He and his college roommate and current FEMA chief Mike "Brownie" Brown are in the news this week because of the massive failures of FEMA in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, but it's not even that connection that this blog is interested in, though it is the reason he came to our attention.
We're more struck by how he's just one more piece of the tight inbred nexus of war dreamers, planners, sellers, and profiteers who gave us the current quagmire in Iraq that will still be a disaster long after we're celebrating Fat Tuesday again in the Big Easy. Here's Josh Marshall writing in The Hill on October 1, 2003 (around the time we realized that the "Mission" was not quite as "Accomplished" as we had been told by the guy dressed up like a Naval Aviator for his aircraft carrier photo opportunity).
The Bush Crony Full-Employment Act of 2003=The Hill.comHaley Barbour, of course, is now the Governor of Katrina-ravaged Mississippi. Surely a coincidence, but a coincidence that would have some poetic justice if it weren't for the human lives lost and ruined.
[...] Remember Joe Allbaugh? He’s part of what they used to call President Bush’s Iron Triangle — Allbaugh, Hughes and Rove.
In chronological order, he was Bush’s chief of staff when Bush was governor of Texas, his campaign manager when he ran for president and his Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) director after that.
So you could say they were pretty close.
A couple weeks before the beginning of the war, Allbaugh left his job at FEMA to get into the business of securing pricey Iraqi reconstruction contracts for high-flying clients.
Allbaugh’s new firm is called New Bridge Strategies. But it’s actually an outgrowth of Haley Barbour’s lobbying firm, Barbour Griffith & Rogers. [...]
Crossposted from Whiggate Update
2 comments:
Your post has lead me to wonder..what kind of grades did all these Bush high-up's get in high school/elementary? Were they poor students, is our country being run by a bunch of people who as kids got "D's" and "F's?" That would be sad, cause I was always taught in school that the kids with good grades would be the leaders, the ones with potential to do great things. The kids with "D's" and "F's" well, not to disparage trash collectors (which I think is a noble job, cause everyone complains and you gotta do it, with all the smells etc.), but that is what these poor students were suppose to do.
Dear V.G., I imagine they had a mixed scholastic record, but none of them seem to have been standouts in the classroom. It does impress me over and over again that we have a government full of people who (like their boss) got to where they are because of "who they know" not "what they know". That's usually not a great way to hire people (to say the least).
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