Feinstein Under Fire
Even after resigning from her position as chairwoman of the Senate Subcommittee on Military Construction Appropriations, questions still need to be answered:
CNSNews.com) - Government watchdog groups want more answers as to why Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) stepped down from a military appropriations subcommittee at a time questions were being asked billions of dollars in federal defense contracts going to her husband’s companies.
Feinstein resigned her post as chairwoman of the Senate Subcommittee on Military Construction Appropriations last week.
The decision came less than two months after Metro Newspapers, a group of alternative weekly papers in northern California, detailed the number of defense contracts awarded to Perini Corp. and URS Corp., both of which her husband, Richard C. Blum, has ownership, according to the newspapers.
Investigation came from the left:
“This was a critique from the left,” Tom Fitton, president of Judicial Watch, a conservative public interest group, told Cybercast News Service. “These were left-leaning papers. The fact that she stepped down from the committee lends credibility to the charges.”
Fitton said this is something Judicial Watch wanted to further investigate, possibly by seeking public documents on the matter and by asking the Senate Ethics Committee to look into the matter for a possible conflict of interest on Feinstein’s part.
“On the face of it, it seems she at least had influence on how contracts were awarded,” Fitton said. “There should be an investigation.”
Feinstein’s press office was contacted several times Friday by Cybercast News Service, but her office did not provide a statement on the matter at the end of the day.
Steering money and contracts to hubby?:
The California weeklies detailed examples that included a subcommittee hearing in which Feinstein asked Pentagon officials about increasing anti-terrorism protection for Army bases.
The next year, in March 2003, Feinstein asked why the funds for anti-terror protection had not been spent. Just over a month later, URS announced a $600 million contract to provide services for U.S. Army bases that included anti-terrorism force
protection.In another instance, Feinstein asked another military official when money would be spent on a maintenance facility for the C-17 Hickam Air Base in Hawaii. URS later announced a $42 million contract to build it.
Also, Feinstein’s subcommittee in mid-2005 approved funds to reinforce roofs at military stations in Iraq, and in October of that year, Perini got a $185 million federal contract for that purpose, the papers reported.
The real reason liberals groups went after one of their own:
“Conversely, you’d think she might stick around (the subcommittee) to try to fix the medical-care disaster she helped engineer for the vets who were suckered into fighting her and (President) Bush’s panoply of unjust wars,” Byrne added.
– ‘The Commish’ A.J. Sparxx