The White House said Rove was unaware that Norquist solicited any money in
connection with ATR events in both 2001 and 2002 that brought Abramoff's tribal
clients and others to the White House.
"We do not solicit donations in exchange for meetings or events at the White
House, and we don't have any knowledge of this activity taking place," said a
White House spokeswoman, Erin Healy.
After the tribes' 2002 event with Bush, Norquist pressed Abramoff anew for
tribal donations ¡ª this time for a political action committee. "Jack, a few
months ago you said you could get each of your Indian tribes to make a
contribution. ... Is this still possible?" Norquist asked in an October 2002
e-mail.
Abramoff responded that "everyone is tapped out having given directly to the
campaigns. After the election, we'll be able to get this moving."
The e-mails show Abramoff delivered on his original promise to get tribal
money for the event that included the Bush visit, sending one check from the
Mississippi Choctaw tribe in October and one in November from the Saginaw
Chippewa of Michigan. Kartch said Abramoff didn't deliver on PAC contributions.
Norquist and Abramoff were longtime associates who went back decades to their
days in the Young Republicans movement. Norquist founded ATR to advocate lower
taxes and less government. He built it into a major force in the Republican
Party as the GOP seized control of Congress and the White House.
Abramoff became one of Washington's rainmaker lobbyists before allegations
that he defrauded Indian tribes led to his downfall and a prison sentence. He is
cooperating with prosecutors.
At the time ATR dealt with Abramoff, Kartch said, "he was a longtime and
respected Republican activist in Washington. There was no reason to suspect any
of the problems that later came up."
The e-mails show Abramoff, on multiple occasions, asked clients for large
donations to Norquist's group while Norquist invited them to ATR events that
brought them face to face with top administration officials.
For instance, several months after donating $25,000 to Norquist's group,
Saginaw officials attended a reception in the summer of 2003 at Norquist's home.
They posed for a photo with Norquist and Labor Secretary Elaine Chao.
A few weeks earlier, then-Saginaw tribal chief Maynard Kahgegab Jr. had been
appointed by Chao to a federal commission, according Labor Department and tribal
documents obtained by the AP.
The Saginaw used the Chao photo, the commission appointment and photos they
took with Bush at the White House to boast on their internal Web site about the
high-level Washington access that Abramoff's team had won.
Labor officials confirmed that Chao attended the reception at Norquist's
home. But they said they do not know who recommended Kahgegab to be appointed in
May 2003 to the U.S. Native American Employment and Training Council. The
department sought to remove the chief a year later after he lost a tribal
election, documents show.
"This is one of hundreds of advisory appointments that are sent forward by
agencies within the department for front office signoff," said a department
spokesman, David James.
ATR's Kartch suggested Chao's contact with the Saginaw at Norquist's home was
incidental. "ATR does many receptions for supporters. There were dozens of
people in attendance that evening. This event was not organized specifically for
any person, but was rather a widely attended general event," he said.
Norquist did make a special effort ¡ª at Abramoff's request ¡ª to introduce a
British businessman and an African dignitary to Rove at another ATR event in
summer 2002.
Abramoff bluntly told Norquist he was asking the African dignitary for a
$100,000 donation to ATR and suggested the introduction to Rove might help
secure the money.
"I have asked them for $100K for ATR," Abramoff wrote Norquist in July 2002.
"If they come I'll think we'll get it. If he is there, please go up to him
(he'll be African) and welcome him."
Norquist obliged.
"I am assuming this is very important and therefore we are making it happen,"
the GOP activist wrote back, promising to introduce the two foreigners as well
as a Saginaw tribal official to Rove that night.
A day later, an ecstatic Abramoff sent an e-mail thanking Norquist for
"accommodating" the introductions. "I spoke with the ambassador today and he is
moving my ATR request forward," the lobbyist wrote, referring to the donation.
Kartch confirmed Norquist invited the foreigners to the ATR event, but Kartch
said the group never asked for, expected or received the $100,000.
It was not the first time that Abramoff sought ATR donations in connection
with lobbying business. E-mails dating to 1995 show Abramoff solicited donations
from clients to Norquist's group as part of lobbying efforts.
"I spoke this evening with Grover," Abramoff wrote in an October 1995 e-mail
outlining how Norquist and his group could help a client on a matter before
Congress.
Abramoff wrote that the lobbying help he was seeking from Norquist's group
was "perfectly consistent" with ATR's position but that Norquist nonetheless
wanted a donation to be made.
"He said that if they want the taxpayer movement, including him, involved on
this issue and anything else which will come over the course of the year or so,
they need to become a major player with ATR. He recommended that they make a
$50,000 contribution to ATR," the lobbyist wrote.
Abramoff cautioned one of his colleagues that the donation needed to be "kept
discreet."
"We don't want opponents to think that we are trying buy the taxpayer
movement," he said.
Kartch denied that anyone at ATR asked Abramoff for the money. "ATR is not
responsible for comments by Jack Abramoff to third parties," he
said.