'Foolish' Dean Still Refuses to Give Details of His Secret Energy Group
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, Dec. 29, 2003
More: Ally in Vermont Guards Dean's Secrets
WASHINGTON Democrat presidential hopeful Howard Dean,
who has criticized the Bush administration for refusing to release
the deliberations of its energy policy task force, as governor of
Vermont convened a similar panel that met in secret and angered
state lawmakers.
Dean's group held one public hearing and after the fact
volunteered the names of industry executives and liberal advocates
it consulted in private, but Dean refused to open the task force's
private deliberations.
In 1999, he offered the same argument the administration uses
today for keeping deliberations of a policy task force secret.
"The governor needs to receive advice from time to time in
closed session. As every person in government knows, sometimes you
get more open discussion when it's not public," Dean was quoted as
saying.
His own dispute over the secrecy of the task force that devised
a policy for restructuring Vermont's nearly bankrupt electric
utilities has escaped national attention, even as he has attacked a
similar arrangement used by President Bush.
In an interview with The Associated Press, Dean defended his
recent criticism of Vice President Dick Cheney's task force and his
demand that the administration release its private energy
deliberations.
Dean said his group developed better policy in a bipartisan
manner, seeking advice not just from energy executives but
environmentalists and self-described advocates for the poor. He said his task force was more open because it held a public hearing and divulged afterward the names of people it consulted even though
deliberations were held in secret.
'Not Exactly Cheney'
The Vermont task force "is not exactly the Cheney thing," Dean
said. "We had a much more open process than Cheney's process. We
named the people we sought advice from in our final report."
Dean said he still believed it was necessary to keep his task
force's deliberations secret, especially because the group was
reviewing proprietary financial data from Vermont utilities. "Some
advice does have to be given in private, but I don't mind letting
people know who gave that advice," he said.
An expert in political rhetoric said it was risky for Dean to
attack Bush and Cheney on an issue where he was vulnerable.
'Foolish'
"In general, what is good for the vice president should be good
for the governor. A candidate who attacks on grounds he is
vulnerable is foolish," said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, a University
of Pennsylvania professor who helps run a Web site that compares
presidential candidates' rhetoric with the facts.
Dean's campaign said it was "laughable" to equate the two
panels.
"Governor Dean confronted and averted an energy crisis that
would have had disastrous consequences for the citizens of Vermont
by bringing together a bipartisan and ideologically diverse working
group that solved the problem," spokesman Jay Carson said Sunday.
"Dick Cheney put together a group of his corporate cronies and
partisan political contributors, and they gave themselves billions
and disguised it as a national energy policy."
In September, Dean argued that the task force Cheney assembled
in 2001 and the Bush energy policy that were unduly influenced by
Bush family friend and Enron energy chief Kenneth Lay. He demanded
that records of its deliberations be made public.
"The administration should also level with the American people
about just how much influence Ken Lay and his industry buddies had
over the development of the president's energy policy by releasing
notes on the deliberations of Vice President Cheney's energy task
force," Dean said on Sept. 15.
In 1998, Dean's Vermont task force met in secret to write a plan
for revamping state electricity markets that would slow rising
consumer costs and relieve utilities of a money-losing deal with a
Canadian power company, Hydro Quebec.
The task force's work resulted in the Dean administration and
state utility regulators advocating that Vermont have the first
utility in the country to meet energy efficiency standards.
It also freed the state's utilities from burdensome costs from a
long-term deal with Hydro Quebec that had left them near bankruptcy
by passing as much as 90 percent of those costs to consumers.
Utility shareholders also suffered some losses.
The parallels between the Cheney and Dean task forces are many.
Both declined to open their deliberations, even under pressure
from legislators. Both received input from the energy industry in
private meetings, and released the names of task force members
publicly.
Dean's group volunteered the names of those it consulted with in
its final report. While Cheney has refused to formally give a list
to Congress to preserve the White House's right to private advice,
known as executive privilege, his aides have divulged to reporters
the names of many of those from whom the task force sought advice.
The Bush-Cheney campaign and Republican Party received millions
in donations from energy interests in the election before its task
force was created.
Payback
Dean's Vermont re-election campaign received only small
contributions from energy executives, but a political action
committee created as he prepared to run for president collected
$19,000, or nearly a fifth of its first $110,000, from donors tied
to Vermont's electric utilities.
One co-chairman of Dean's task force, William Gilbert, was a
Republican lawyer who had done work for state utilities. At the
time, Gilbert also served on the board of Vermont Gas Systems, a
subsidiary of Hydro Quebec.
Many state legislators, including Dean's fellow Democrats, were
angered that the task force met secretly.
"It taints the whole report," Democrat state Rep. Al Stevens
told the AP in 1999. "I'd have more faith in that report if the
discussions had been open."
Elizabeth Bankowski, a Democrat who was co-chairman of the task force
with Gilbert, told the legislature that the secrecy requirement
"was decided in advance by the governor's office and the
governor's lawyer."
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