A McCain aide told me that the Arizona senator opposes the farm bill
because it “rewards lobbyists” by granting rich farmers lucrative
subsidies, although he would support “a reasonable level of assistance
and risk management to farmers when they need America's help.”
But the aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity, acknowledged that
the presumptive Republican presidential nominee also opposes the farm
bill because Gramm advised McCain that he should resist its regulatory
language on the energy futures market.
Democrats have dubbed that gap in energy futures regulation the “Enron
loophole,” but it played a part, too, in the more recent attempt by the
Amaranth Advisers hedge fund to corner the national gas market by
shifting trades to the unregulated “dark markets” of the
Intercontinental Exchange.
The “Enron loophole” also has become part of the debate over the
soaring price of oil. Last week, a study sponsored by Sen. Carl Levin,
D-Michigan, concluded that speculative futures markets were partly to
blame for the surge in oil prices that have pushed gas at the pump
toward $4 a gallon
At a May 15 news conference, Levin said the skyrocketing price of oil
is “not the result of supply and demand. Speculators have taken over
most of the futures market."
However, the 673-page farm bill, containing the regulatory provisions
on electronic energy trading, still faces obstacles amid overall
concerns about the bill’s largesse to farmers at a time of rising food
prices.
President George W. Bush has vowed to veto the bill, although it
cleared the House and Senate by margins wide enough for an override,
assuming Republicans don’t rally behind Bush and McCain, their current
and future standard bearers.
Gramm and Enron
The battle over the “Enron loophole” also could draw attention to
McCain’s dependence on Gramm as his chief economic adviser and Gramm’s
key role in passing legislation that let Enron trade commodities on
electronic platforms without federal oversight.
In 2000, with the Republicans in charge of Congress and Gramm chairing
the Senate Banking Committee, the exemption on electronic trading was
approved without a Senate hearing.
Internal Enron documents, which were released in 2002, revealed that
the Houston-based company helped write the legislation, which was
signed into law by President Bill Clinton in December 2000.
Freed from regulatory interference, Enron then used manipulative
trading practices to game the California electricity market and drive
up electricity prices across the state.
While California consumers were getting fleeced, the new Bush
administration shielded Enron from early accusations of market
manipulation. President Bush personally joined the fight against
imposing caps on the soaring price of electricity, buying additional
time for Enron although the company’s house of cards collapsed anyway
in fall 2001. [For details, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Bush’s Enron
Lies.”]
In 2006, the “Enron loophole” allowed Amaranth Advisers hedge fund to
shift its trades from the regulated New York Mercantile Exchange
(NYMEX) to the unregulated Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) in Atlanta.
That let Amaranth corner the natural gas market, betting that futures
prices would rise. The hedge fund lost about $6 billion and imploded as
natural gas prices fell to a two-year low in September 2006.
Last July, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission charged that Amaranth manipulated prices
paid in the physical natural gas markets. FERC has proposed $291
million in penalties and the forfeiture of “unjust profits.”
“Unregulated markets are known as ‘dark markets’ because there is very
little oversight of the trades,” said Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Michigan,
chairman of the subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, during a
hearing on energy speculation last December.
By trading on the “dark” ICE market, traders can avoid the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission’s rules which are in place to prevent price
distortions or supply squeezes.
Stupak said trading volumes on ICE “have skyrocketed in the past three
years and are now as large or even larger in some months, than the
volumes traded on the regulated futures market.”
The lack of oversight “makes it difficult for regulators to detect
excessively large positions which could lead to price manipulation,”
Stupak said.
Advising McCain
Gramm, who is now a vice chairman of financial services company UBS,
began advising McCain in 2005 when the Arizona senator indicated he
planned to run for President.
Since then, McCain has adopted much of Gramm’s anti-tax,
anti-regulatory agenda. Most strikingly, McCain shifted to support
Bush’s tax cuts, which McCain had voted against in 2001 and 2003. He
now vows that, if elected President, he would make them permanent.
Yet Gramm’s influence over McCain’s economic agenda – and the checkered
political-business history of Gramm and his wife Wendy – have largely
escaped media scrutiny.
Gramm received more than $34,000 in campaign contributions from Enron
and served as one of the company’s key legislative allies in
Washington, including his help in 2000 removing federal oversight from
energy trades on electronic platforms.
At the height of the Enron scandal in January 2002, Gramm’s press
secretary Larry Neal told The New York Times that Gramm did not “recall
a conversation” he apparently had with Enron’s chairman Ken Lay in 2000
to discuss that Enron legislative priority.
An internal Enron e-mail dated Aug. 10, 2000, under the subject “CFTC
Reauthorization” – sent by Enron’s top lobbyist Richard Shapiro to
Steve Kean, Enron’s executive vice president – said the company needed
to get Lay on the phone with Gramm so the bill could be passed.
“The bill is not moving quickly in the Senate due to Senator Phil
Gramm's desire to see significant changes made to the legislation (not
directly related to our energy language),” Shapiro said.
“Last week at the [2000] Republican Convention, I asked the Senator
about the bill and he said they were working on it, but much needs to
be changed for his support. More telling perhaps, were Wendy Gramm's
comments that she would rather the current bill die if a better bill
can be passed next year.
“What this means is that we must, at the least, remove Senator Gramm's
opposition to the bill to move the process and more importantly seek to
gain his support of the legislation.”
Shapiro added: “However, with less than 20 or so legislative days left, we need Senator Gramm to engage.
“A call from Ken Lay in the next two weeks to Senator Gramm could be an
impetus for Gramm to move his staff to resolve the differences. Gramm
needs to fully understand how helpful the bill is to Enron.
“Let me know your thoughts on this approach. I am prepared to assist in
coordinating the call and drafting the talking points for a Ken
Lay/Sen. Gramm call.”
Several other internal Enron e-mails briefed company staffers on the
status of Gramm’s position and Enron’s lobbying of the senator. Gramm
finally removed a “hold” on the bill in December 2000, reintroduced the
bill under a different number, and forced a vote on it without floor
debate.
It was then attached to an appropriations bill that was signed by President Clinton on Dec. 21, 2000.
California Crisis
Less than a month later, California began to experience rolling
blackouts due to artificial electricity shortages which, according to
documents later released by federal energy regulators, were the result
of manipulative trading practices employed by Enron.
The California crisis centered on Enron’s energy trades through a new
platform called EnronOnline, which had been freed from regulatory
oversight by the legislation pushed by Gramm.
In April 2002, Gramm blocked an amendment by Sen. Dianne Feinstein,
D-California, that would have closed the loophole that Gramm had helped
open.
Gramm’s wife, Wendy, also had played a role in the anti-regulatory policies that contributed to the Enron scandal.
On Jan. 14, 1993, in the final days of the first Bush administration,
Wendy Gramm – as chairwoman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
– pushed through a key regulatory exemption removing energy derivatives
contracts and interest-rate swaps from federal oversight.
That was a major financial boon to Enron, where Wendy Gramm landed five
weeks later as a member of the board of directors. She also became a
member of the audit committee that signed off on another one of Enron’s
fraudulent schemes, partnerships that hid the company’s growing debt.
Even after Enron had collapsed in fall 2001, Sen. Gramm continued to resist congressional efforts at tightening up the rules.
In 2002, despite the accounting scandals at Enron, WorldCom and other
major companies, Sen. Gramm objected to the Sarbanes-Oxley corporate
reform bill designed to hold executives accountable for inaccuracies in
financial reports.
Now, the Gramm family’s anti-regulatory agenda is returning via McCain’s presidential campaign.
As Fortune’s editor-at-large Shawn Tully wrote, “economic conservatives
should take heart. McCain’s chief economic adviser – and perhaps his
closest political friend – is the ultimate pure play in free market
faith, former Texas Sen. Phil Gramm. … Most of [McCain’s] current
positions are vintage Gramm indeed.” [Fortune, Feb. 19. 2008]
The first test of McCain’s commitment to Gramm’s anti-regulatory purity
may come in the looming battle over the “Enron loophole” that the farm
bill seeks to close.
Jason Leopold has launched a new Web site, The Public Record, at www.pubrecord.org