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Airline
industry lobbyists spent more than $264 million for a
$25 billion industry bailout, liability limits and other benefits.
But “Honest Graft” made sure that all provisions to help laid
off airline workers were dropped from the final bills.
Aviation Stablization and Security
On September 11th, the world stopped turning.
Rescue and recovery workers raced towards the World Trade Center and
Pentagon.
Amid the dust and debris, simple acts of courage, self-sacrifice and
compassion flashed, and produced brilliant rays of hope.
And yet, after the attacks, the foul smell of honest graft rose above
the devastation.
Two bills―the Air Transportation Stabilization Act and the Aviation
Security Act―began their trek through the legislative process within 10
days of the attack. A $25 billion bailout of the airline industry sailed
through the Congress in a single day, September 21st. The airline
security bill took until November 19th to become law.
The IAM Journal took a hard look at both public laws and found
that honest graft trumped honest work at every turn.
A coalition of airlines, aircraft manufacturers and insurers saw their
opportunities, and took ‘em. They were uniquely poised to do so.
Since 1999, they had spent a total of $264,295,548 on lobbying and soft
dollar contributions ŠŠ more than a quarter billion dollars!
From Delta Airlines to Federal Express, from General Electric to United
Technologies, from Aetna to Prudential, from the Air Transport
Association to the Airport Council International, the mutual interest of
76 different organizations converged into one massive special interest.
During the ten weeks Congress worked on the two bills, the 76
organizations gave $692,528 in “soft dollar” contributions to federal
politicians. All but $150,000 of it went to Republican campaign
committees. In fact, the National Republican Congressional Campaign
Committee received checks totaling $100,000 from Federal Express, Delta
Airlines and United Parcel Service on September 12th.
The Democratic Senate Campaign Committee received $30,000 from the
Prudential Insurance Company on September 21st, the day the airline
bailout bill passed the Congress. That public law let the Federal
government pay an air carrier for “increased cost of insurance” and
limited an air carrier’s liability to its existing insurance coverage.
On October 4th, the day the Senate tried (and failed) to take up the
Aviation Security Act, Prudential wrote four $5,000 checks to the
Republican National Committee Š Governors’ Account. On October 11th, the
day the Senate passed the bill, Metropolitan Life gave the RNC $25,000.
Aetna kicked in $50,000 five days later.
Prudential then dropped $50,000 on the DCCC and Aetna added $15,000 to
the RNC’s coffers four days before the House took up the Aviation
Security bill.
On November 16th, the day all congressional action on the Aviation
Security Act ended, Aetna wrote the RNC a check for $40,000.
Why all this insurance company money? Could it be the war risk insurance
provisions Congress included in the bill? Or the limited liability to
insurance coverage provision? Both provisions help the insurance
industry directly or indirectly.
Was there a quid pro quo? We will never know for sure.
But during these ten weeks, individual contributions to the members of
the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee ŠŠ the key
committee for both bills― totaled $1,275,871
Even the owner of the World Trade Center, Larry A. Silverstein, wrote
checks. On September 15th, he sent a check for $2,500 to the
Responsibility Opportunity Community PAC―Senator Joe Lieberman’s
leadership PAC.
Silverstein was a modest donor to Democratic senate candidates and New
York Mayor Rudy Guliani. Between 1998 and 2000, he gave $49,750 to
federal committees.
Until his September 15th check to Lieberman’s leadership PAC, Larry
Silverstein had written only one $1,000 check in all of 2001.
And yet, Public Law 107-71 limits the liability of “a person with a
property interest in the World Trade Center” to the amount of liability
insurance they maintained and says that limitation doesn’t apply if
there is a “willing default on a contractual obligation to rebuild
. . . the World Trade Center.”
Yes, the world stopped turning on September 11th.
More than $1.2 million in donations poured into members of the House
Transportation and Infrastructure Committee which initially handled the
two bills that bailed out the airline industry and left workers to fend
for themselves.
But the honest graft just kept on churning.
Just coincidence? Public Law 107-71 limited the liability of “a person
with a property interest in the World Trade Center.” Owner Larry
Silverstein made a $2,500 political donation on September 15th.
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