Giuliani
law firm lobbies in Texas for Chavez-controlled CITGO
By
Henry Goldman and Jonathan D. Salant
Bloomberg
New York/Washington
Petroleumworld.com
03 15 07
Rudolph Giuliani's law firm lobbies for Citgo Petroleum Corp., a unit
of the state-owned oil company controlled by Venezuelan President
Hugo Chavez, the U.S.'s chief antagonist in the Western Hemisphere.
Bracewell &
Giuliani LLP registered to lobby for Citgo in Texas on April 26, 2005,
less than a month after the former New York mayor joined the firm
and became a name partner, state records show. Citgo renewed the contract
in 2006 and 2007 and pays the firm $5,000 a month to track legislation.
Giuliani doesn't lobby, the firm says.
The law firm's
representation of Citgo comes as Chavez's relations with the U.S.
have grown increasingly hostile. He has called President George W.
Bush a ``devil'' and a ``madman'' and staged a mass, anti-American
rally in Buenos Aires during Bush's trip to Latin America, which ends
today.
Patrick Oxford,
a managing partner at Bracewell & Giuliani, said Giuliani, a Republican
presidential hopeful, has no dealings with the Venezuelan-owned oil
company. ``He has not seen hide nor hair of Citgo,'' Oxford said.
Giuliani's presidential-exploratory
committee released a statement that didn't address written questions
asking whether he knew his firm did business with Houston-based Citgo
and whether he considered it appropriate. The e-mailed statement discussed
his views toward Chavez and energy policy.
``Mayor Giuliani
has been clear and consistent -- Hugo Chavez is no friend of the United
States,'' campaign spokeswoman Katie Levinson said in the statement.
``Chief among the reasons Chavez has so much influence around the
world is our ongoing dependence on foreign oil.''
No Disclosure
Giuliani, 62,
has been active in business since leaving office at the end of 2001,
making speeches, running a security- consulting company and an investment
bank, and joining the Houston-based law firm. He hasn't yet had to
file public disclosures of his client lists, income or holdings.
The U.S. State
Department said in May that Venezuela was ``not fully cooperating
with counter-terrorism efforts,'' and the U.S. government banned arms
sales to the country.
Citgo has been
fully owned by Venezuela's national oil company, Petroleos de Venezuela
SA (PDVSA), since 1990. Chavez, 52, who earlier this year won the
authority to supersede the Venezuelan legislature, has the power to
appoint and fire PDVSA's top executives and set policy for the company.
Paying Dividends
Citgo spokesman
David McCollum said PDVSA supplies Citgo with crude oil to refine
and sell. ``We do pay dividends to them as any subsidiary does to
its parent company,'' he said.
Venezuela is the
third-largest oil producer in OPEC.
Texas Ethics Commission
filings show Citgo paid Bracewell & Giuliani between $75,000 and
$150,000 in 2005-06 and will pay an additional $50,000 to $100,000
this year. The firm monitors such issues as environmental regulation
and taxes, Oxford said.
Bracewell &
Patterson, the predecessor firm to Bracewell & Giuliani, did legal
work for PDVSA in the 1990s, before Chavez came to power, and for
Citgo before Giuliani arrived in 2005, Oxford said.
Oxford called
Citgo ``an old-time U.S. company,'' saying it pays U.S. taxes and
employs 5,000 people in the U.S., mainly in Texas.
In September,
7-Eleven Inc., which once owned Citgo, dropped the oil company as
its gasoline supplier, citing in part Chavez's hostile rhetoric toward
the U.S.
Building an Image
The law firm's
association with a Venezuelan company may affect Giuliani's image,
which was burnished by his role in coordinating New York's response
after the 2001 terrorist attacks, said Linda Fowler, a professor of
government at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire.
The question,
Fowler said, ``is how Rudy reconciles his heroic role as mayor of
a devastated New York with the less appealing image of the corporate
shill.''
Giuliani forged
his post-Sept. 11 persona with such acts as rejecting a $10 million
contribution for disaster relief from Saudi Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal
Bin Abdul Aziz, after the prince said the U.S. should ``adopt a more
balanced stand toward the Palestinian cause.''
A Richmond Times-Dispatch
editorial last month contrasted Giuliani's gesture with former U.S.
Representative Joseph Kennedy II -- son of the late U.S. Senator Robert
Kennedy and president of the nonprofit Citizens Energy Corp. Kennedy
has appeared in television commercials thanking Venezuela for providing
discounted oil to heat homes of low-income U.S. residents.
The
Feb. 15 editorial reminded readers that Giuliani ``scorned money he
considered tainted.'
To
contact the reporters on this story: Henry Goldman in New York at
hgoldman@bloomberg.net ; Jonathan D. Salant in Washington at jsalant@bloomberg.net
.
Bloomberg
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03 07
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