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Report1212

(661 posts)
Fri May 15, 2015, 10:26 AM May 2015

Bill Clinton's former trade negotiator working for Mexico -- to sue us using WTO rules

This might help answer why the Obama administration is pushing TPP so hard -- do they want huge paydays in 2017 too?

In early 2014, Shapiro formed his own consulting firm, Ira Shapiro Global Strategies, departing from Greenberg Traurig, the law and lobbying firm he had worked at for eleven years. In 2015, the Mexican government's Department of Agriculture and Fisheries (Sagarpa/Conapesca) contracted Shapiro to serve as a consultant to his old firm Greenberg Traurig in its work with the Mexican government on the dolphin-safe tuna regulations. Through April 3, 2015, Shapiro was paid $18,000.

Read more: http://www.alternet.org/mexico-hires-bill-clintons-former-trade-negotiator-attack-americas-dolphin-safe-tuna-regulations

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Bill Clinton's former trade negotiator working for Mexico -- to sue us using WTO rules (Original Post) Report1212 May 2015 OP
18K? A truly corrupt politician or lobbyist would snort that up in a day. Fred Sanders May 2015 #1
Kick! RiverLover May 2015 #2
It's a Revolving Door. Take nuclear, please. Octafish May 2015 #3

Fred Sanders

(23,946 posts)
1. 18K? A truly corrupt politician or lobbyist would snort that up in a day.
Fri May 15, 2015, 10:41 AM
May 2015

But you are on the right track.

The unspoken word is "corruption", or the appearance of corruption, as corrosive to democracy as this creeping fascism.

Octafish

(55,745 posts)
3. It's a Revolving Door. Take nuclear, please.
Fri May 15, 2015, 11:36 AM
May 2015
The Revolving Door Goes Nuclear

by Michael Smallberg
Project on Government Oversight, April 21, 2015

After years of investigating the well-oiled revolving door between the federal government and the businesses it oversees, we thought we’d seen it all.

But even our jaws hit the floor when we learned that Daniel Poneman had taken a job as the head of Centrus Energy Corp.

Poneman served from May 2009 to October 2014 as the number two official at the Department of Energy (DOE), in charge of more than 100,000 federal and contractor employees and a budget of just under $30 billion. Less than six months after leaving his government post, Poneman was named the president and CEO of Centrus, where he’ll be making as much as $1.7 million a year. He took charge of the company earlier this month.

If the name Centrus doesn’t ring a bell, that’s because it was known as the United States Enrichment Corporation (USEC) until last March, when the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Before it went under, USEC had enjoyed decades of special treatment from DOE and other government offices. Like its predecessor, Centrus is likely to need a lifeline from U.S. taxpayers in order to stay afloat. With Poneman now on board, the company may be able to utilize his cachet to attract future government bailouts, no matter the potential taxpayer losses.

Poneman’s rapid transition to a high-paying job with Centrus has drawn scrutiny on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers from both sides of the aisle are questioning whether government ethics rules are strong enough to safeguard the integrity of DOE actions that affect the company’s bottom line. Company and government records reviewed by the Project On Government Oversight add to the picture, showing how Poneman and DOE took positions—on issues such as the downblending of highly enriched uranium (HEU) that has been declared excess to military needs—that favored USEC/Centrus, a supplier of low enriched uranium (LEU), and the nuclear power industry in general. The records show how the revolving door blurs the lines between the government and the corporate world, enabling an official in Poneman’s position to enrich himself and the industry he used to oversee.

CONTINUED...

http://www.pogo.org/our-work/articles/2015/the-revolving-door-goes-nuclear.html

Money is why "Integrity is for Paupers."
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