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December 4 - President Bush will make two stops in Maryland on Friday. The first is an exclusive, big-ticket fundraiser in Baltimore, where he is expected to add another million dollars to his massive campaign war chest. Then hell deliver a speech on the economy to workers at a Home Depot in nearby Halethorpe. Bushs appearance at the home improvement behemoth has left the locals a bit baffled. On Wednesday, The Sun in Baltimore ran a story on the presidents upcoming visit to the town of 20,000 in southwest Baltimore County. Titled "A Presidential Mystery," the article confirmed Bushs itinerary but concluded that "nobody seems to know why" hes going to Halethorpes Home Depot. Research by Public Citizen suggests the presidents visit is yet another way to reward the nations second-largest retailer for its generosity to the Bush campaign and the Republican Party. Home Depot employees and their families have given $1.5 million to the GOP since 1999, according to data provided to Public Citizen by the Center for Responsive Politics. During that time, no candidate has benefited from Home Depots largesse more than Bush. The total includes $907,950 in mostly "soft money" donations to the Republican National Committee before such giving was outlawed by the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA). So far this year, Home Depot employees and the company political action committee have contributed $31,000 to the 2004 Bush-Cheney re-election campaign. "Every time Bush has a fundraiser, he also schedules a purportedly public event to pass the cost onto the taxpayers," said Frank Clemente, director of Public Citizens Congress Watch. "These carefully staged performances before a captive audience of workers are a sham. The president has managed to turn policy pronouncements into free PR for his most generous political supporters." Campaign contributions have helped cement a close working relationship between Home Depot and the Bush administration. Consider these uncanny connections: Duty-Free Favors Buried in two small paragraphs on page 710 of the massive, stalled energy bill is a measure that would lift a tariff on Chinese-made ceiling fans sold by Home Depot. The new language was inserted during the closed-door conference committee and had never been debated by either branch of Congress. According to estimates by the Joint Committee on Taxation, suspension of the tariffs would cost the U.S. Treasury $48 million over five years. Home Depot CEO Robert Nardelli who is making the trip up from Atlanta to appear alongside Bush is hoping the White House will do some more arm-twisting on the energy bill to overcome a Senate filibuster that has blocked its passage. Friday wont be Nardellis first appearance with the president. The former GE executive, who took control of Home Depot in 2000, has made at least three trips to the White House during the Bush administration. Most recently, Nardelli was recognized at a November ceremony honoring eight companies for supporting workers who had been deployed in Iraq. In December 2002, Nardelli accompanied NASCAR champion Tony Stewart who drives a car sponsored by Home Depot to the Oval Office. A few months earlier, Nardelli attended a White House conference on volunteerism, an event that led to his appointment to Bushs Council on Service and Civic Participation. Revolving-Door Connections The Bush administrations close ties to Home Depot dont stop there. Executive Vice President Francis Blake, the companys No. 2 person, left his post as Bushs deputy energy secretary after just 10 months on the job in 2001 to work for Home Depot. Blake, who worked for Nardelli at GE, previously served as general counsel to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under President Clinton. The wife of Kent Knutson, Home Depots top in-house lobbyist, formerly was a top aide to Vice President Dick Cheney. Karen Knutson served as deputy director of the National Energy Policy Development Group, better known as Cheneys secret energy task force. She left the administration last year to become a lobbyist. Federal disclosure forms for the first half of the year show Home Depot spending only $20,000 on lobbying (for the "suspension of tariffs on ceiling fans"). But the company prefers to work behind the scenes. According to internal documents uncovered by The Wall Street Journal in 2001, Home Depot secretly gave $1 million to the Institute for Legal Reform, an arm of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, to buy ads aimed at electing business-friendly judges. Energy-Saving Tiff Maryland Gov. Robert Ehrlich who is hosting Bushs Baltimore fundraiser has his own history with Home Depot. Last May, he vetoed energy-efficiency legislation passed by wide margins in both house of the state legislature after intense lobbying by the company. The bill would have set energy-efficiency standards for nine types of appliances not covered by federal rules. The Natural Resources Defense Council calculated that the bill could save consumers $600 million in energy costs by 2020. But Home Depot objected to "mandatory standards" governing ceiling fans, arguing that government-subsidized "Energy Star" fans should not be the only ones approved for sale. Ironically, these are the same fans for which Home Depot is seeking tariff relief. TO ruling that European countries must accept imports of beef grown with artificial hormones. But unlike the EU, the White House bowed to the power of the WTO. ### |