On Sunday October 15, 2006, the Los Angeles Times published a
1488-word, front-page article entitled,
"Displease a Lobbyist, Get Fired," by Times staffer Peter Wallsten.
The gist of the piece (if you can't glean it from the title): Lobbyist
Jack Abramoff "manipulated the system" and used his influence at
the White House to get Allen Stayman, a State Department official
who was working against the interests of Abramoff's clients, fired.
Wallsten's lengthy piece portrays Stayman as an unwitting government
official who was innocently bulldozed for standing in the way of
Abramoff and his interests.
However, Wallsten's article left out a big chunk of the
story. Wallsten failed to inform his readers that Mr. Stayman, back in
the 1990's, resigned from President Clinton's Department of
Interior. He stepped down after serious criminal investigations was
conducted against him and his department for illegal political activity.
Documents show that his office contacted the Democratic Congressional
Campaign Committee (DCCC) to "target" Republican lawmakers who were up
for reelection in 1998. The bulk of this campaign activity resulted out
of an
issue on which Abramoff and Stayman clashed.
In 1997, President Clinton planned to impose federal minimum wage and
immigration laws on the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI), a
territory of the United States. The local government of Saipan (on CNMI)
and several Republican politicians strongly opposed these measures.
Politicians, garment factory owners, and human rights groups bitterly
clashed on the issue. Amidst all this, Jack Abramoff represented several garment factories
on Saipan and its local government. This is where the story really starts.
Here's a rough timeline of the story that Wallsten omitted:
1. 1997: Allen Stayman, as the acting director
of the Office of Insular Affairs (OIA) at the Department of Interior (DOI),
reportedly writes a letter to the Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee (DCCC). In the letter, Stayman allegedly asks the head of the DCCC to "repudiate" Froilan Tenorio, the Democratic governor of the island of Saipan, for lobbying against Clinton's plans
for Saipan. "Largely out of sight, there is a nominal Democrat, a
Governor running for reelection, who scorns our President, who is in
Washington this week playing footsie with the Republican House
leadership, and who should be repudiated -- in writing -- by the
Nation's Democrats," wrote Stayman ("Interior to probe on-job campaign,"
Washington Times, August 18, 1999). Accompanying the memo is
a four-page document entitled, "Proposed DNC Press release" ("Senate
Hires controversial Dem staffer," The Hill, July 8, 2003).
(BTW, after his election, Gov. Tenorio switched parties. ("Interior to
probe on-job campaign," Washington Times, August 18, 1999))
2. 1997: David North, working with Allen Stayman at the
OIA, reportedly writes a letter to the DCCC asking for
information on how to help Democratic candidates for the upcoming 1998
midterm elections. ("We have been asked for the names and phone
numbers of the Democratic candidate [sic] for Congress in these
district [sic] if they have been identified for 1998 ... Some
friends have asked for this information because the incumbents
([Rep. Dick] Armey, [Rep. Tom] DeLay and [Rep. Dana]
Rohrabacher) have been giving the Clinton Administration a hard
time." (bold mine) ("Interior official hit for on-job politics,"
Washington Times, August 3, 1999). North's letter is
perfectly clear that these politicians should be targeted because of
their opposite positions on trade and immigration on the CNMI. (North: "My
motivations are: to elect Democrats to the House and to punish the
handful of obvious GOP sweatshop allies." ("Tactics of thugs at
Interior," Washington Times commentary, August 20, 1999).)
3. March 13, 1998: Allen Stayman appears on an
episode of ABC's 20/20 (link)
about reported worker abuses on the island of Saipan. The piece is also a
very unflattering portrait of Rep. Tom DeLay. The
piece clearly implies that Rep. DeLay is turning his back on
"sweatshop labor," "forced abortions," and "forced prostitution" on Saipan. (And here's the kicker: In his report, Brian Ross, the host
of the 20/20 segment, says that DeLay was one of "more than 80
influential Congressmen and Congressional staff members" who were
brought out from Washington to visit Saipan. "More than 80"? Why,
then, the laser-beam focus only on DeLay?? No other
Congressman is profiled in Ross' report!)
Are you with me so far? In 1997, Stayman and his cronies at his
department clearly appear to be performing illegal campaign and lobbying
activity against Republicans with the DNC and DCCC. Then, in
1998, Mr. Stayman appears on national television in a story plastering
Rep. DeLay for his activities regarding the island of Saipan. There's
more:
4. SUMMER 1999: The House Resources Committee begins an
investigation into illegal activity at the OIA. The committee is chaired
by Rep. Don Young (R-Alaska). The investigation looks into
whether North and others at the OIA violated
the
Hatch Act, which forbids on-the-job campaign and lobbying
activity at government offices. Stayman becomes the subject of a
separate investigation by the Office of Special Counsel (OSG). (Stayman
retains Washington lawyer
Plato Cacheris, whose clients reportedly have included Monica Lewinsky
and CIA spy Aldrich Ames. ("Congress to examine politics in the
Pacific," Washington Times, September 14, 1999)) North and Stayman resign from their positions.
5. July 1999: Ferdinand Aranza, acting director
of Insular Affairs (he succeeded Stayman), is issued a subpoena for
failing to promptly provide documents and computer hard drives in
the investigation into illegal activity at the OIA. ("Senior Interior official facing contempt
charge over subpoena," Washington Times, July 20, 1999)
6. August 8, 1999: A Washington Times article
reports that Sen. Rod Grams (R-MN) has asked for an investigation of Allen Stayman. In addition to looking into Stayman's
on-the-job campaign activities, Sen. Grams wants to investigate a "purported threat" by Stayman.
The allegation is that Stayman said he would "go after"
Sen. Grams because of his position on CNMI.
("Interior official accused of threat," Washington Times, August
8, 1999).
7. August 24, 1999: The investigation into the
activities at the DOI expands when Jeffrey Farrow, a senior
official in the Intergovernmental Affairs Office at the White House, is
served with a subpoena. ("Interior probe hits White House," Washington Times, August 25, 1999)
8. September 1999: Northern Mariana Governor Pedro T.
Tenorio, Lt. Gov. Jesus R. Sablan, and another CNMI official visit
Washington to say that "federal interference in labor and immigration
laws would create a burden on their economy" (quoting "Congress to
examine politics in the Pacific," Washington Times, September 14,
1999) ... Speaking about allegations of labor abuses on Saipan, Rep. Don
Young says, "If there are the problems some allege, we also want to
know why our federal agencies on the islands haven't addressed them
under existing federal law." ("Congress to examine politics in the
Pacific," Washington Times, September 14, 1999) (For more reading
concerning Young's particular issue, try
here,
here, and
here.)
9. May 17, 2000: The Washington Times quotes
Rep. Don Young as saying that subpoenaed records show that government
officials "were actively engaged in partisan campaign activities using
official time and resources in an attempt to assist the campaigns of
their Democratic challengers." In addition, the actions by OIA officials
"constitute probable violations of the Hatch Act prohibitions against
campaign activities by federal employees on the job." ("Probe of
improper campaigning targets insular affairs employees," Washington
Times, May 17, 2000)
10. JULY 12, 2000: The inspector general of the
Interior Department, Inspector General Earl E. Devaney, a
Clinton appointee,
recommends to a House panel that the U.S. Attorney General prosecute
David North. However, the Justice Department (headed by Janet Reno) refuses
to prosecute, citing, in part, a "lack of evidence of criminal
intent." ("Interior IG wanted ex-official charged," Washington Times,
July 13, 2000)
In addition, "Devaney testified that [Allen] Stayman had
admitted to investigators that he contacted the Democratic
Committee, and provided a memorandum and draft press release, urging
them to intervene in a local election in the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, a territory overseen by OIA. Stayman
denied the charges, although he acknowledged that the signature on
the memorandum was his, explaining that he signed it without reading
its contents." ("Revealed Improprieties at Interior Available to the
Public," Northwest Mining Association, July/August 2000)
In his opening statement before the Committee, Rep. Young states
(bold mine):
“We have found evidence of massive waste, fraud and abuse
at OIA. This is what oversight is all about. OIA’s
highly-questionable activities include:
• researching and writing political campaign press releases and
candidate position papers for candidates;
• editing, researching and writing reports, for lobbying
organizations; and
• hiring private investigators to collect information in foreign
countries."
("Revealed Improprieties at Interior Available to the Public,"
Northwest Mining Association, July/August 2000)
_*_*_*_*_*
To almost no one's surprise, Stayman dodged formal charges.
In 2003, commenting on the investigations he once faced,
Stayman said, “I really don’t want to make any comment about that.
It happened and nothing ever really came of it, and I’d prefer that
nothing come of it anymore. It concluded and there was no action taken.
That was a nice way to end it, and I’d like to end it that way.”
Incidentally, according to
this 2003 article in The Hill, "While at the Interior
Department and during the CNMI debate, Stayman made frequent
contributions to Democratic Party organizations totaling $6,850."
(He gave $450 to Sen. McCain (R-AZ) in 1999 for his presidential bid.)
Now that Stayman's history is outlined, one can see why many
Republicans took issue with Stayman landing a State Department position
in the Bush administration. (BTW: A
recent staff report by the House Government Reform Committee did not
delve into Stayman's past history, either.)
Finally ... Wallsten's LA Times piece begins with the line,
"For five years, Allen Stayman wondered who ordered his removal from a
State Department job negotiating agreements with tiny Pacific island
nations — even when his own bosses wanted him to stay." Did he really
wonder? The oppositional relationship of Stayman and Abramoff went back
nearly a decade, and Stayman assumedly knew of Abramoff's contacts and
lobbying efforts. It seems like a stretch that Stayman would find it a
mystery who would want him to stop his efforts against influential
Republicans during a Republican administration.
Jack Abramoff's business activities appear to have been quite shady,
but this is no excuse for the Times painting only half of the
picture in the Abramoff-Stayman saga.