By The Prowler on 10.12.06 @ 12:09AM
Under Secretary Paulson, a key Bush department has been thrown open to Goldman Sachs liberal Democrats.
If the Bush White House wants to understand just why
conservatives are walking away from this Administration, they need
only look at the disaster brewing over at the Treasury Department,
where Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is turning
the federal agency into Goldman Sachs South and allowing liberal
Democrats the run of the building.
By some Treasury insiders accounts, as many as 15 senior
positions at Treasury may go to former Goldman Sachs employees or
consultants. At least one of those jobs may already have reopened,
with the sudden resignation of one of those liberal Democrats
Deborah Lehr.
Lehr is well credentialed: a former Clinton Administration
National Security Council adviser, a top aide to Clinton trade rep
Mickey Kantor, an adviser to Paulson when he was
chairman of Goldman Sachs, and an associate of former Clinton
national security adviser Samuel "Sock Stuffer"
Berger.
Oh, and she happens to be married to John F.W.
Rogers, chief of staff at Goldman Sachs, and one of
Paulson's closest confidantes.
Lehr had been appointed to her post overseeing a strategic
economic dialogue with China in the wake of Paulson's meetings with
senior Chinese officials in September. Lehr resigned earlier this
week, citing "personal reasons." Press speculation noted that she
and Rogers have young children, but in the past three years, Lehr,
according to associates in Washington and New York, has kept up a
highly active business life outside the home.
Some questions have been raised about her association with Sandy
Berger, who famously stuffed sensitive national security archived
documents into his socks and literally legged them out of the
National Archives while preparing briefings for the 9/11
Commission, but it isn't clear if those close ties to Berger would
have nixed Lehr's job as a key contact for the Chinese government
with the Bush Administration's economic team.
Paulson, who has cultivated the Chinese marketplace in his
former role at Goldman Sachs, was thought to be the right man to
open up more cooperative discussions with the Chinese. At the time
of the meetings, Paulson crowed: "The key to working with the
Chinese is being able to get access to all the right people at
whatever level." Implicit in that statement was that Paulson was
the man.
But inside Treasury and in some financial institutions in New
York the post-meeting reviews of Paulson and his Treasury team were
less than stellar. "We've heard the meetings were a waste of time,
that the Chinese just rolled us," says an investment banker in New
York with GOP ties. "These meetings had so many Goldman people
involved on different levels that the Chinese couldn't tell if this
was a government meeting or a conference with Goldman Sachs. Even
some of the Treasury people I talk to say they couldn't figure out
what is going on."
More directly, many inside Washington are trying to figure out
why liberal Democrats are being given senior level, intelligence
sensitive and economically critical jobs in what is supposed to be
a Republican administration. "Yeah, a President John
Kerry would appoint a Republican to that kind of job,"
says a Republican political consultant derisively. "This would be
funny if it weren't apparent that this Administration has just
completely lost its way. I'm not sure this White House understands
the anger that is simmering out there, and which will become very
apparent in the aftermath of this election cycle should dramatic
changes take place on Capitol Hill. The Paulson thing is just one
more exhibit in a long line of examples."
topics:
Trade, Business