, you already know about her
"face time" -- oops, poor choice of words -- hunting with the vice
president at her family's other ranch in South Texas, and we told you about
her visit to Crawford last August. In November, Armstrong attended the official White House state dinner for Prince
Charles and his wife Camilla, and she was also on the list of overnight guests
who visited the Bush family at either the White House or Camp David. That's
a lot more than Hannukah rope-line access. One footnote. The reason for the Bush quote at the top? It was because of the
woman he would not see while he was hanging around with friend -- and lobbyist
-- Katharine Armstrong: Iraq war mother and protestor Cindy Sheehan. __________________________ Cheney's hunting host lobbied White House Ranch owner who divulged accident earned $160,000 for work in 2004 By Aram Roston Katharine Armstrong, whose family owns the ranch where Vice President Dick
Cheney accidentally shot a hunting partner, is a registered lobbyist who has
been paid to lobby the White House, according to records. Armstrong told NBC News in a telephone interview that she has never directly
lobbied Cheney as far as she remembers. "Never!" she said. And she says she does not remember directly lobbying
the president himself either. Armstrong was playing host to Cheney and to attorney Harry Whittington at her
50,000-acre spread 60 miles south of Corpus Christi when Cheney accidentally
shot Whittington on Saturday. The White House did not immediately release news
of the incident, but Armstrong said she told Cheney on Sunday morning that she
was going to inform the local paper, the Corpus Christi Caller-Times. She said
he agreed, and the newspaper reported it on its Web site Sunday afternoon. A statement issued Monday by Kenedy County (Texas) Sheriff Gilbert San Miguel,
who interviewed Cheney after the hunting accident, said that alcohol was not
a factor in the shooting. "The investigation reveals that there was no
alcohol, or misconduct involved in the incident," the sheriff said. ‘No comment’ on blood test At a news conference Wednesday outside Whittington’s hospital in Corpus
Christi, reporters asked hospital officials whether Whittington’s blood-alcohol
level had been tested. The officials responded with a "no comment."
In a recorded, on-the-record phone call with NBC News, Armstrong said that
beer may have been available at lunch that day. "If someone wants to help
themselves to a beer," she said, "they may, but I did not see anyone
do that," Armstrong says. She says she was not sure if there were beers
in the coolers but wasn't ready to rule it out: "There may be a beer or
two in there, but remember not everyone in the party was shooting," she
told NBC News. Armstrong added that she did not believe that Cheney or anyone else shooting
in the hunting party had alcohol on Saturday before the hunting accident. NBC News called the vice president’s office for comment four times Tuesday
and Wednesday and asked whether the vice president or anyone in the hunting
party had consumed any alcohol on Saturday prior to the accident. In an e-mail
statement Wednesday to NBC News, the vice president’s press secretary
referred NBC News to the Kenedy County Sheriff’s Department report on
the incident. Later in the day on Fox News, Brit Hume stated that Cheney told
him during a taped interview that he had had "a beer at lunch" before
the hunting incident. Armstrong was paid $160,000 in 2004 by the powerful legal firm Baker Botts
to lobby the White House, according to records she filed with the U.S. Senate
as required by lobbying disclosure rules. The records indicate she was paid
the money after she "communicated with the White House on behalf of Baker
Botts clients." Won't reveal client's name In a phone interview, she told NBC News that in return for the money in one
case, she set up a meeting at the White House for a Baker Botts client, although
she said she felt she could not release the client’s name. "A meeting for doing something with one of their clients," she said,
describing the event. "I’m not at liberty to say which." She
says she cannot remember which White House official the meeting was with. She
also said that during the inauguration proceedings, she got Karl Rove to speak
at a Baker Botts function. "I got them Karl Rove," she said. Records indicate that early in 2005 she ended her dealings with Baker Botts. In a subsequent interview, Armstrong told NBC News that Baker Botts asked her
not to discuss what she did for the firm. Reached late Tuesday afternoon, Baker
Botts had no comment on the story. Records also indicate that early the same year she ended her lobbying relationship
with another firm, Prionics, which had paid her to "work with the administration,"
on issues related to mad cow disease. Bush shot at ranch while governor Armstrong also told NBC News that while George W. Bush did shoot at her ranch
while he was Texas governor, she has never hosted him while he was president.
Armstrong said the shooting accident happened toward the end of the hunt on
Saturday, when it was still sunny but as darkness was encroaching and they were
preparing to go inside. She said Whittington made a mistake by not announcing
that he had walked up to rejoin the hunting line, and Cheney didn’t see
him as he tried to down a bird. Armstrong said she saw Cheney’s security detail running toward the scene.
"The first thing that crossed my mind was he had a heart problem,"
she told The Associated Press. The Associated Press contributed to this report. |