'DeLay Inc.' Lobbying Firm Has Links to Three Capital Scandals
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DeLay's Bid to Return to US Leadership in Jeopardy [
'DeLay Inc.' Lobbying Firm Has Links to Three Capital Scandals
Bloomberg
Friday 06 January 2005
Representative Tom DeLay's campaign to get Republicans to dominate Washington lobbying may have worked too well for Alexander Strategy Group.
The firm has links to no fewer than three of the scandals convulsing the US capital. One partner, former DeLay aide Tony Rudy, is now a focus of a federal investigation of lobbyist Jack Abramoff. The group's founder, former DeLay chief of staff Ed Buckham, set up a South Korea junket for his old boss that violated ethics rules. And the firm represents a company whose owner, prosecutors allege, bribed former Representative Randy Cunningham.
Alexander Strategy's links to lawmakers are an outgrowth of a decade-long effort by DeLay, 58, to force lobbying firms to hire more Republicans, who can direct corporate money to the party. The system, known as "DeLay Inc." or "the K Street Project," has fueled a surge of money in politics, and critics say it has also created the potential for greater corruption.
"Alexander Strategy Group is really part of DeLay Inc. and Abramoff Inc.," said Melanie Sloan, a former federal prosecutor who now heads Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, an ethics watchdog group. "There have been some aggressive prosecutors trying to unravel those ties. I am sure that Alexander Strategy is going to have more than Tony Rudy as a problem when this is over."
Rapid Growth
Alexander's ties to DeLay, a Texas Republican and the former House majority leader, helped it become one of Washington's fastest-growing lobbying firms, with revenue surging 20-fold from 2000 to 2004, according to lobbying- disclosure reports.
Its DeLay ties go well beyond Rudy and Buckham. Jim Ellis, the head of DeLay's political action committee, Americans for a Republican Majority, also worked for the firm as a lobbyist. Karl Gallant, who preceded Ellis as head of DeLay's political action committee, is currently an Alexander lobbyist. And the firm employed DeLay's wife, Christine, from 1998 to 2002, paying her from $3,200 to $3,400 a month, according to Richard Cullen, a lawyer for the former majority leader.
Another congressional spouse, Julia Doolittle, wife of California Republican John Doolittle, helped Alexander with bookkeeping for one of its clients, according to Justice Department records.
Ellis faces money-laundering charges in Texas along with DeLay, who was forced to give up his leadership post after his September indictment. The case involves his PAC's alleged attempts to steer corporate money to state legislative races.
From 2000 to 2003, the PAC paid at least $388,000 to Alexander in fund-raising fees, FEC and Internal Revenue Service records show.
'Nothing Wrong'
Buckham and Rudy didn't return phone calls seeking comment. Cullen, DeLay's lawyer, denied his client engaged in any wrongdoing. DeLay "knows that he has done nothing wrong," Cullen said on Jan. 3, after Abramoff pleaded guilty to conspiracy, mail fraud and tax evasion in the Justice Department investigation of political corruption.
The DeLay-Buckham connection helped Alexander thrive. The company, whose offices are along the Potomac River in Washington's fashionable Georgetown district, brought in $7.8 million in 2004, an average of $650,000 for each of its 12 registered lobbyists, according to disclosures filed with Congress. That compares with an average of about $250,000 per registered lobbyist last year at Patton Boggs LLP, Washington's biggest lobbying firm by revenue. Patton Boggs had revenue of $30.6 million in 2004.
Giving to Republicans
Some of Alexander's money found its way to the Republican Party. Its lobbyists gave at least $376,608 to Republican candidates and party committees since 2001, according to Federal Election Commission records. The 12 gave a total of $1,000 to Democrats during that period.
"The largest public image of DeLay Inc. would be Alexander Strategy Group," said Kent Cooper, a former FEC official who co-founded PoliticalMoneyLine, a Washington-based company that tracks political finance. The firm's relationships with DeLay and other lawmakers and spouses "might be what prosecutors are looking at."
Prosecutors are clearly looking at Rudy, 39, DeLay's former deputy staff chief. Abramoff's plea agreement states that in 2000 a DeLay aide the government called "Staffer A" helped the lobbyist defeat legislation that would have restricted Internet gambling. People familiar with the case later said the staffer was Rudy. In return, the wife of "Staffer A" was paid $50,000 through a charity, according to the plea. Rudy hasn't been charged with a crime.
Measure Defeated
In July 2000, DeLay was one of 44 Republicans who voted against the Internet Gambling Prohibition Act, while 165 party members supported it. The legislation, which required 270 votes to pass, fell short by 25 votes.
Alexander was also employed by Abramoff associate Michael Scanlon, a former communications director for DeLay. Scanlon's public-relations company, Capitol Campaign Strategies LLC, paid $120,000 to the firm in 2002, according to records released by the Senate Indian Affairs Committee in November.
Justice Department records show that Alexander was behind a nonprofit association - the Korea-US Exchange Council - that was financed by South Korea's Hanwha Group and that flew DeLay to Korea in August 2001. Congressional ethics rules ban registered foreign agents from funding travel by members of Congress; the trip added to the cloud of controversy surrounding DeLay when it was reported by the Washington Post in March.
Possible Violation
Alexander, whose lobbyists signed the council's tax returns, may be in violation of the law, says the IRS's former head of nonprofit groups. While the council is registered with the Internal Revenue Service as a nonprofit organization, its business-oriented purpose documented in Justice Department disclosures "suggests tax-exempt status was not warranted," said Marcus Owens, who headed the IRS division of tax-exempt groups from 1990 to 2000.
Kelly Kramer, a lobbyist for the council at Nixon Peabody LLP, didn't return phone calls and e-mails asking for comment.
In the years before the Korea trip, Buckham and Abramoff had a close association. They used their credit cards to help pay for a 2000 trip to the U.K. for DeLay and his wife, the Washington Post reported in April. House rules bar members from accepting travel from registered lobbyists. DeLay's office said it had been told that a nonprofit group sponsored the trip.
"He is someone on our side," Buckham said of Abramoff in a 1995 interview with the National Journal. "He has access to DeLay."
The Cunningham Connection
One of the biggest clients Alexander landed was Group W Advisors, a San Diego-based defense consultant. The company is owned by Brent Wilkes, a businessman who is one of the four un- indicted co-conspirators in a Nov. 28 criminal complaint for allegedly bribing Cunningham, his lawyer, Michael Lipman, told USA Today. Cunningham pleaded guilty and resigned his House seat on Nov. 28.
Alexander took in at least $525,000 in fees from 2002 to 2004 from Group W to lobby on defense appropriations. Those appropriations are among the legislative favors Cunningham gave to receive his gifts, according to the former lawmaker's plea agreement. It isn't clear what role, if any, Alexander strategists had. Lipman didn't return a call seeking comment.
DeLay's Bid to Return to US Leadership in Jeopardy
By Richard Cowan
Reuters
Friday 06 January 2006
Washington - Rep. Tom DeLay's bid to return as majority leader of the House of Representatives was in mounting jeopardy on Thursday as fellow Republicans feared his ties with convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff have made the Texan too much of an election-year liability.
"I would not support him for majority leader," Rep. Ray LaHood told Reuters in a telephone interview from his central Illinois district.
LaHood, a conservative Republican with close ties to House Speaker Dennis Hastert, also from Illinois, added that elections for a new majority leader ought to be held when the House reconvenes on January 31.
"We need to clean up our House here very quickly or a year from now we'll be the minority party," said LaHood, initially elected to Congress in 1994 when his party won control of the House for the first time in 40 years.
DeLay's legal problems deepened this week when his self-described close friend Abramoff pleaded guilty to fraud charges in Washington and Florida. An ex-aide to DeLay who later worked with Abramoff also has pleaded guilty to felony charges.
On Wednesday, aides to DeLay said his campaign committee would "redirect" $15,000 in donations from Abramoff and his wife to Texas charities.
Under House Republican rules, DeLay was forced to step down in September after a Texas grand jury indicted him in an unrelated case on charges of conspiracy and money laundering.
DeLay, an 11-term congressman, has predicted he would be exonerated in Texas, clearing the way for his return as majority leader.
But a former House Republican leadership aide turned lobbyist predicted DeLay might renounce his intention to seek reinstatement before it comes to a leadership vote.
"He will probably, in the course of the next few weeks, take the temperature in private of (Republican) caucus members," the former House aide said.
No Offer of Support
Rep. Mike Pence of Indiana, the chairman of a powerful group of conservatives, called the Republican Study Committee, offered DeLay no public support.
The congressman was "not commenting on any aspect of Republican leadership elections at this time," a spokesman said, adding that Pence was "troubled about allegations that members of Congress and staff were involved" in the Abramoff scandal.
Moderate Republicans in the House, who often have to fend off tough challenges from aspiring Democrats, are watching for any ripple effects the Washington ethics scandal could have on November's congressional elections.
"Jack Abramoff's guilty plea and his close association with Tom DeLay underscore the need for a new majority leader in the Republican Party," said Rep. Christopher Shays, a moderate Connecticut Republican and longtime DeLay critic.
There was speculation about who may replace DeLay.
While Acting House Majority Leader Roy Blunt of Missouri is expected to seek the job, an energy trade group president said "support is coalescing around (John) Boehner," an Ohio Republican who chairs an education and labor committee.
DeLay has not given any sign of backing down.
"Mr. DeLay believes his support in the Republican conference is strong because it is clear he has always acted properly, with a full and public disclosure of his actions," said spokesman Kevin Madden.
On Wednesday, the conservative magazine The National Review wrote that it would be an "act of service" if DeLay gave up his quest to recapture the majority leader post. Ex-House Speaker Newt Gingrich publicly offered the same advice.
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