This Sunday we will have John Anderson here to discuss his fantastic book, "Follow The Money: How George W. Bush and the Texas Republicans Hog-Tied America." I have been re-reading the book this week in preparation for my book salon intro, with a handy pad of post-it page markers at the ready for important bits I want to mention.
At the moment, the book is a sea of post-it markers. You have got to read it.
I wanted to give everyone a little preview of what promises to be a fantastic chat on Sunday -- so here's a little excerpt of Follow the Money:
...If Gingrich was the architect of the Republican House ascendency, DeLay was soon to emerge as its financier, and therein lay his claim to power. The day before the Republicans were to organize the 104th Congress -- the first time in forty years that they were the majority party in both houses -- DeLay opened the doors of the majority whip's office for the purpose of setting in motion the innocently named Project Relief. The not-so-innocent goal of Project relief was to cut corporate taxes and loosen government regulations over big business. The name given the project was a pure piece of advertising (like Contract with America) -- but full of irony, foretelling an ominous future. The "victims" awaiting relief turned out not to be the country's many millions of poor and indigent, but instead were a handful of America's richest citizens and biggest corporations.
While Tom DeLay cracked the whip in public, his chief of staff, Ed Beckham, lurked, ever present, in the shadows. That no one outside Capitol Hill knew his name mattered little. For Buckham, elected to nothing, exercised the power that his boss had seized -- exercised it ruthlessly, too....
Another of [DeLay press secretary Tony] Rudy's tasks -- one that might at first glance have seemed menial to outsiders, but which actually brought with it significant power -- was to oversee the whip's "member maintenance" operation. This amounted to running a concierge service that provided Republican House members with private town cars and expensive meals -- at no charge -- during late-night votes. "The whole purpose of this," Rudy boasted, was "to treat members of Congress like kings and queens."
Buckham, however, wasn't content to be a concierge or even a gatekeeper. His boss, DeLay, had already shown the way. Where Gingrich was obsessed with ideology and with his personal place in history, for Buckham, as for DeLay, it was -- 24/7/365 -- all about the benjamins.
And that's just a tiny fraction of what Follow the Money digs into on Tom DeLay's K Street crony crowd. There is a LOT more: Jack Abramoff, Ralph Reed, Karl Rove, Grover Norquist and the corrupt little nest of vipers from their College Republican days, George W. Bush, Jim Baker and the Carlyle Group...you name it. It is all here. This is a book salon that you will not want to miss.
See everyone Sunday, November 25th, at 5 pm ET/2 pm PT for Follow the Money -- and a live chat with it's author, John Anderson, the former deputy editor of the American Lawyer.
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Zed!
Ha.
Good on ya. 4 was too much to ask for.
Bustednuckles @ 3
The hat trick was enough…
Evening all. How is everyone this evening? Anyone else watch the LSU/Arkansas game? (Go Mountaineers…guess what I’ll be watching tomorrow? *g*)
Christy, what is your take on the ‘Customary Immunity’ that was the basis of Rummy’s torture case dismissal?
Hi Christy. Sounds like an interesting book.
For
BuckhamDick Cheney, elected to nothing, exercised the power that his boss had seized — exercised it ruthlessly, too….Sorry, just had to correct that….
CTuttle at 6 — No idea. Haven’t run into that — might be a local law issue there. Did it have to do with him being a government official at the time that the decisions were made?
Christy Hardin Smith @ 5
The Hogs were hungrier… Beating them in Baton Rouge too… Priceless… *g*
Hi Christy!
I usually when I follow the money it is what is going out of my wallet. I must be in the wrong racket.
If being the financier brings one power, what does it mean for those who destroy capital?
OECD Predicts up to $300B in Mortgage-Based Losses Globally
A hundred billion here, a hundred billion there… Are we talking about real money yet?
Betsy at 7 — John is a native Texan, and his knowledge on the ins and outs of local TX politics is fascinating. Especially when you aren’t from TX, and haven’t had to watch it up close and personal.
CTuttle @ 10
I know THIS may sound un-American, but I don’t understand football. At all. My husband played in high school and has tried several times, without success.
Another reason we don’t have tv in our house..
Good evening Christy.
I was reading the excerpt above and just flat getting riled.
It’s no wonder the members of Congress look down their noses at us peons, after living so large on the largess of their corporate whores, we don’t stand a chance.
Whee!
Sounds like a good book for my Republican relatives.
While I absolutely love “urked,” I’m assuming that was meant to be “lurked”?
Busted — That’s only a taste. Poor Mr ReddHedd has had to live through me reading this book twice now. *g*
Christy Hardin Smith @ 9
Here’s the link…
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/n....._out_r.php
I don’t keep up with football but all I have heard this year from Razorback fans is “Fire Coach Nutt!”.. A bunch of folks even paid for a plane to fly over stadiums during game time with protest banners.. to which I said.. why don’t you all protest Bush and Pryor that way? I got less than *crickets* in reply.
Anyway… Why, oh why, isn’t Tom Delay in jail?
I keep hoping for the Grover Norquist takedown-into-the-mudpit. Lordy I want to see him gone. Thanks Grover for your brand of thinking for allowing the bridge collapse in Minnesota.
Mr. Redd Hedd must be a very good man.
Someone else who is on my ‘Hope to meet someday’ list.
Gawd, my favorite cast of characters of realtime corruption…and it’s still going on…why, why, why, why….won’t someone do something about these people!! (Read that as if you were hearing an extremely shrill voice, because that is what my mind is screaming)…
Grrrrrrrrr.
I’m fine now.
It’s no wonder the members of Congress look down their noses at us peons, after living so large on the largess of their corporate whores, we don’t stand a chance.
If only they didn’t have to deal with those damned annoying elections…
Poor bastards.
Does it make me a bad man that I will dance in the street when I read Gingrich and Delay’s obuts in the paper?
Peanutbutter — Thanks, I fixed it.
BTW, gang, one of the odder aspects of this is that Buckham is also DeLay’s minister. As in man of the cloth — an ordained nondenominational born again preacher-and-crony combo. Guess you can’t beat your corruption partner and absolution giver all wrapped up in one package, eh?
Essentially, it would seem to be an expose on the K Street Project… Any and all sunshine on it is certainly needed…
Christy Hardin Smith @ 26
Christianfascism? Similar to Islamofascism…
Christy Hardin Smith @ 26
Wow. Nondenominational, as in, DeLay can’t invoke Priest-penitent privilege? Or would that be too much to hope for…
Christy Hardin Smith @ 26
Why do so many of these guys remind me of Elmer Gantry. Nothing but opportunists, through and through.
CTuttle at 27 — Not just K Street. The corrupt money core of politics, Bush-style. This isn’t the whole story, not by a long shot, but this really gets to the heart of the smarmy corruption that has only been hinted at the last few years.
and you are wondering why FDR is crying
Ann at 30 — Every time I read one of these stories, I think Elmer Gantry. Gad to know it isn’t just me…
Christy Hardin Smith @ 31
I can’t get over the image in my head of this huge line of trmendous hogs with their heads in the trough.
It is the old tried and true philosophy of “if you aren’t cheating, you aren’t trying hard enough”.
“However, I told Tom that if he were seen as the driving force behind the impeachment effort, it would fail. A partisan impeachment of the president would never win conviction in the Senate. Tom didn’t care. He told me he couldn’t face his foster children if he did not demonstrate that Clinton’s activity was morally wrong.
My stomach wasn’t in this effort. I couldn’t match the energy of Rudy and Scanlon. They were everywhere, doing the briefing books, leaking to reporters, doing the legal research and whipping the members. They spread rumors that there was evidence that Clinton had raped a woman. I told Tom I was leaving, and he was very gracious. His attack dogs were already on the prowl. He didn’t need me.”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/.....00695.html
Toby Wollin @ 34
Funnel the Money
CTuttle @ 10
There is going to be a lot of WOOOOO Pig Sooie in Eureka’s neck of the woods tonight.
Christy Hardin Smith @ 26
A good portion of European history had that same combination. When Henry VIII didn’t get the absolution he wanted, it caused all kinds of problems . . .
Professionally speaking, absolution-givers must first be truth-tellers — especially when the truth is nasty and no one else will speak it. I’m guessing that’s not high on Buckham’s list of strengths.
Peterr — Have you watched any of The Tudors on Showtime? The whole first season explored that issue thoroughly. Extremely well written show…and the acting is superb. (Lots of nudity, though, so not for the kiddos…)
Sorry, Redd another minor edit…
Rudy boasted, was “to treat mebers of Congress like kings and queens.”
i shall NEVER forget this
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mn4daYJzyls
Christy Hardin Smith @ 26
“Non-denominational” basically means that he’s had minimal supervision by any church body. “Free to roam,” with little or no accountability. Does that tell you anything?
Bob in HI
Christy Hardin Smith @ 40
No, we don’t have Showtime.
I take it this might be worth looking for on DVD?
LS @ 36
“But I do know that Tom DeLay achieved great things for the Republican majority, the Congress and for the country.”
This guy is delusional.
CTuttle at 41 — Thanks. That’s what I get for copyediting while playing with The Peanut…my typing sucks if I’m not giving it my full attention.
Anderson does a great job of accumulating all the stories about Bush & Texas & money into one book, and in that it is a terrific read. I’m about halfway through, though, and I’ve learned nothing new. Can you tell me, Christy, if he breaks any new ground? Lots of the story is familiar to me, and I guess I was expecting some new tales from someone who’d followed the money as closely as Anderson.
Christy Hardin Smith @ 46
Are you wearing the boa today?
LS @ 36
This is sweet…
“…Tom prized the most aggressive staffers and most often heeded their counsel. As it turned out, three of them went over the line, abused the trust of House members and seemingly broke the law. A former hockey player, Tony Rudy was DeLay’s enforcer; he wasn’t evil, but lacked maturity and would do whatever necessary to protect his patron. Ed Buckham, DeLay’s chief of staff, gatekeeper and minister, constantly pushed DeLay to be more radical in his tactics and spun webs of intrigue we are only now beginning to unravel. And Michael Scanlon, who, in my experience, was a first-class rogue and a master of deception.”
Peterr — Absolutely. But I don’t know that it would be out on DVD just yet. Here’s the website for the show.
Now this is an “E” ticket…
Teddy at 47 — There isn’t a lot new in terms of the big storylines for me. But the inside bits on Baker, the behind-the-scenes on the Florida recount haggles, the personalities in play with all of the Texas political personalities — all of that was inside stuff that I hadn’t heard in detail. I knew the players, but I didn’t know some of the things they were doing under the radar.
And I always find the under the radar stuff fascinating. *g* Plus, having it all together in one, coherent narrative makes for one infuriating read. It’s would be a good introductory book for folks who haven’t been paying attention to these issues all along.
Bustednuckles @ 3
OT:Are you still here, BustedKnuckles? That link on the last thread to the Temples of Damanhur is amazing. Very beautiful.
There was someone who carved some beautiful room or rooms underground in the southwest here, but the gubmint made him fill them in. Aargh.
neokneme @ 51
Are you strapped in for the plunge?
CTuttle @ 54
That made me feel sick - O.
CTuttle @ 54
Only in America!
Nice sidelight: Rudy pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges for, among other things, arranging legislative favors for Jack Abramoff’s clients, in return for which Abramoff funneled money through his tame religious charity Toward Tradition (founder and professional moral scold Michael Medved was still on the board then) into his wife’s consulting firm.
Christy Hardin Smith @ 26
Now that IS convenient.
julia at 57 — Reading all of this in one fell swoop, I kept thinking two things: (1) jeebus, this reads like a huge racketeering and ponzi scheme and (2) how in the hell does anyone have the balls to lie this much to people’s faces and claim to be pious out of the other sides of their mouths.
Really appalling. And I already knew a lot of this in bits and pieces. But honestly, the scope of the mendacity is beyond what even a criminal lawyer would believe if this were a work of fiction.
“Follow the Money”… hmmm. “Follow the money…” Seems to me I’ve heard that phrase before. Hmmm.
…Oh, wait– wasn’t that what Deep Throat told Woodward & Bernstein????
What does Anderson have to say about Abramoff?
Follow the money!
I’ll bet Rove was involved. And Gonzo was probably right in there, too, obstructing justice right and left, to make sure that anyone who started sniffing around didn’t follow the trail very far.
With the French, the saying was that the key to any investigation was “Cherchez le femme.” In America, it apparently is “Follow the money,” perhaps supplemented by “look for deviant sexual behavior.”
Bob in HI
Oh, he’s probably just tired…
Christy Hardin Smith @ 52
That’s an excellent point I hadn’t thought of — Anderson’s book provides a gateway into all of the nastiness for someone who’s not followed it. If you’ve got a curious newly politically interested friend, it’s a wonderful gift.
TeddySanFran @ 62
Or, someone who has an almost unendless supply of the capacity to sustain rage for 24/7.
Christy Hardin Smith @ 59
So why is Delay still a free man? Inquiring minds want to know… 8-(
greenwarrior @ 53
I was explaining EPU to a first time poster on the last thread.
BTW Christy, I emailed that link to you earlier, check it out, soooo beautiful.
TeddySanFran @ 62
I Am Curious / Yellow Rose
CTuttle at 64 — Because they haven’t flipped the right person up the chain, yet. Rumor has it, though, that Buckham has been asked to chat it up with the Feds…don’t know it for certain, but I’ve heard it from more than one person. (And yes, I am looking into more detail if I can get it.)
Christy Hardin Smith @ 59
Lying politically and lying piously are *not* all that different. No separation of church and state among liars like this. “It’s all in the service of a greater good.” Give me a break.
And a fast glance at that “Tudors” website really makes me wish we had Showtime. Oh well . . . the DVD goes on the 2009 Christmas list (or whenever it comes out).
via Calitics at msnbc:
I’d like to know a lot more about this guy…
Well, my “snake hunt” today turned up nuttin’! 5 Targets, 1 Walmart, 2 major shopping centers and not one little petitioner anywhere to be found… Have they collected enough signatures? Did everybody quit or not show up today? Have they changed their tactics?
a mystery to be sure.
punaise @ 66
Now I’ve got to wipe up my keyboard.
Christy Hardin Smith @ 67
Heh, the wheels of justice can turn infernally slowly, eh? ;-)
On Buckham, a federal grand jury subpoenaed business records from him in September of this year, FYI. The Muck has some reporting on that as I recall, as did the wire services. So they are working up the chain…it just takes some time.
IIRC, a country music singer with the name John Anderson was a bright young talent in the 1980’s with a hit or two. Is this Texas author the same fellow?
hackworth — I don’t think so…
hackworth @ 73
It’s a fairly common name including the former Congressman from Illinois who ran for President as an Independent.
dakine01 @ 75
Actually, wasn’t it on the Libertarian Ticket?
CTuttle @ 76
No — Independent. (Though he might have been endorsed by certain state libertarian parties.)
Toby Wollin @ 14
I don’t understand it either, and I live in Ohio. I see the ball in the air, it lands, a bunch of people pile onto it and…that is where I lose track of the ball, and lose interest.
I do love baseball though.
Peterr @ 77
Okay, I remember him on Hawaii’s ballot as Libertarian…
This may not be directly involved, but it could be, in as far as “backdoor” software that hides financial activities from auditors…
The corruption could be occurring in the background, but up front the money looks fairly “normal”…unless they slip up. This is what Indira Singh has been talking about.
With the players involved in all of the RNC type corruption, I wonder if it is a way they have covered up the laundering of the money…I’m not saying the following like is accurate, but it does make one sit up and take notice, considering the trillions of missing dollars from all over the government, as well as the appearance of bribery and perhaps blackmail. Interesting, anyway:
http://www.webcom.com/~lpease/.....inslaw.htm
LS at 80 — One of the things that John talks about in the book is the series of interconnected shell and dummy companies that Abramoff and Scanlon, among others, set up to launder money through. And, of course, on the way to and from, Reed and Norquist both got a cut of a lot of it.
wow, this sounds like one incredible read
it looks like delay might have been even more responsible for the fall of our country then cheney and bush
and this man gets to still be a pundit on the TEEvee
we need our media back and we need to make it brutally clear the depravity of this individual
I would LOVE to see a moore documentary and I would LOVE to see them try to say moore is exagerating
I want our media back, I will throw my full weight and support behind the first person to say thier top 5 items of to accomplish is the break up of corporate owned media
that is HUGE
another top five is eliminate corporate buying law, no more campaign contributions from corporations, if they want to contribute they have to disolve their corporation
NO FREE SPEECH FOR CORPORATIONS
and a constitutional amendment
MONEY IS NOT SPEECH
I want the fairness doctrine back on the books, I Want the agencies that provide oversite to be to be staffed with professionals that do not have a vested interest in the profit of those industries they monitor
these are the platforms that will get ALL americans behind a candidate, it will get republicans voting for them, it will get wingnuts voting for them
nobody wants their media run by five corporations, not even the wing nuts…we must break that up immediately
nobody wants corporations to have the ability to buy our law, not even the wingnuts
nobody wants corporations to be able to buy politicians, not even the wingunuts
these are the winning issues
Christy Hardin Smith @ 67
And I’m sure that the U.S. Attorneys NOT canned last December aren’t exactly scrambling to expedite efforts; there may be white hats left in their ranks, but they may be thwarted by folks above them or just below them, too. Priority may not have been given to DeLay (R), for example, where in other states and under other U.S. Attorneys, cases like Siegelman (D-AL) were put at the top of the heap.
Agh, I hate being this cynical — and I hate even more that being this cynical means being realistic about the state of our justice system under Bush.
Christy Hardin Smith @ 81
I’m dyin’ to read it!!!
Rayne — Alice Fisher, former DeLay associate is in charge of the public corruption unit at the DOJ. I’d say there are many questions that ought to be asked — that Jane has been asking for ages — about whether things are being stifled or not.
Rayne @ 83
You’re not being cynical, political prosecutions have been skewed heavily against Dems, to the tune of 85% against Dems, versus 15% against Repugs… That’s from DoJ’s own numbers…
OT..I wonder if the up coming movie release has anything to do with this:
A Canadian school board has decided to remove Philip Pullman’s books from its schools’ shelves because people complained that the author is an atheist. This is a remarkable objection, obviously. I mean, we don’t see school boards screaming to remove Chuck Colson’s books from the shelves because the author is a convicted felon, which seems to me to be a much more serious indicator of moral turpitude than atheism, nor do we see a call to eject books by Ann Coulter because she is incredibly stupid, and is therefore a poor role model for students. It’s just atheism that spurs this objection.
(snip)
scienceblogs
And….there’s always Gonzo….Goddess only knows what he stifled…all of it without a doubt…in-between torture and spying, of course.
The people all need to be in jail. Every last one of them. It is so frustrating…what kind of solid evidence is it going to take????
From Skippy the Bush Kangaroo:Watch outTrex!!!
AZ Matt @ 21
It’s coming, but slowly. Grover and the Club for Growth are bound up with Howard Rich and the Americans for Limited Government; they are two sides of a very nasty coin. One of their primary purposes is to push the Overton Window as far as possible to the right, while sucking down the resources of states’ governments with a plethora of ballot initiatives. Anti-gay marriage? that’s the ALG. Anti-tax/Anti-spending? that’s the CFG — and there are more initiatives they push besides these. Between them they try to put up several ballot initiatives a year, to motivate swing/marginal/libertarian voters to the polls, while trying to drain down the resources of progressive organizations and state governments to either fend off or manage responses to these initiatives.
While we’re preoccupied with anti-gay marriage/eminent domain/anti-tax and a myriad of other button-pushing, polarizing ballot initiatives, folks like DeLay, Buckham, Ralph Reed, Abramoff were shaking down the Native Americans and finding other ways to move around large amounts of cash to buy access, influence Congress, and corrupt the electoral process.
Christy used the right word: racketeering. It’s all one massive racket the size and scale of which the world has never seen before.
I’ll bet that 99% of the whole shebang is due to closeted, sexual bribery of some sort. Remember, during Bush41, there was the Franklin cover-up. What better vulnerabilities to take advantage of to get people to do your bidding…provide the services and then blackmail them by…for example..spying on them; all the while calling black white, and white black.
AZ Matt @ 89
11. homosexuality and Larry Craig
12. homosexuality and Karl Rove
13. homosexuality and Jeff Gannon
14. homosexuality and Little Boots
15. homosexuality and Mark Foley
16. homosexuality and and Clinton’s BJ
17. . . .well you get the picture
RICO, RICO, RICO!!!! Bring it on!!!!