The
collapse of energy trading giant Enron, with
all its legal and economic ramifications,
has obviously embroiled the Bush administration
in a major scandal. A column in the Los Angeles
Times last week referred to the affair as
"Teapot Dome, the Sequel" (the Teapot Dome
affair essentially brought an end to the Harding
administration in the 1920s). It is pointless
at the moment to speculate whether or not
Enron will prove the present government's
undoing. The more critical issue is grasping
the extent to which Enron as a criminal and
parasitic enterprise expresses the social
essence of the Bush administration and the
American ruling elite as a whole.
To
speak of "connections" or "intimate ties"
between Enron and the Bush regime nearly misses
the point. To a large extent, the present
administration is an extension of the Enron
board of directors. This government, one might
say, is Enron in office, not simply because
numerous Bush cabinet members and other appointees
(and other leading Republicans) have been
employed in one capacity or another by Enron,
but more profoundly in the sense that the
social types found in Enron's boardroom and
in leading government posts in Washington
are interchangeable.
As
evidence one might simply note that the top
law enforcement official in the land, Attorney
General John Ashcroft, was obliged to recuse
himself January 10, along with his chief of
staff, David Ayres, from the criminal investigation
into Enron launched by his own department
because he received tens of thousands of dollars
from the company for an unsuccessful bid to
hold onto his Senate seat in the 2000 elections.
The Vice President of the United States, former
oil man Dick Cheney, has been obliged, under
pressure from congressional investigators,
to acknowledge that he or members of his staff
met six times with Enron executives last spring
during discussions held by his secret energy
task force. The only executive Cheney met
with alone was Enron chief Kenneth Lay.
From
this point of view, to debate whether Bush
government officials "crossed the line" in
their dealings with the energy trading firm
results from a misunderstanding. There is
largely no "line." Only a child would believe,
for example, that former top executives of
Enron-only a few months off the job-and their
associates in the Bush administration would
not have known of the company's financial
crisis at least from last summer, as the company's
stock continued its plunge which would wipe
out the life savings of thousands. (The wife
of Republican Senator Phil Gramm of Texas
sits on Enron's board of directors!)
When
Commerce Secretary Donald Evans tells interviewers
that he received a telephone call from Lay
in late October informing him that the company
was in dire straits and that he told White
House chief of staff Andrew Card of the conversation
"several weeks" later, but that Card never
informed Bush, there is good reason to be
skeptical. In effect, one is being asked to
accept that Bush's 2000 campaign manager (Evans)
did not inform the president, or at least
have him informed, that his long-time backer
and largest financial contributor (Lay) was
facing disaster. It is more likely that he
didn't tell him because Bush already knew.
In
any event, the very manner in which the Enron
crisis has burst into the headlines has considerable
significance. The marked rise of interest
in Enron (which, after all, collapsed more
than six weeks ago) largely coincides with
the wearing thin of the non-stop propaganda
about the "war against terrorism." In effect,
the period during which the attention of layers
of the population, confused and angered by
the September 11 events, could be diverted
by prospects of a decisive war in Central
Asia and the capture of Osama bin Laden-with
the additional mileage provided by the anthrax
scare-has come to a close. Once again the
underlying social issues in the US are coming
to the fore.
This
speaks to the reality that the war in Afghanistan
has been driven from the beginning by the
growing social and political crisis in the
US. It is enough to ask: what would be the
standing of the Bush regime if there had been
no attacks in New York and Washington on September
11 and no war as a result? The administration,
only eight months old, was increasingly beleaguered
and unpopular at home and abroad by the end
of last summer. It was threatening to unravel.
There is every reason to believe that had
it not been for the suicide hijackings and
subsequent events, the standing of the Bush
government might mirror the present condition
of Enron on the New York Stock Exchange, where
the price of one of its shares has fallen
from $90 to under a dollar.
Enron's
collapse, in its own fashion, gives some indication
of the fragility of the political standing
of the extreme right and the narrowness of
its social base. It cannot be considered coincidental
that the resignation of Jeff Skilling-one
of the architects of Enron's meteoric rise-as
chief executive in August (at a time when
we now know a company vice president was warning
that Enron was about to implode in "a wave
of accounting scandals") was followed three
weeks later by the announcement from Gramm,
whose family fortunes (literally) have been
bound up with Enron's fate, that he was bowing
out of political life. The Texas Senator clearly
saw the writing on the wall.
What
was Enron?
In
the wake of Enron's spectacular demise, a
whole host of media analysts are wagging their
fingers at what they describe as the "excesses"
of the 1990s. A New York Times column ("A
Bubble That Enron Insiders and Outsiders Didn't
Want to Pop") points out that Enron "was not
much of a company, but its executives made
sure it was one hell of a stock." Enron "has
... become an indictment of the anything-goes
approach to business that characterized the
late 1990s. The bull market convinced analysts,
investors, accountants and even regulators
that as long as stock prices stayed high,
there was no need to question company practices."
The
Times cites comments by the president of a
money management firm, who suggests that Enron
was "the prime example of all the things that
were allowed to go wrong during the stock
market mania.... This wall got built brick
by brick in broad daylight in the 1990's by
companies doing whatever they had to do to
make their numbers, being willing to sacrifice
the long-term well-being of the company so
that executives could get rich."
The
Times piece is useful as far as it goes, but
it is intended to leave the impression that
there was something aberrational about the
conditions which made Enron's growth possible
and about the company's operations themselves.
One is presumably meant to conclude that,
finally, cooler heads have prevailed.
On
the contrary, Enron is a paradigm for American
capitalism in the era of Reagan, Clinton and
the two Bushes. As we have previously noted
on the WSWS, the deregulatory policies of
Republican and Democratic administrations
alike created conditions where profits could
be accumulated, not through the construction
of new facilities and the organization of
new energy supplies, but through manipulations
in the energy market. Enron acted like a financial
speculator, purchasing and selling energy
contracts extending months and even years
into the future.
Enron
was not an excrescence, some entity peripheral
to the workings of American and global capitalism.
Through its drive for shareholder value at
any cost, the company became the universal
"business model." Lay may have been a parvenu,
but his firm enjoyed the most fruitful relations
with "old money." The Securities and Exchange
Commission is investigating Enron's ties to
Wall Street and the most respectable American
financial institutions. Regulators are probing
to see whether banks such as J.P. Morgan Chase
& Co. and Citigroup helped Enron carry out
its massive fraud.
The
Wall Street Journal, in a piece suggestively
titled "How Wall Street Greased Enron's Money
Engine," writes: "The upshot: Some of the
world's leading banks and brokerage firms
provided Enron with crucial help in creating
the intricate-and, in crucial ways, misleading-financial
structure that fueled the energy trader's
impressive rise but ultimately led to its
spectacular downfall. Indeed, without the
financial grease from Wall Street, Enron wouldn't
have grown into the nation's biggest energy
trader and seventh-biggest company. In return
Wall Street firms earned hundreds of millions
of dollars in fees-$214 million in underwriting
alone, and much more in lending, derivatives
trading and merger advice."
Enron
rose to the top of the heap over the past
decade through corrupt, reckless and socially
destructive methods. The firm created a market
for energy futures where none existed or needed
to exist. Its role in California was particularly
disastrous, where it deliberately manipulated
energy prices, helping to nearly bankrupt
the state. Some of its activities were openly
criminal. It was apparently assisted in its
shady operations by accountants at Andersen,
whose officials have now acknowledged that
the firm shredded or deleted thousands of
potentially incriminating documents as the
roof was falling in last autumn.
Enron
essentially produced nothing and served no
legitimate economic purpose. Skilling believed,
in the words of a Journal analysis, "that
a company didn't need a lot of hard assets
to thrive.... Hard assets, Mr. Skilling said,
tied up cash that could be more profitably
deployed trading." He "emphasized divesting
Enron of Œbig iron' [i.e., machinery and equipment]
and instead putting the money to work trading
everything from electricity to Internet bandwidth,
from memory chips to advertising space."
Enron
became a giant confidence scheme, in which
elaborate and "opaque" accounting methods
were used to hide massive losses and continue
attracting credit. In the end, Enron's "asset-light"
approach led to disaster, when disclosures
of its web of transactions with related partnerships,
some headed by company executives, shook investor
confidence. Of Enron's reported $60 billion
in assets, only about $10-15 billion is still
in physical plant and equipment, according
to estimates.
Enron's
methods accumulated fantastic wealth in the
hands of top executives and have now wrought
devastation on its workforce and those taken
in by its promises.
Bush
officials see nothing extraordinary about
Enron's rise and fall. Treasury Secretary
Paul O'Neill, who has also acknowledged receiving
calls from Lay last October about Enron's
financial crisis, stated in a television interview
last weekend that he was not surprised by
the company's demise. Demonstrating utter
indifference to the fate of thousands of Enron
workers and small investors who have been
ruined by the collapse of the firm, the treasury
secretary-doing his best Marie Antoinette
impression-continued: "I've watched lots of
corporations come and go.... There are very
few companies that have been around for 40
or 50 years.... Companies come and go. It's
part of the genius of capitalism. People get
to make good decisions or bad decisions, and
they get to pay the consequences or to enjoy
the fruits of their decisions. That's the
way the system works."
This
comment ignores the small, nagging fact that
Enron employees and those who invested in
the company had no say in or foreknowledge
of the "decisions" made by Lay and other executives
that devastated their lives, even as company
officials were rewarding themselves with tens
of millions of dollars in salaries, bonuses
and the sales of stock. Moreover, it is a
distinct possibility that many or all of those
who operated in a fraudulent manner will "pay"
no legal or financial "consequences" and continue
"to enjoy the fruits" of their criminality.
That, in fact, is "the way the system works."
There
are many obvious parallels between Enron and
the Bush regime. On the one hand, a corporation
with no assets, and on the other, a government
with no legitimacy. The political faction
now in power in Washington first came to prominence
under Reagan. After the defeat of the elder
Bush in 1992, they chafed under Clinton, despite
all his best efforts to appease them. They
viewed even the most timid restrictions on
their unfettered access to wealth as intolerable.
Lacking confidence in their ability to gain
office through elections, these right-wing
forces, with the aid of a cabal of reactionary
lawyers and judges, leveraged the trivia of
the Whitewater-Jones-Lewinsky affairs into
an impeachment drive aimed at unseating a
twice-elected president. They were able to
advance as far as they did with their plans
largely due to the miserable cowardice of
the Democratic Party, which was unable to
offer much serious resistance to the "vast
right-wing conspiracy." (In this regard, it
is worth noting that Enron's donations to
the Democrats, while not nearly as large as
those it made to the Republicans, were nonetheless
sizable.)
The
attempt at a coup d'état having narrowly failed,
the ultra-right was determined to see George
W. Bush in the White House. Following last
year's election, in which Al Gore won the
national popular vote and, by all indications,
the popular vote in Florida, the Bush forces,
gangster-like, hijacked the vote.
The
Bush administration was installed in office
through fraud and rules that way today, in
both domestic and foreign affairs. It has
seized upon the September 11 terrorist attack
to implement a sweeping, right-wing agenda
of attacks on democratic rights at home and
embarked on an open-ended colonial war in
Central Asia, whose principal purpose is to
pave the way for US dominance of vast reserves
of natural resources, particularly oil and
gas.
Nor
is the character of the Bush administration
peripheral to the state of American society
and its ruling elite. It represents the most
predatory and rapacious elements of American
big business and presides over a society sharply
polarized between a fabulously wealthy handful
and broad layers of the working population.
This element's coming to the fore is not a
trick of fate, any more than Enron's. The
crisis of American and world capitalism, in
the final analysis, is behind the lurch to
the right by the US political establishment,
the virtual collapse of liberalism and the
criminality of the present regime. The first
lesson to be drawn from the Enron scandal
is the need to place it in this political
and historical context.
See
Also: New York Times defends Bush on links
to Enron corporate fraud [10 January 2002]
Enron: The real face of the "new economy"
[6 December 2001] Workers lose jobs, health
care and savings at Enron [14 January 2002]
Copyright
1998-2002 World Socialist Web


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