NY Times reported on Saudi donations to Clinton foundation, ignored Sen. Clinton's criticisms of Saudi government
SUMMARY: A New York Times article cited concerns "that donors could use presidential foundations to circumvent campaign finance laws intended to limit political influence" and noted that "the Saudi royal family, the king of Morocco, a foundation linked to the United Arab Emirates [UAE], and the governments of Kuwait and Qatar have made contributions of unknown amounts to the Clinton Foundation." But the article did not mention that Hillary Clinton has repeatedly criticized the Saudi government and opposed the Dubai ports deal.
In a December 20 New York Times article, reporters Don Van Natta Jr., Jo Becker, and Mike McIntire wrote that "the secrecy surrounding the William J. Clinton Foundation has become a campaign issue as Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton seeks the Democratic presidential nomination" and cited concerns "that donors could use presidential foundations to circumvent campaign finance laws intended to limit political influence." The Times reported that "federal election law prohibits foreign donations to presidential campaigns and limits Americans to $2,300 per election" in order "[t]o limit the influence of any single donor," in contrast to the "unlimited and anonymous contributions" to the Clinton Foundation by "foreigners and foreign governments," suggesting an ability on the part of foreigners and foreign governments to exercise considerable influence over candidates through contributions. The article went on to note that "the Saudi royal family, the king of Morocco, a foundation linked to the United Arab Emirates [UAE], and the governments of Kuwait and Qatar have made contributions of unknown amounts to the Clinton Foundation." But the Times did not note that Hillary Clinton has repeatedly criticized the Saudi government and opposed the sale of control of several U.S. ports to Dubai Ports World, a company owned by the government of Dubai, a member state of the UAE.
The article also did not mention that former President George H.W. Bush's presidential library, the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum, received several donations of $1 million or more from "foreigners and foreign governments," including the Saudi royal family, the government of Kuwait, and the late president of the UAE.
Hillary Clinton most recently criticized the Saudi government after a Saudi court sentenced a rape victim to 200 lashes and six months in prison for not having a male guardian with her at the time. (The Saudi king later pardoned the victim.) In a November 26 editorial, the New York Sun editorial board praised Clinton for speaking out on the issue despite the library donations from the Saudi royal family:
How's this for a surprising turn in the presidential race? The candidate who has been toughest on Saudi Arabia in the past week hasn't been Mayor Giuliani, Senator McCain, or Governor Romney, but Senator Clinton, the Democrat of New York. It was Mrs. Clinton who spoke out about a punishment of 200 lashes that a Saudi Arabian court gave to a 19-year-old woman victim of a gang rape by seven men. Said Mrs. Clinton, "This is an outrage. The Bush administration has refused to condemn the sentence and said it will not protest an internal Saudi decision. I urge President Bush to call on King Abdullah to cancel the ruling and drop all charges against this woman. As president I will once again make human rights an American priority around the world."
Hats off to Mrs. Clinton for talking tough to the Saudis. The statement is even more newsworthy because the House of Saud has long been a patron of the Clintons. As The New York Sun reported in 2004, the Saudi royal family and three Saudi businessmen, Abdullah Al-Dabbagh, Nasser Al-Rashid, and Walid Juffali, each donated $1 million or more to the Clinton presidential library in Little Rock, Ark. President Clinton also helped secure millions of dollars in Saudi funds for the University of Arkansas.
As for the Bush administration, we have given great deference to the maneuvering required of a wartime leader, as Churchill so memorably explained of his dealings with Stalin in pursuit of Hitler. But the State Department hasn't been covered with glory; here's how it went at the State Department on Tuesday:
In August, Clinton asserted that the United States would need to see "evidence of genuine Saudi cooperation" with U.S. interests in the Middle East before the United States should agree to a proposed arms sale to Saudi Arabia and its neighbors. A December 4 article from The Hill reported that the "Bush administration said it would not officially notify Congress of the deal until Jan. 15, 2008," and that "[o]nce Congress is officially notified, it has 30 days to review such a deal and possibly oppose it." In an August 22 blog post on the Jerusalem Post website, Clinton stated: "I think we needed to see evidence of genuine Saudi cooperation in pursing stability in Iraq and Lebanon and in supporting our efforts to foster peace between the Israelis and Palestinian, before we move ahead with such a significant arms sale. We also need Saudi cooperation in stopping the export of radical Islam from the Kingdom."
Further, in a November policy address on "America's Economic Challenges," Clinton warned that U.S. "dependence on foreign oil means we send billions of dollars to countries like Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. Our trade deficit and our ballooning debts mean we send billions of dollars in payments to countries like China." She added: "These countries then turn around and use our dollars to buy chunks of our economy":
Now, where exactly are countries getting the money for these funds? They're getting it from us. Our dependence on foreign oil means we send billions of dollars to countries like Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. Our trade deficit and our ballooning debts mean we send billions of dollars in payments to countries like China. These countries then turn around and use our dollars to buy chunks of our economy.
Today, sovereign wealth funds hold an estimated $2.5 trillion. Within a decade, it's predicted they'll hold five times that much. We have never seen anything like this, and you don't hear a peep out of the Bush administration.
Now, why exactly are these sovereign wealth funds cause for concern? Well, let me ask you this: How would you feel if a foreign government used its sovereign wealth fund to buy an American car company and moved it overseas? Right now, that government might be our banker, but what if they became our boss, as well?
And how would you feel if countries used their investments in America to influence our foreign policy? What if a country set out to buy companies that compete with their national industries and shut them down?
I don't think we'd be comfortable with our own government speculating in real estate or buying up companies, and we should be doubly uncomfortable with the idea of a foreign government doing these things in our country. In short, these sovereign wealth funds represent a potential threat to our economic sovereignty if we don't act now to assess their impact on our economy.
In March 2006, Clinton joined a bipartisan effort criticizing Saudi Arabia's decision to host a meeting promoting a trade boycott of Israel. She was among a group of senators who signed a letter on the subject addressed to President Bush:
Dear President Bush,
We are writing to urge you to protest the decision by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to host a meeting next week in Jeddah to promote the trade boycott of Israel. Saudi Arabia is taking this action despite a public promise to you last November to drop the trade embargo. You should urge the Saudi rulers to keep their word, cancel this meeting, and end the boycott immediately.
The Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), which has its headquarters in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, is hosting 57 countries at this conference next week. Saudi diplomat Salem el-Honi, High Commissioner of the OIC, recently described the purpose of the meeting in a telephone interview March 6th, 2006 with The Jerusalem Post as follows: "we will discuss coordination among the various offices to strengthen the boycott."
On November 11th, 2005, the World Trade Organization (WTO) ruled to admit Saudi Arabia into the WTO. As you know, the WTO rules forbid any member government to participate in a boycott of a fellow WTO member. Israel is a member of WTO. Last month, in a Senate Finance Committee hearing, your trade representative, Rob Portman, said that the Saudis "have a responsibility to treat Israel as any other member of the WTO." By calling for a strengthened trade embargo against Israel, Saudi Arabia is failing to live up to its obligations to treat all WTO partners equally.
Mr. President, the United States cannot remain silent on Saudi Arabia's intolerant boycott of Israel, nor should the U.S. allow the continued membership of Saudi Arabia in the WTO if they continue to violate WTO rules.
Additionally, in a speech to the 2005 AIPAC Policy Conference, Clinton criticized "Saudi textbooks" that "characterize Jews as wicked" as an example of "hate and incitement and anti-Semitism ... throughout the Arab world."
Clinton also opposed a 2005 Bush administration proposal to establish a bilateral trade agreement with Saudi Arabia and to pave the way for Saudi membership in the WTO. Indeed, a June 22, 2005, article in The Hill reported that Clinton was part of a Democratic effort to pressure the administration to forestall the welcoming of Saudi Arabia into the WTO and the finalization of the trade agreement:
Saudi Arabia's effort to join the World Trade Organization (WTO) and finalize the U.S.-Saudi free-trade agreement that will accompany its admission is coming under increasing attack from a bipartisan group of lawmakers assisted by pro-Israel lobbyists.
[...]
"Clearly, Congress continues to be concerned with Saudi behavior with regard to a number of issues," said Josh Block, a spokesman for AIPAC, which is "clearly supportive of attempts to bring attention to those issues prior to any ascension to the WTO by Saudi Arabia."
AIPAC disagrees with ZOA [the Zionist Organization of America] on Israeli-Palestinian policy, but the two groups have united in congressional outreach that attempts to capitalize on general frustration with the Saudis by linking it to the WTO. [Then-Rep. Ben] Cardin [D-MD] maintained that the Saudis were slowing their own path to democracy.
"They could do things quickly if they wanted to, to show some goodwill," Cardin said.
Other senators who have pledged to back the campaign against Saudi WTO membership include Kit Bond (R-Mo.), Jim Bunning (R-Ky.), John Kerry (D-Mass.) and Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.), whose speech at last month's AIPAC Policy Conference noted that "Saudi textbooks describe Jews as wicked."
Further, in opposing the proposed sale of control of the Port of New York and New Jersey to Dubai Ports World, Clinton said in a February 24, 2006, press conference: "It is clear that the Bush Administration has failed to adequately address valid national security concerns. We will do everything possible to make sure the Administration conducts the mandatory investigation required under the law and does not compromise security at our ports." As Media Matters for America noted, a March 4, 2006, Baltimore Sun article reported that Clinton was among the five Democratic senators and five Republican senators who "sent a letter to their party leaders" on March 3, 2006, "asking for cooperation in giving Congress a role in the Bush administration's latest review of Dubai Ports World's planned takeover of some operations at the port of Baltimore and five other major U.S. seaports." A statement announcing the letter is posted on Clinton's website. In a March 3, 2006, article, Newsday reported that "Bill Clinton coached United Arab Emirates officials on how to handle the Dubai ports controversy two weeks ago -- but didn't tell his wife about that conversation, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton disclosed yesterday." As Media Matters noted, after Bill Clinton's role was first reported, Hillary Clinton continued to publicly criticize the deal.
The December 20 Times article also cropped a quote by Bill Clinton regarding whether foundation donors would try to influence a Hillary Clinton administration. As Media Matters noted, the article omitted the portion of the quote in which Bill Clinton asserted that he did not believe that donors would make contributions to his foundation in an attempt to influence a Hillary Clinton administration, and that if such an attempt were made, it would be ineffective.
Furthermore, the Times reported that two members of the "ready pool of donors" who contributed to the Clinton library had given to the foundations of other presidents. Specifically, the article quoted a spokeswoman for the Anheuser-Busch Cos., whose charitable arm gave $1 million over five years to the Clinton library, asserting that Anheuser-Busch's "foundation had contributed more than $360 million to a wide array of organizations, including the Bush, Truman and Johnson presidential libraries." The Times also reported that donor Bernard L. Schwartz said "that he had contributed to other presidential libraries." However, the article did not note many of the foreign governments cited had contributed to the Bush library years earlier. Indeed, a November 4, 1997, USA Today article about the opening of Bush's library reported:
Gratitude for Bush's leadership in the Persian Gulf War helped with the library fund-raising. Listed among donors of $ 1 million or more are the citizens of Kuwait, the State of Kuwait, the Bandar Bin Sultan family of Saudi Arabia, the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Science, the Sultanate of Oman, Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahayan and the People of the United Arab Emirates.
From the December 20 Times article, headlined "In Charity and Politics, Clinton Donors Overlap":
Over the last decade, former President Bill Clinton has raised more than $500 million for his foundation, allowing him to build a glass-and-steel presidential library in Little Rock, Ark., and burnish his image as an impresario of global philanthropy. The foundation has closely guarded the identities of its donors - including one who gave $31.3 million last year.
Now, the secrecy surrounding the William J. Clinton Foundation has become a campaign issue as Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton seeks the Democratic presidential nomination with her husband as a prime source of strategy and star power. Some of her rivals argue that donors could use presidential foundations to circumvent campaign finance laws intended to limit political influence.
[...]
To limit the influence of any single donor, federal election law prohibits foreign donations to presidential campaigns and limits Americans to $2,300 per election. But presidential foundations are free to accept unlimited and anonymous contributions, even from foreigners and foreign governments. Indeed, the Saudi royal family, the king of Morocco, a foundation linked to the United Arab Emirates, and the governments of Kuwait and Qatar have made contributions of unknown amounts to the Clinton Foundation.
"The vast scale of these secret fund-raising operations presents enormous opportunities for abuse," said Representative Henry A. Waxman, Democrat of California, who introduced a bill to force disclosure of presidential foundation donors. The bill passed the House, 390-34, in March but stalled in the Senate.
[...]
On October 6, 1999, the charitable arm of the Anheuser-Busch Companies gave $200,000, the first of five payments over five years totaling $1 million, according to records filed by the company's foundation. Less than a month earlier, the company, the country's leading beer maker, had scored a major victory when the Clinton administration's Federal Trade Commission dropped a bid to regulate beer, wine and liquor advertising that critics said was aimed at under-age drinkers.
Francine I. Katz, a company spokeswoman, said the donation was unrelated to any government action and that its foundation had contributed more than $360 million to a wide array of organizations, including the Bush, Truman and Johnson presidential libraries.
[...]
Bernard L. Schwartz, another major Democratic contributor who was then chief executive of Loral Space and Communications, gave $250,000 and pledged $750,000 more in 2000. At the time, investigators were trying to determine if Loral had improperly provided satellite technology to China. Under the Bush administration, Loral agreed to pay a civil fine of $14 million to settle the case. Mr. Schwartz, who is now also a Hillraiser, said that his donations were unconnected to Loral's troubles and added that he had contributed to other presidential libraries.














hillary notes correctly that our dependence on foreign oil has us, so to speak, over a barrel, by funneling money to countries frequently hostile to our interests. which is what is so hypocritical about all the claims of how bush has kept us safe. we'd be a lot safer if he and his followers in the republican party had been supporting energy conservation years ago. we have the standards we have now because of jimmy carter and the democratic congress. and the auto companies cried a river back then too: we can't do it in the time allotted and it will be too expensive. we have had guys like limbaugh telling us for the last 20 years that dollar fifty gas was going to last forever: no need to conserve folks, it's all these crazy environmentalists trying to scare you. and hillary spoke the absolute truth about the saudi's treatment of this woman. it was a disgrace.
Just imagine if Bill Clinton and Al Gore had kept their 1992 promise to increase CAFE standards. If they had, we wouldn't need a drop of Saudi oil today.
Umm, Presidents and Vice Presidents don't get to make laws. Raising CAFE standards is not something they could deliver without help from what was, especially after 1994, a hostile Congress.
It's the job of a president to lead. Clinton and Gore promised in 1992 to increase CAFE standards. They had a Democrat-controlled Congress with large majorities in both the Senate and the House during 1993 and 1994. Their failure to lead and keep their promise made us more dependent on foreign oil. Our vehicles were the most fule efficient duriing the Reagan administration. Bush 43 signed into law legislation this week that called for higher CAFE standards. Once again, Democrats talk a good game, but Republicans deliver.
they were most fuel effecient for the reason i stated, the standards passed during the carter administration, which took full effect in the 80s. and bush and most of the republicans opposed the raised standards in this bill for years. it's only because he really had no choice this time. so save your revisionist history.
You're the one revisioninst history. Clinton and Gore's promise to raise CAFE standards was made eight full years before Bush ran for president. Clinton and Gore had huge Democrat majorities in the Senate and House during all of 1993 and 1994. They did not need a single Republican vote to keep their promise. I repeat: If Clinton and Gore had kept their 1992 promise to increase CAFE standards, we wouldn't need a single drop of oil from Saudi Arabia today.
Oh boy. She talked tough and kept the money. That's real integrity Hills.
Then she has the temerity to chide Saudi investment in our economy as a security risk while she secures millions of Saudi dollars for the University of Arkansas. She sells our commonwealth to the highest bidder, but hey she talks a tough game. You go girl!
Whatever MMFA. This is lame.
Nothign wrong with keeping the money.
To quote the preacher...
"The devil's had it long enough."
How does giving money TO the Saudi's, UAE, etc... any better?
"How does giving money TO the Saudi's, UAE, etc... any better?" - For starters, we are getting a product in return.
Which product? Do you mean terrorism and anti-American madrasses, or do you mean the fossil fuels from which our economy could have been weened decades ago with just a little effort and innovation.
"Do you mean terrorism and anti-American madrasses," - Well, sure we are getting that. We would get that whether or not we buy their oil though, so you have no point.
"or do you mean the fossil fuels from which our economy could have been weened decades ago with just a little effort and innovation." - Buy from citgo if you'd rather get oil from our socialist pal to the south. Or, buy from one of those "terror free oil" gas stations. Or, if you think you're so much better than the rest of the country and you don't want to depend on oil, get a diesel engine and run it on vegetable oil.
all of which has absolutely nothing to do with what was said. that we could have begun weaning ourselves off foreign oil decades ago. but you're such a lemming you would rather talk about "socialists". which actually proves the point made. we would not have to buy as much oil and give as much money to that socialist if we had started energy conservation. it's you, mister hard ass conservative, that wants to keep sending him money.
Not up to your standards RH? Good trick surpressing investment and selling to the highest bidder in two sentences. Define comonwealth. Some of the talk became action.
I though the article had some interesring information. Parts of this could effect all the campaigns. I'll be looking to see if it'll be just a reoccuring theme, or if it grows.
I do see a couple things that would bring the Anti-Clinton crowd to a batshit crazy state, but as most are already there anyway, in that aspect there is some redundancy.
Commonwealth is our infrastructure, public institutions (libraries, public universities and schools etc.) our national parks. Basically it's the public trust from we all share and to which we all contribute.
No she's not up to my standards and I said why. What's the problem?
Selling off our comonwealth as you've shown is a large and complex package. You accuse but give no examples what she is responsible for selling off cheaply.
She have an active part in snuffing the port deal, and the case of the rape victim.
As far as the charge of taking money from countries of the middle east. Or dealing with them. The charges could go fast and fierce to alot of powerful people. Julie is very vunerable on this issue.
Everytime we use oil a certain amount of our money travels to these people. We're suporting them at a very basic level. Shall we as a poster below might follow an extreme form of logic, and thereby collectivily throw ourselves into prison for supporting our enemies.
She's making noises about the issue and has acted on the issue. Does she have any company with the other candidates on this important issue?
I wasn't sure if your post contained some humor, thank you for clarifing. Your statement apeared to contradict itself. If your gonna complain, complain better. She dosn't meet many of my standards either. But I'm not pushing any candidate for a number of reasons.
OK, I've reread the article and now I have to back off a bit. My original post had Hillary accepting money from the House of Saud for the University of Arkansas but I see that was Bill's deed. I took that investment in the University as an example of selling off our commons. Maybe it is, maybe it ain't I don't know the details. I get real sensitive about the people's property coming under the supervision of for profit entities. So I jumped the gun a bit. I'm human.
Still, it's a relationship that's too close for comfort.
But please don't ever tell me how to do anything ever again, I don't tell you to you how to make an argument so don't waste your time telling me.
A polite request, not one I can promise to meekly abide. By all means tell me when I go wrong, its not a rare thing.
You really have sweet disposition ewestone. I took your remark about complaining better too seriously. I do appreciate good advice when it's offered with honesty. So thanks.
Basically, sorry to be such a jerk is what I'm saying.
Thank you as well. We got off on a wrong foot. You've had some good posts recently I do enjoy reading yours and all the rest of the crew's wit and wisdom.
I'm glad I found this space and I'll have to say most of the people here. The few I have trouble with have been at least educational, and sometimes correct.
Merry Xmas all, hope 08 is good for us and vice/versa.
I find it so sad that the donations to the William J. Clinton Foundation have become a campaign issue. This Foundation is on track to raise more money for humanitarian causes than any in history – but now they have to “curb the enthusiasm” to appease anyone who might perceive a donation as a curry of favor from a possible Clinton Administration?
Even if this were the case, this is all just “politics as usual”, so why would anyone be so shocked or disgusted at the thought or possibility? Then to take issue with this group of donors, of all people – like our government hasn’t been holding our hands out to any of them with a nod and a wink for decades now, all while most continue regimes that breeds terrorism and keeps a fat thumb on the civil rights of its citizens?
I guess anyone who contributes to Huckabee’s or Romney’s church is trying to gain favor or a position in their administration should one of them be elected? This is like saying because I contribute to my nephew’s Boy Scout troop, then I must support all conservative causes.
I donated $100 to the Clinton campaign.
Nobody's asked me what I plan to gain from Hillary when she becomes president. ;)
But then again, I also donated $100 to Dennis Kucinich. I wonder what favors I could ask for from him - it's obvious he won't make it to the White House.
I think that taking money from the same "royal family" that murdered 3000 Americans on September 11, 2001, and that funds the "insurgency" in Iraq (which murders U.S. Soldiers there)... I'd think that's at least a disqualification from consideration for any elected Office in the U.S.
It's evidence of an uncaring unthinking callous greed. It's more than a disqualification from Public Office, it deserves a jail sentence, a huge fine, and possibly a beating.
Dem02020: When I look at your handle vs. your post, I’m not sure whose side you’re on here.
The big difference here with this story is that the Clinton Foundation is not part of any government or “elected Office in the U.S.”. To use your argument on a non-profit humanitarian organization taking money while The Bush Administration seems to accept their money without any problem is just plain hypocritical – or is this the same point you’re making here?The point I was making is that Mr. Clinton must be a fool, or a greedy accomplice, to accept money from the sources listed in this MMFA item. There's no argument to justify it. You can make subtle distinctions all day long, and so what who cares, people will make up there minds as their hearts tell them. And in matters as serious as these, even the appearance of impropriety, is enough to sway any voter. In politics, mere suspicion is as damaging as a conviction.
I believe we're talking about a presidential candidate, their spouse, and the foreign interests (personal or professional) they might have, by way of the money they reach out to take.
There's a lot of us who think our Nation is nowhere near safe from the global sponsors of terrorism, and we also think there has never been any Justice, for the attacks of September 11, 2001.
Perhaps the Clintons live in a bubble where the saudi "royal family" has been forgiven, and the attacks of 9/11 forgotten.
Maybe they're too chummy with the likes of rupert murdoch, I don't know. But it's easy to screw up any election, and the American electorate is like a dry tinder box: all it takes is the mere appearance of being in league with the saudi "royal family", to burn you to ashes with the American People.
Just look at George W. Bush.
Bill Clinton (as well as Al Gore) has also taken money from the Bin Laden family when he delivered speeches in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The Clintons are in this gig for the money and the chicks.
Hey, I say the Clinton's and other humanitarian organizations should accept as much money as possible from the likes of Bin Laden and the Saudi family. I mean, look what the Clinton Foundation is doing with the money - HELLO, HUMANITARIAN AID!
Accepting money from the "terrorists" for use in humanitarian crises (which usually arise because of the terrorists or questionable leaders) is poetic justice, IMHO.
Are you guys saying that if the Clinton Foundation accepts money from terrorists or from companies and governments with questionable motives, the Clinton's should be punished? Are you serious?
This whole idea of "people donated money to so-and-so's campaign, so it's obvious that they're trying to get something out of the candidate" mularkey is really starting to wear on my nerves.
Can't people donate to a campaign - just to donate (without the whole quid pro quo attached to it)? Why is it that when certain candidates receive campaign donations, there's always some perceived ulterior motive? Notice how I used the words 'certain candidates', because this fallacious logic isn't applied evenly to all candidates - mostly (and disingenuously) to candidates on the Left.
That's a good point.
There's a difference between accepting 100 dollars from a voter and accepting 100 million from a foreign government with ties to terrorism. I can't put my finger on it, but it's what dem2020 meant when he/she said people will make up their minds as their hearts tells them.
Also, there's a big difference between accepting 100 dollars from a voter and accepting millions from drug company lobbyists, then to say that those lobbyists represent the interests of the people is plain insulting.