podesta-emails
Fwd: CLIP | Yahoo: Hillary moneyman highlights new Saudi connection
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: *Sara Latham* <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, October 16, 2015
Subject: Fwd: CLIP | Yahoo: Hillary moneyman highlights new Saudi connection
To: John Podesta <[email protected]>
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Tyson Brody <[email protected]
<javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','[email protected]');>>
Date: Fri, Oct 16, 2015 at 4:13 PM
Subject: CLIP | Yahoo: Hillary moneyman highlights new Saudi connection
To: Clips <[email protected]
<javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','[email protected]');>>
Hillary moneyman highlights new Saudi connection
<https://www.yahoo.com/politics/hillary-moneyman-highlights-new-saudi-connection-194828485.html>
Michael Isikoff
Hillary Clinton and Saudi Arabian Defense Minister Prince Salman bin
Abdul-Aziz Al Saud prior to a State Department meeting in 2012. (Photo:
Alex Wong/Getty Images)
The Saudi government, under increasing criticism over civilian casualties
from its airstrikes in Yemen and a harsh crackdown on political dissidents
at home, has just hired a powerhouse Washington, D.C., lobbying firm headed
by a top Hillary Clinton fundraiser — an arrangement that critics charge
raises fresh questions about the influence that foreign government
lobbyists could have on her campaign.
The Saudi contract with the Podesta Group, owned by veteran Washington
lobbyist and Clinton campaign bundler Tony Podesta, calls for the firm to
provide “public relations” and other services on behalf of the royal court
of King Salman.
It included an initial “project fee” payment of $200,000 last month and
unspecified further sums over the course of the next year, according to
documents recently filed with the Justice Department Foreign Agents
Registration Act office.
The retention comes at a time the Saudis are being condemned by United
Nations officials over reports that its bombings against Houthi strongholds
in Yemen’s civil war has resulted in the deaths and injuries of hundreds of
innocent civilians, including children.
Adding to the international pressure, the Saudis are also facing criticism
from human rights groups over its continued refusal to allow basic rights
to women (e.g. the freedom to drive cars). They are also being criticized
for their hardline domestic suppression of political dissidents, with
draconian punishments such as the sentence — by beheading — recently given
to a 20-year-old Shiite political protester.
“They are very nervous about an American policy change, and so they are
betting on the horse they think will win — Hillary Clinton,” said Ali
Al-Ahmad, a Saudi analyst with the Institute for Gulf Affairs, and a
frequent critic of the regime, about the hiring of the Podesta Group.
The Podesta Group is now on a roster of a half-dozen D.C. lobbying firms
representing the Saudis, including the giant international law firm of DLA
Piper and the firm of Hogan Lovells, whose principal on the Saudi account
is former Minnesota Republican Sen. Norm Coleman, who chairs the
Congressional Leadership Fund, a super-Pac that is a major source of House
GOP campaign funds. (Former Texas congressman Tom Loeffler, a top bundler
for Jeb Bush’s presidential campaign, for years representedthe Saudis, but
his current firm, Akin Gump, now lobbies for the United Arab Emirates,
among other foreign clients.)
But the retention of the Podesta Group has gotten attention in Washington
lobbying circles because of its unusually close ties to Hillary Clinton’s
campaign: Tony Podesta is the brother and former business partner of
Clinton’s campaign chairman, John Podesta. He is also a prolific Democratic
Party fundraiser who is among 43 Washington lobbyists (many of whom also
represent foreign governments) listed as Clinton campaign bundlers in
reports filed by the campaign with the Federal Election Commission.
The reports disclose that Podesta had raised $140,175 for the Clinton
campaign through Sept. 30. Two weeks ago, just days after filing its Saudi
contract with the Justice Department, Podesta held a Clinton campaign
fundraiser at his home that offered fine Italian food cooked by five
gourmet chefs, including himself and his brother, the campaign chairman.
The Podesta Group point man on the Saudi account is David Adams, who
previously served as assistant secretary of state for legislative affairs
in 2011 and 2012, making him Clinton’s chief Capitol Hill lobbyist for her
last two years as secretary of state, according to Justice Department
filings reviewed by Yahoo News.
But Tony Podesta, while calling himself “a proud Clinton bundler,”
vigorously denied that the Saudi contract had anything to do with his
efforts to elect her president. “I’ve never had a conversation with Hillary
Clinton or anybody in the campaign about the work of the firm,” Podesta
said, when reached by Yahoo News on his cell phone while he was dining at a
restaurant in Sicily. “We represent a dozen foreign governments around the
world — we do good work for them. And it has nothing to do with the Hillary
Clinton campaign.”
Asked for comment, Clinton campaign spokesman Josh Schwerin emailed:
“Hillary Clinton has a strong record of standing up for human rights, and
has spent her career fighting for women and girls around the world. She’s
proven that she cannot be intimidated — let alone influenced — to sacrifice
these core principles. And so as president she will continue to stand up to
countries like Saudi Arabia that don’t allow women to have equality. … Make
no mistake, when it comes to U.S. national security, she is guided only by
the best interests of our country.“
The Saudis have longstanding ties to the Clintons: The Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia is among the largest donors to the Clinton Foundation, contributing
between $10 million and $25 million, according to the foundation’s website
(which only discloses figures in broad categories, not precise sums.) Bill
Clinton has also received hefty fees for speeches in Saudi Arabia,
including $600,000 for two talks while Hillary Clinton was secretary of
state. Last September 4, Bill Clinton met with King Salman for what was
described by one source as a “brief courtesy visit” at the Four Seasons
Hotel. Two weeks later, on Sept. 18, the Podesta Group filed papers with
the Justice Department reporting that it had been retained by an entity
called “the Center for Studies and Media Affairs at the Saudi Royal Court.”
Tony Podesta speaking to Associated Press reporters in Philadelphia,
September 2004. (Photo: Jacqueline Larma/AP)
Podesta said he was “unaware” of the Four Seasons hotel meeting between
the King and the former president and that his negotiations to represent
the Saudis had been going on for several months before that. He declined,
however, to talk about precisely what his firm had been retained to do for
the Saudis. “We don’t speak on or off the record about what we do for our
clients,” he said.
Podesta is far from the only Clinton campaign bundler to be lobbying for
foreign governments or their interests. A review of the Clinton campaign’s
bundler list by Yahoo News found lobbyists representing the United Arab
Emirates, Bahrain, South Korea, Morocco, Japan, and Hong Kong. (Bush, who
among GOP candidates has the most entrenched ties to K Street, received
bundled contributions from lobbyists with firms that represent the People’s
Republic of China, Turkey, and South Korea.)
Two of the Clinton lobbyist-bundlers, Richard Sullivan and David Jones, are
principals in a firm that, until late last year, represented the Russia
Direct Investment Fund, a sovereign wealth fund co-founded by Vladimir
Putin when he was prime minister. Another Clinton campaign bundler, former
New Jersey Sen. Robert Torricelli, is the lobbyist for the Paris-based
National Council for Resistance in Iran, a controversial Iranian dissident
group that for years had been on the State Department’s terrorism list, but
was “de-listed” three years ago.
In her campaign, Hillary Clinton has pledged to push for sweeping campaign
finance reform that will “end the stranglehold that wealthy interests have
over our political system” and “curb the outsized influence of big money in
American politics.” But the role of so many well-heeled foreign lobbyists
in Clinton’s campaign fundraising apparatus is “very troubling” and
represents a substantial retreat from eight years ago, when then candidate
Barack Obama refused to take campaign money at all from any registered
lobbyists, said Craig Holman of Public Citizen, a public interest group
that has long pushed for wholesale changes in the campaign-finance system.
“This is classic influence-peddling,” said Holman
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