Kenneth L. Lay (with Linda P.) March 5, 2001 In addition to being one of the single largest financial backers of George W. Bush's political career, Ken Lay can count himself among the president's closest friends. Letters written while Bush was governor of Texas and obtained by Mother Jones reveal that the Enron Corp. chairman regularly wrote Bush and called upon the governor for favors. Lay recommended appointments to state boards and asked Bush to meet with visiting dignitaries from countries with whom Enron was hoping to do business. In fact, the relationship between the men dates back to the first Bush administration, when George W. used his family name to promote Enron ventures in Argentina ("Don't Cry for Bush, Argentina"). After Bush's election, his friendship with Lay led to widespread speculation that the Enron chairman would be tapped to head the Department of Energy. Instead, Lay has served as Bush's key advisor on energy policy. In recent months, sources say, Lay supported the president's decision not to intervene in California's energy crisis, even though the emergency was created in part by industry deregulation. The crisis is certainly proving to be a windfall for Enron, which is among the state's main suppliers of power. In the fourth quarter last year, as energy prices in California soared, the company's revenues tripled from a year earlier, and profits jumped by 34 percent. Although Enron holds particular influence in the fledgling Bush administration, it is accustomed to wielding clout on Capitol Hill. In 1992, Enron hired former Secretary of State James Baker to hustle contracts for the company in Kuwait, according to a report by Texans for Public Justice. In 1995, Mozambique's natural resources minister told the Houston Chronicle that U.S. officials made "outright threats to withhold development funds" unless he granted Enron a pipeline contract. That same year, Clinton administration officials lobbied heavily for Enron to win a $2.8 billion contract for a power plant in India. But the past influence pales in comparison to the current political debt that President Bush owes Enron. Lay signed on early as a Bush Pioneer, committing to raise at least $100,000 for the campaign. Enron reportedly put its corporate jets at the disposal of the Bush campaign eight times last year, and Lay and his company also kicked in $300,000 to underwrite Bush's inauguration. -- Lila Byock | | |