
From the “color of political slimebags is green” department. Note to readers: Show this to some idiot Internet heckler the next time you are accused of “being in the pay of big oil” for having an opinion on climate.
Here are two instances worth noting, but there are plenty more:
- The report says that in November 2011, former governor Gray Davis — by then a lawyer for Los Angeles-based Occidental Petroleum Corp. — pressured Brown to fire two oil and gas regulators the company felt were slow to grant injection well permits for hydraulic fracturing (fracking). Two months later, Oxy contributed $250,000 to Brown’s Proposition 30 tax increase initiative, and shortly after that gave $100,000 to a pet Brown charity, the Oakland Military Institute. This surely looks like old-fashioned pay-to-play, and boosting “fracking” as well. Maybe he’s allowing fracking because the money is just too good.
- The report shows that in June 2013, tough regulations were dropped from Senate Bill 4, a bill intended to restrict “fracking”. The same day, Chevron Corporation gave $135,000 to the Democratic Party. Several months later, Chevron wrote the party a $350,000 check and a week later, the party put $300,000 into Brown’s re-election campaign fund. On the same day, Chevron plunked $54,400 (the legal maximum) into Brown’s election coffer.
Pay to play; despite telling the world how tough on climate he is at the Paris accord, he’s been on the take with money from “big oil”. The slimage is strong with this one. And, let’s not forget, Brown is an idiot who thinks Los Angeles airport would be underwater soon, then got called out on it for its impossibility. I blame Richard Alley’s AGU talk, which was pandering directly to Brown.
Here is the press release and report on “Brown’s Dirty Hands”:
Consumer Watchdog Report Finds Big Energy Companies Gave Big $ and Got Big Favors From Governor Brown With Dollars and Decisions Flowing In Close Proximity To Each Other
SANTA MONICA, Calif., Aug. 10, 2016 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Public interest group Consumer Watchdog today reported that twenty-six energy companies including the state’s three major investor-owned utilities, Occidental, Chevron, and NRG—all with business before the state—donated $9.8 million to Jerry Brown’s campaigns, causes, and initiatives, and to the California Democratic Party since he ran for Governor. Donations were often made within days or weeks of winning favors. The three major investor-owned utilities alone contributed nearly $6 million.
An exhaustive review of campaign records, publicly-released emails and other documents at PUCPapers.org, court filings, and media reports, shows that Brown personally intervened in regulatory decisions favoring the energy industry, and points to Brown and his operatives having used the Democratic Party as a political slush fund to receive contributions from unpopular energy companies in amounts greater than permitted to his candidate committee. Between 2011 and 2014, the energy companies tracked by Brown’s Dirty Hands donated $4.4 million to the Democratic Party, and the Democratic Party gave $4.7 million to Brown’s re-election. Earmarking to the Democratic Party is illegal. Consumer Watchdog is forwarding its report to the Fair Political Practices Commission.
“The timing of energy industry donations around important legislation and key pro-industry amendments, as well as key regulatory decisions in which Brown personally intervened, raises troubling questions about whether quid pro quos are routine for this administration,” said consumer advocate Liza Tucker, author of the report, Brown’s Dirty Hands. “While Brown paints himself as a foe of fossil fuels, his Administration promoted reckless oil drilling, burning dirty natural gas to make electricity, and used old hands from industry and government, placed in key regulatory positions, to protect the fossil fuel-reliant energy industry.”
Download Brown’s Dirty Hands at www.consumerwatchdog.org/dirtyhands
View a video on the report here:
Evidence strongly suggests that the timing of certain donations may have elicited or rewarded legislative or regulatory action on behalf of these companies. Among the most egregious examples detailed in the report:
- Southern California Edison donated $130,000 to the California Democratic Party, its largest contribution up until that time, on the same day PUC President Michael Peevey cut a secret deal with an SCE executive in Warsaw, Poland to make ratepayers cover 70 percent of the $4.7 billion cost to close the fatally flawed San Onofre nuclear plant. Brown backed the dirty deal, telling Edison’s CEO personally, according to an email from the CEO uncovered by the Public Records Act, that he was willing to tell the media on the day of the plant’s shuttering that the company was acting responsibly and focused on the right things. Three days prior to SCE’s announcement that it would close San Onofre permanently, the company donated $25,000 to the California Democratic Party.
- Emails from PG&E’s top lobbyist Brian Cherry to his boss claim that Brown personally intervened with a PUC Commissioner to persuade him to approve a natural gas-fired power plant called Oakley for the utility. In a January 1, 2013email, Cherry described a New Year’s Eve dinner with Peevey where Peevey reminded him “how he and Governor Brown used every ounce of persuasion to get [Commissioner Mark] Ferron to change his mind and vote for Oakley…Jerry’s direct plea was decisive.” PG&E donated $20,000 to the California Democratic Party the day after the PUC voted for the project. An appeals court would later strike down the decision because PG&E had not proved its necessity.
- While PG&E’s lobbyist and then-PUC President Michael Peevey fed names to Brown’s executive secretary, former PG&E vice president Nancy McFadden, to appoint the critical swing-vote PUC commissioner who would cast pro-utility votes, PG&E donated $75,000 to the California Democratic Party. The same day that Brown appointed ex-banker Mark Ferron to the commission, PG&E donated another $41,500. The appointment lifted the value of PG&E’s stock and the PG&E stock held by McFadden and valued as high as $1 million.
- Chevron donated $135,000 to the California Democratic Party the same day lawmakers exempted a common method of well stimulation from legislation meant to regulate fracking. After the bill passed with an amendment dropping a moratorium on fracking permits, Occidental gave $100,000 to one of Brown’s favorite causes, the Oakland Military Institute. Brown signed the weakened bill. On December 23, 2013, Chevron donated $350,000 to the Democratic Party. OnDecember 30, the Democratic Party donated $300,000 to Brown for Governor 2014, while Chevron donated the maximum to Brown’s campaign, $54,400, on the same day. Less than two months later, Brown came out publicly to oppose a proposed oil severance tax. The weakened fracking bill also helped Nancy McFadden who held up to $100,000 in Linn Energy that would acquire Berry Petroleum and its 3,000 California fracking wells.
- Occidental’s attorney, former Governor Gray Davis, successfully pressured Brown to fire two oil and gas regulators who wouldn’t grant oil waste injection permits without proof that aquifers would not be contaminated. Two months later, when Brown’s new interim oil and gas supervisor granted Occidental a permit without an environmental review, Occidental contributed $250,000 to Prop 30, Brown’s ballot measure to raise taxes, then another $100,000 two weeks later to his favored Oakland Military Institute. Seven months later, Occidental made a second $250,000 donation to Prop 30.
- Brown’s climate change bill, SB 350, gave utilities a monopoly on electric vehicle infrastructure and large-scale renewable energy projects by excluding rooftop solar from the state’s renewable portfolio standard. Three weeks after a last-minute amendment granting utilities access to a regional grid, PG&E donated $80,000 to the Democratic Party. The utility donated another $50,000 three weeks after the bill was chaptered. Utility stocks increased by at least 14 percent within two months.
- Power plant developer NRG wasn’t a Brown donor until the company cut a sweetheart deal with the PUC to settle the state’s case over its 2001 electricity price manipulation, touted as a win by the Governor’s office. Rather than paying back the state, the company was allowed to spend $100 million of its $120 million fine to build electric vehicle charging infrastructure. Two months later, NRG began donations to Brown, his causes, and his party that would come to $105,000. A lawsuit against the PUC, filed by electric charging station competitor Ecotality, called the deal illegal because it awarded a monopoly to an out-of-state company.
- Lawmakers sent Brown a package of six PUC reform bills in 2015 which would have increased oversight, transparency and accountability at the PUC, and received unanimous, bipartisan support. Brown vetoed the reform bills on October 12, 2015. One week later, PG&E donated $50,000 to the Democratic Party. In December, PG&E donated another $175,000 to the Party.
Brown’s top staffers—Executive Secretary Nancy McFadden and former Cabinet Secretary Dana Williamson—both former PG&E executives, were paid roughly $100,000 each by the California Democratic Party for consulting and fundraising services at various times between 2013 and 2016.
Jerry Brown’s family and other personal ties to industry insiders also appear to play a role in his Administration’s decisions to promote the interests of the utilities and the oil and gas industry at the expense of consumers.
Brown’s sister, Kathleen, was given a seat on Sempra’s board of directors in June 2013, just as lawmakers amended fracking legislation to drop a moratorium on fracking permits. As of April 2016, Kathleen Brown had earned $691,300 for her board service at Sempra, parent company of Southern California Gas which is responsible for the massive Aliso Canyon natural gas well blowout that caused the biggest methane leak in U.S. history. Governor Brown issued an emergency order that ensured secrecy around the blowout investigation, has waged a campaign through his energy regulators to keep Aliso open and has kept information and data involving the blowout secret from the public. Sempra stock has increased by 116% since Brown took office, more than any other utility.
Kathleen Brown also served on the board of real estate and oil company Forestar Group—which owns 700 acres next to Porter Ranch, a community drastically affected by the leak, where Forestar plans to build luxury homes, and another 1,000 acres of oil and gas interests in California. Kathleen holds $749,000 worth of Forestar stock. She now sits on the board of Renew Financial, a private funder of renewable energy projects that stands to benefit from SB 350. She stepped down from Forestar one month after Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency at Aliso Canyon.
Governor Brown supported, appointed and hired a group of old hands from previous administrations and the energy industry that have played a role in policies promoting the fossil-fuel natural gas system. Brown’s Dirty Hands details how the revolving door of industry insiders, including former PUC President Michael Peevey, now under criminal investigation for corruption at the PUC, was supported and installed by Brown and his top aides. The report details crucial moments for the energy industry contributors through the Administration’s course and how Brown sided with them.
The report is released just as ratepayers dodged a bullet in the last month of the legislative session in Sacramento, where the legislature stalled for the year efforts by Brown and his hands to enact a Western regional grid and federalize energy regulation in California.
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What’s the big deal? It’s obvious that Trenberthian ethics apply here. Oil money given to AGW supporters: good. Oil money given to AGW skeptics: bad.
By his lights, Jerry has committed no sins. His heart’s in the right place, so money is purified as soon as it enters his grasp.
At least it’s for big bucks. Years ago Texas Gov John Connelly was accused of taking a $10K bribe. His response was he wouldn’t even get out of bed for $10K.
With a $10K hooker, he wouldn’t have to! 🙂
This sounds like “dog bites man” stuff here. There is somewhere in the neighbourhood of $US 1.5 Trillion every single year sloshing around the Global Warming and Big Enviro industry. Governor Moonbeam extracted only a small slice of that amount.
I love it when someone makes a pile of dough out of fossil fuels…Tom Steyer, Jerry Brown, whoever. I love that Germany has expanded its coal production (and kept its nukes humming).
I just don’t get the preaching against fossil fuels by those who depend most on fossil fuels. When Di Caprio wants to celebrate New Years in three times zones on the same day he doesn’t row from one zone to the other, does he?
By the way, could someone tell me how to get corrupted? I constantly praise Australian coal, even describing it as chocolate sunshine with an aroma of freshly brewed Lapsang Souchong…and still no check from Big Black, or even a thank you.
I feel like the loose glamour girl who’s bonking around for free.
LOL. We definitely gotta get you some help.
mosomoso,
I don’t know, but if you find out will you take me with you (or at least tell me the secret)? Trying to live a relatively honest, law-abiding life and pass my values onto my kids has left me kind of broke and frustrated.
Corrupted is a socialist disease you get from $10K hookers
…and GE
WSJ today….
GE Wants to Bring More Life to Coal
After playing down fuel’s future, group chases rising demand in India and Southeast Asia
“We expect a quite-stable if not increasing amount of installations in coal,” said Andreas Lusch, the chief executive of GE’s steam-power-systems business, who came over to the company in the Alstom deal.
I figure that with all the various taxes, government (federal,state,local) takes more per gallon of oil/gasoline than ‘big oil’ manages to keep for themselves.
This means that ‘big oil’ money goes to each and every environmentalist, who gets a government grant, is taking money from ‘big oil’.
Well, he did bang Linda Ronstadt, so there’s that.
He’s a Jesuit, what would you expect?
This all looks a lot like legislative blackmail and danegeld.
I wish I could send a photo of my “Shocked Face”.
Typical elite green hypocrite demanding from others what they don’t do themselves.
This is a very old story with Moonbeam but it’s worse than you thought! Right from the get go when he was governor the FIRST time and Grey Davis was his aide Jerry brown brought down “strictest in the nation” pollution controls which limited the grade of petroleum that could be used to start refining from to produce fuel for California. The law firm exclusively in charge of letting the contracts from Pertamina, the Indonesian dictatorship’s oil company that provided the lion’s share of supply was… wait for it ..corrupt old Pat Brown Sr. The entire Brown family fortune is based on crooked oil deals and an incestuous relationship with the Manatt law firm in Los Angeles whose partners reads like a who’s who in the Democratic National Committee for forty years.
Californians live by the mindset which led them to elect this man. Let them live out the consequences of their own thinking. By their suffering, maybe they’ll catch on.
Problem is they are leaving California and moving north to escape the lunacy, but end up here in our northern states voting the same way the did in California and ruining our way of life. Stay away! Donald, don’t build a wall on the southern border, build a wall around California!
Now I am beginning to understand the Democratic party plank condemning frakking. Just a prelude to a shakedown. If the dems win, frakking will go on; but the appropriate “protection money” will have to be paid out as campaign contributions to the democratic party. Simple.
Of course he did
Reference to 3,000 Berry Petroleum ‘fracking wells’ by Linn Energy doesn’t make any sense. Had the wells already been fracked?
Perhaps related:
Soros Paid Al Gore MILLIONS To Push ‘Aggressive US Action’ On Global Warming
Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2016/08/17/soros-paid-al-gore-millions-to-push-aggressive-us-action-on-global-warming/#ixzz4HgsXhXYv
America: where you will find the best politicians that money can buy.
Actually, we get the worse (worst?) politicians because the money is so good.
Climate conspirator for Federal funds to get high speed rail to nowhere is more like it.