The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Lobbyist seeking FirstEnerg­y bailout

- By Matthew Daly and Richard Lardner Associated Press writer Steve Peoples and NewsHerald Staff Writer Andrew Cass contribute­d to this report.

Jeff Miller, a lobbyist tied to Rick Perry, is seeking a FirstEnerg­y Solutions bailout.

WASHINGTON » At a West Virginia rally on tax cuts, President Donald Trump veered off on a subject that likely puzzled most of his audience.

“Nine of your people just came up to me outside. ‘Could you talk about 202?’” he said. “We’ll be looking at that 202. You know what a 202 is? We’re trying.”

One person who undoubtedl­y knew what Trump was talking about last month was Jeff Miller, an energy lobbyist with whom the president had dined the night before. Miller had been hired by FirstEnerg­y Solutions, a bankrupt power company that relies on coal and nuclear energy to produce electricit­y. His assignment: push the Trump administra­tion to use a so-called 202 order — named for a provision of the Federal Power Act — to secure a bailout worth billions of dollars.

Although Trump didn’t agree to the plan — he still hasn’t — for Miller, a president’s public declaratio­n of interest amounted to a job well done.

How a single lobbyist helped carry a long-shot idea from obscurity to the presidenti­al stage is a twisty journey through the new swamp of Trump’s Washington. Rather than clearing out the lobbyists and campaign donors that spend big money to sway politician­s, Trump and his advisers paved the way for a new cast of powerbroke­rs who have quickly embraced familiar ways to wield influence.

Miller is among them. A well-connected GOP fundraiser, he served in the past as an adviser to California Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger and to Texas Gov. Rick Perry, also a close friend. He ran Perry’s unsuccessf­ul presidenti­al campaign in 2016. And when Trump tapped Perry to lead the Energy Department, Miller shepherded his friend through confirmati­on, sitting behind him, next to the nominee’s wife, at the Senate hearing.

When Perry came to Washington, Miller did, too. He launched his firm, Miller Strategies, early last year and began lobbying his friend and other Washington officials.

Besides Perry, Miller is close to other Trump-era power players. He is among House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s best friends, their relationsh­ip dating back decades to Miller’s days in California. In more recent years, Miller developed a friendship with Vice President Mike Pence adviser Marty Obst.

Obst says the two began working closely together when Perry and Pence held leadership roles at the Republican Governors Associatio­n several years ago. “He’s very influentia­l in Washington, a leading fundraiser,” Obst said of Miller in a brief interview.

Now, after 14 months in business, the 43-year-old has collected more than $3.2 million from a roster of clients that includes several of the nation’s largest energy companies, among them Southern Co., a nuclear power plant operator headquarte­red in Atlanta, and Texasbased Valero Energy, according to federal filings.

Miller also has continued to raise money for GOP politician­s. He contribute­d nearly $37,000 of his own over the past year to Republican­s, including Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and Greg Pence of Indiana, who’s seeking the congressio­nal seat once held by his younger brother, the vice president, according to federal campaign records.

He is an active supporter of America First Action, a pro-Trump super PAC that raised $4.7 million in the first three months of 2018. That work earned him a spot at dinner with Trump, McCarthy and other GOP donors in the upscale City Center complex blocks from the White House.

“What happened to draining the political swamp?” asks Dick Munson with the Environmen­tal Defense Fund, who said he sees FirstEnerg­y and other coal operators “grasping” for bailouts to solve problems of their own making. “It seems when you don’t have solid arguments, you hire well-paid lobbyists and make huge political contributi­ons.”

Miller declined to comment for this story.

Brian Walsh, president of America First Action, said Miller raises money for the group on a volunteer basis. Miller, who lives in Texas, spent years outside of Washington independen­tly developing an “amazing” network of connection­s, Walsh said. He described Miller as a “straight shooter” and rejected the notion that he is cashing in on Trump’s election and Perry’s ascension to energy chief.

“He doesn’t play games with people,” Walsh said of Miller.

But Tim Judson, executive director of Nuclear Informatio­n and Resource Service, an activist group, called Miller’s involvemen­t in the bailout request the ultimate “Washington swamp” situation.

“We have a special-interest appeal by FirstEnerg­y, a top lobbyist dining with the president, and that same lobbyist is raising money for a proTrump super PAC and asking for ‘emergency action’ from someone whose presidenti­al campaign he ran,” Judson said.

Miller registered as a lobbyist in Washington in February 2017, just after Trump took office. He was hired by FirstEnerg­y in July 2017. Lobbying disclosure records show he was paid to target the highest levels of American government: the White House — to include the offices of Trump and Pence — and Perry’s Energy Department. Miller has earned $330,000 from FirstEnerg­y since last year, making him one of the company’s highestpai­d outside lobbyists.

The coal industry’s top priority at the time was seizing on the campaign promises Trump had made — he pledged repeatedly to bring back coal jobs — to ask for unpreceden­ted federal assistance.

Ohio-based Murray Energy Corp., the nation’s largest privately owned coal-mining company, and its largest customer, FirstEnerg­y, pushed the Energy Department for an emergency order, a measure typically reserved for war or natural disasters. Among other measures, the interventi­on would have exempted power plants from obeying a host of environmen­tal laws and would have spent billions to keep coalfired plants open, an unpreceden­ted federal interventi­on in the nation’s energy markets.

CEO Robert Murray and Charles Jones, CEO of FirstEnerg­y’s parent company, met with Trump in West Virginia to discuss the request, informing the president that the power company was on the verge of bankruptcy.

Despite the high-powered lobbying, Perry rejected the request in August, saying the emergency order wasn’t the right mechanism. He offered another option, asking federal energy regulators to approve a plan that would reward nuclear and coalfired power plants for adding reliabilit­y to the nation’s power grid. But the independen­t Federal Energy Regulatory Commission rejected the plan in January, saying there’s no evidence that past or planned retirement­s of coal-fired power plants pose a threat to grid reliabilit­y.

Soon after, FirstEnerg­y began pushing anew for the 202. Miller has visited the Energy Department at least twice since June, including on the day Trump delivered a speech on his energy agenda at the agency’s Washington headquarte­rs.

The company argues the emergency order is needed to prevent premature retirement of coal and nuclear plants that “cannot operate profitably under current market conditions.” The proposal would allocate money to subsidize the company and other coal operators — an outcome the company says would avert thousands of layoffs and help ensure reliabilit­y of the electric grid up and down the East Coast.

The Ohio-based company filed for bankruptcy in late March, days after announcing it would shut down three nuclear plants in Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia within three years. The announceme­nt followed the planned closure of a West Virginia coal-fired plant, one of a series of closings as the coal and nuclear industries struggle to compete with electricit­y plants that burn natural gas.

FirstEnerg­y’s bid for the emergency request is widely opposed by business and environmen­tal groups as an unfair tipping of the scales in favor of faltering energy sources.

An independen­t wholesaler that oversees the power grid in 13 states and the District of Columbia has said the Eastern grid is in no immediate danger. FirstEnerg­y can shut down its three nuclear power plants within three years without destabiliz­ing the power grid, according to a report last month from the wholesaler, PJM Interconne­ction.

Still, the push for a bailout continues.

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W. Va., recently suggested that Perry consider using a Korean War-era defense law to prevent the retirement of ailing coal and nuclear units. The Defense Production Act of 1950 is intended to prioritize industries deemed vital to national security. President Harry Truman used the law to cap wages and impose price controls on the steel industry.

FirstEnerg­y said it supports the premise, although it says it has not specifical­ly urged Perry to use the defense law.

Perry said the administra­tion is looking at the defense law “very closely,” one of several options being considered.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jeff Miller attends then Energy Secretary-designate Rick Perry’s confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources on Capitol Hill in Washington.
CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jeff Miller attends then Energy Secretary-designate Rick Perry’s confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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