quinta-feira, 14 de agosto de 2008

In Split Role, McCain Adviser Is Sometimes a Lobbyist



By M.Cooper
When Senator John McCain led a Senate investigation three years ago of Jack Abramoff, the disgraced lobbyist who later pleaded guilty to fraud charges, Mr. Abramoff’s old firm turned to a former McCain campaign adviser for help.
The firm, Greenberg Traurig, which had quickly cut its ties to Mr. Abramoff, hired Randy Scheunemann, who had been the McCain campaign’s foreign policy adviser in 2000 — and is again this year — for advice on handling the Senate investigation.
"After Greenberg Traurig severed ties to Mr. Abramoff, Mr. Scheunemann advised the law firm on how best to cooperate with the Senate investigation," said Brian Rogers, a spokesman for the McCain campaign. "The record reflects that the law firm cooperated."
Mr. Rogers said he believed that Mr. Scheunemann was hired because he had worked in Congress for more than a decade and had experience with investigations, and not because of any ties he had to Mr. McCain. He added that Mr. Scheunemann had served the firm in an advisory role, and had never spoken with Mr. McCain about the issue.
Since the Russian invasion of Georgia, Mr. Scheunemann has drawn attention for his lobbying efforts on behalf of the Georgian government, for which he lobbied until March. Mr. McCain has been outspoken in his support of Georgia. During a flight on Tuesday on the McCain campaign plane, Mr. Scheunemann told reporters that Mr. McCain has known the Georgian president, Mikheil Saakashvili, for more than a decade.
Craig Holman, the governmental affairs lobbyist for Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy organization, said Mr. Scheunemann’s dual role — sometimes advising Mr. McCain as a candidate, and sometimes advising private clients on their interactions with him as a senator — raised potential red flags. "This is a serious revolving door problem: a person who keeps fluctuating between being a lobbyist, and advising candidates," Mr. Holman said.
The McCain campaign imposed more rigid rules governing lobbying in the spring, but a number of senior advisers have been lobbyists in the past.
After the Abramoff scandal was brought to light in 2004, Greenberg Traurig ordered Mr. Abramoff from his office, conducted an internal investigation into his conduct, began working with clients he had misled, and cooperated with outside inquiries. A spokeswoman for Greenberg Traurig did not respond to a message seeking comment that was left after office hours on Wednesday evening.
Mr. McCain praised Greenberg Traurig’s cooperation, saying in prepared remarks at the time that "consistent with their professional obligations, Greenberg Traurig and its counsel have always been responsive to the committee’s requests, always made themselves available to answer questions, and have always conducted themselves with dignity and professionalism in these trying circumstances."
Last week, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that Ralph Reed, the former director of the Christian Coalition and an associate of Mr. Abramoff, had sent an e-mail message asking people to attend a fund-raiser for Mr. McCain next week. Mr. Abramoff had arranged for
Mr. Reed to be paid several million dollars by Indian tribes that ran casinos to coordinate anti-gambling campaigns against competing casinos. McCain aides said Mr. Reed did not hold any position with the campaign and was not a host of the fund-raiser.