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Hillary Clinton Yells at Greenpeace Activist, Calls Sanders' Campaign Liars

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  sean-treacy  •  8 years ago  •  2 comments

Hillary Clinton Yells at Greenpeace Activist, Calls Sanders' Campaign Liars

 

Hillary Clinton’s campaign has been backed by the fossil fuel industry in a number of ways.

First there are the direct contributions from people working for fossil fuel companies to  Hillary Clinton’s campaign committee . According to the most recent filings, the committee has received  $309,107  (as of 3/21/16; source:  Center for Responsive Politics ) from such donors

Next are the fossil fuel lobbyists, many of whom have also bundled contributions. These donations also flow to Hillary Clinton’s campaign committee. Greenpeace has tracked $1,259,280 in bundled and direct donations from lobbyists currently registered as lobbying for the  fossil fuel industry . This number excludes donations from lobbyists who are employed directly by a fossil fuel companies, as those donations would have been included in the previous number.

Last are contributions from fossil fuel interests to  Super PACs supporting Hillary Clinton . Greenpeace has found $3,250,000 in donations from large donors connected to the fossil fuel industry to Priorities Action USA, a Super PAC supporting Secretary Clinton’s campaign.

All told, the campaign to elect Hillary Clinton for president in 2016 has received more than $4.5 million from lobbyists, bundlers, and large donors connected the fossil fuel industry.

 

Number of oil, gas and coal industry lobbyists that have made direct contributions to Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign : 57

  • 57 registered oil, coal and gas lobbyists have personally given $126,200 to the Hillary campaign
  • Of those 57, 11 are bundlers.
  • 11 lobbyists have bundled $1,140,930 in contributions to the Hillary campaign
  • 43 lobbyists have contributed the maximum allowed ($2700).

This includes:

  • Lobbyists who have reported lobbying for the oil and gas industry – both in-house company lobbyists and hired lobbyists from “K-Street firms.”

This  does not  include:

  • Industry executives
  • Other employees of the oil and gas industry
  • Board members
  • Corporate PAC contributions
  • Contributions by major investors
  • Donations to Super PACS or non-profit groups
  • Contributions made by trade associations to Super PACs

Hillary takes more from lobbyists in general than any other candidate

https://www.opensecrets.org/pres16/select-industries.php

Total Amount bundled from O&G lobbyists: $1,140,930

Examples:

  • 3 Enbridge lobbyists contributed to HRC’s campaign. While she was Secretary of State, Clinton signed off on the Enbridge pipeline ( the alternative to KXL).
  • Ben Klein (Heather Podesta and Associates) lobbied on behalf of Oxbow Carbon on petcoke and other issues. Petcoke is a byproduct of refining. Communities in Detroit and Chicago have complained about piles of  petcoke blowing into the community.  Bill Koch (the estranged brother of Charles and David) owns controlling interest of Oxbow.  Klein also lobbied on restrictions of ivory imports for Oxbow.
  • Fracking company and gas industry trade association lobbyists have also contributed to Clinton’s campaign, including Former Rep. Martin Frost (D-TX), who lobbied for the Domestic Energy Producers Alliance, and Martin Durbin of the American Natural Gas Association (now merged and part of the American Petroleum Institute – API), the nephew of Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL).  Another donor is Elizabeth Gore, a lobbyist for WPX energy (fracking).  A lobbyist for FTI Consulting, creator of an industry  front group called Energy In Depth , also contributed to Clinton;s campaign. Although Clinton has said she would require FERC to consider climate change before granting any  new gas pipeline permits she recently told activists she would not ban fracking as president , and has a pro-fracking track record  which has been well-documented by numerous groups, including  pro-Clinton Super PAC Correct the Record.
  • Marty Streett, a lobbyist for BP, gave Clinton’s campaign the maximum allowable amount ($2700). Her sister, Stephanie S. Streett, is the Executive Director of the William J. Clinton Foundation and former ED of the Bill Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation (Bill Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation, 990 report 2013).   The Podesta Group (Tony Podesta) also lobbied for BP, on issues including the Gulf of Mexico spill response and recovery.
  • While Secretary of State, Clinton pushed fracking in countries around the world, through the department’s Global Shale Gas Initiative.   According to Grist ,  after the Bulgarian government signed a five-year deal with Chevron, major public protests led the Bulgarian parliament to pass a fracking moratorium. Clinton traveled to Bulgaria and then dispatched her special envoy for energy in Eurasia, Richard Morningstar, to push back against the fracking bans, which were eventually overturned.
  • Clinton’s State Department played a major role in negotiating a bilateral oil agreement with Mexico. Her former special envoy for international energy affairs, David Goldwyn, has donated the maximum allowable amount to the campaign ($2700). Since leaving State, Goldwyn has consulted  for companies wishing to profit from Mexico’s decision to allow private oil services contractors into the country in order to expand  PEMEX’s ability to produce shale oil and tap deep offshore reserves.
  • David Leiter (ML Strategies lobbyist for Exxon and a HRC bundler), the former Senate chief of staff to John Kerry, is also a lobbyist for Burisma Holdings, a private Ukrainian natural gas and uranium mining company with  many connections to the Democratic Party.   Biden’s son Hunter joined Burisma’s board in 2014, right before Leiter was hired to lobby members about the role of the company in Ukraine (arguing for its role in helping Ukraine be independent of Russia).  Another board member, Devon Archer, is a HRC donor (2700) and Democratic bundler (I don’t see any record of him bundling for HRC).  FTI’s Lawrence Pacheco does communications for Burisma.  Burisma is owned by a Cypriot holding firm, Brociti Investments Ltd, which is controlled by Nikolai Zlochevskyi, a former Ukrainian gov. minister. 
  • Although Clinton has said she supports an investigation into Exxon’s early concealment of what it knew about the risks of climate change and subsequent financing of  climate denier front groups ,  her campaign has taken contributions from at least 7 lobbyists working for Exxon, including one in-house lobbyist – Theresa Fariello – who has bundled and  additional $21,200 for the campaign.
  • Companies invested in LNG projects with lobbyists that have given to HRC’s campaign include  Freeport LNG (Elizabeth Gore – Brownstein Hyatt, $500);  LNG Allies  (Michael Smith – Cornerstone Gov. Affairs – 2700 and a bundler of $59,400);  Dominion Resources  (Tom Lawler – Lawler Strategies, 2700);  Oregon LNG   ( Robert van Heuvelen VH Strategies – 2700).  Exxon  also has LNG projects.  Cheniere Energy ’s Ankit Desai not only gave the maximum allowed, but also bundled $ 139,300 for the campaign.  Another donor ($2700) to Clinton’s campaign is Heather Zichal, Obama’s former energy advisor, who joined the board of Cheniere (LNG export company) after leaving the administration.
  • Former Rep. Richard (“Dick”) Gephardt’s firm lobbies for Peabody Energy (coal), Prairie State (coal-fired power plant and adjacent mine), Ameren Services Co.  Gephardt and his wife, son and daughter Chrissy all contributed the maximum allowed to Clinton’s campaign (Dick is the only fossil fuel lobbyist in the family). Gephardt, a Democratic Party super delegate, has pledged to support Clinton.   In February, the DNC rolled back its previous commitment to not take any contributions from federally registered lobbyists.  Clinton’s campaign has also received contributions from lobbyists representing big mining companies — Westmoreland Coal, Arch Coal and Rio Tinto.

Other points relevant to lobbyist contributions:


During the NH debate Clinton said donations are not evidence of favors, but in 2008 Clinton suggested the contributions Obama took from the industry were evidence of a quid pro quo.

“But in April 2008, Clinton’s campaign aired a television ad portraying Obama’s support for a 2005 energy bill as a quid pro quo for campaign donations. The ad said Obama had “accepted $200,000 from executives and employees of oil companies,” while criticizing him for voting “for the Bush-Cheney energy bill that that put $6 billion in the pocket of big oil.”  The clear message: Obama backed the bill as a favor to donors.” 

http://www.greenpeace.org/usa/campaign-updates/hillary-clintons-connection-oil-gas-industry/

 


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Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
link   seeder  Sean Treacy    8 years ago

Somebody's lying, Clinton or Sanders.

 
 
 
96WS6
Junior Quiet
link   96WS6    8 years ago

LMAO!  Looks like she struck a nerve.  Truth hurts.

 
 

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