Word: enronizing
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...there's only one witness capable of putting butts in congressional seats - David Duncan, the fired lead Enron auditor who led the shredding at Arthur Andersen, did appear Thursday under subpoena in front of Greenwood's oversight gang. But Duncan, with all Andersen's fingers pointed squarely at him, took the Fifth and will hold out until he gets an immunity deal. So as the House got under way Thursday, fed live to the cable news networks, it was Andersen partner C.E. Andrews, and in-house lawyer Nancy Temple splitting hairs about when Justice called and the shredding stopped...
...that kicked off Thursday - and the several others that will get under way in coming weeks - could take a while to heat up. Lieberman will let Levin, in charge of Governmental Affairs' investigations subcommittee, do the hard digging and knife-waving (he's already sent out 51 subpoenas to Enron and Andersen officials), but with every potential witness thoroughly "lawyered up" by now, there'll be plenty of Duncan-style immunity deals to be made, and all the legalistic haggling that comes with them, to be done first...
...That's fine with the Democrats, who aren't in much hurry. Their job isn't to solve the case, just make a lot of noise about it, with the complete understanding that every time they say "Enron" and "Ken Lay," voters are likely to think "Big Business" and "George W. Bush." Carefully orchestrated, they can turn the myriad Enron investigations - not just into criminality but 401(k)s, tax laws, SEC accounting rules and anything else they can think of - into a prevailing wind on everything from energy policy to tax cuts and the economy. All they...
...point. Senate Democrats will have to make the most of their nominal moral advantage of having been out of power until very recently, because the longer the investigations into Enron, Andersen and supposed supervillain Lay go on, the wider the conclusions are likely to spread the guilt. For all the scolding of Enron's accounting, of its retirement plan, of its executive perks and funny habit of not paying much in the way of taxes the past five years, an early glance suggests that congressional investigators will find an awful lot of it to be perfectly legal...
...money that Enron, and particularly Andersen, has been doling out to Washington so generously in the last decade has touched both parties, and if it hasn't yielded much in the way of overt favors, it's netted plenty in the way of what Congress specializes in - inaction. It was Congress that spiked Arthur Levitt's crusade to separate accounting from consulting two years ago, Congress that keeps passing the impenetrable tax laws Ken Lay so deftly danced upon. Congress that leaves accounting and disclosure loopholes big enough for Lay to pay back a billion-dollar loan in stock without...