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Plouffe to Donate Speaking Fee to Pro-Democracy Groups

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  • Plouffe to Donate Speaking Fee to Pro-Democracy Groups

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123421448248665029 .html?mod=googlenews_wsj

    Wall Street Journal
    February 10, 2009

    Plouffe to Donate Speaking Fee to Pro-Democracy Groups


    By GLENN R. SIMPSON

    President Barack Obama's former campaign manager intends to give away
    the fee he received from a paid private speech he made Monday in the
    oil-rich but authoritarian nation of Azerbaijan.

    The speech was arranged by lobbyists working with a group that has
    ties to the Azerbaijan government, according to people familiar with
    the matter. But a close associate of David Plouffe said he only
    learned of their involvement after he had already embarked for the
    Caspian Sea nation.

    Mr. Plouffe now intends to donate his speaking fee, which the
    associate said is in the range of $50,000, to groups that advocate
    democratization in the turbulent post-Soviet states of the region
    around the Caspian and Caucasus mountain range. Mr. Plouffe also plans
    to share the contents of the speech with opposition groups.

    U.S. officials said Mr. Plouffe coordinated his talks with American
    officials in the region and that his message about the uses of the
    Internet for democratic organizing advances longstanding U.S. policy.
    But they added that the Azerbaijan government has long sought to
    legitimize itself by hosting prominent Americans, often with the help
    of Washington lobbyists.

    The country, in the Caucasus region, is in the midst of a campaign
    over a referendum set for next month that would amend the constitution
    to lift term limits on President Ilham Aliyev. Mr. Aliyev assumed the
    post after the 2003 death of his father Haydar Aliyev, the country's
    first president after gaining independence.

    Azerbaijan is a key U.S. ally but the State Department has also
    criticized the country for its poor record on human rights and free
    elections.

    Mr. Plouffe holds no U.S. government positions but controls the
    remnants of Mr. Obama's 2008 campaign organization, which he built and
    oversaw. His speech at a local university was sponsored by a local
    nongovernmental organization with ties to the Azerbaijan government.

    "I'm here as a private citizen, so all I'm doing is talking about
    elections, and the Internet and democracy, and to talk about our
    election," Mr. Plouffe told a reporter from Radio Free Europe who
    wasn't admitted to the speech.

    Mr. Plouffe's appearance in Azerbaijan was arranged by a
    Washington-based lobbying firm called Bob Lawrence & Associates,
    according to records and interviews. The company lists Azerbaijan
    among its clients on its Web site. People with knowledge of the speech
    said the appearance was arranged by the Lawrence firm through Mr.
    Plouffe's agent, the Washington Speakers Bureau. A person answering
    the phone at the Lawrence firm said no one was available for comment.
    A spokesman for the Washington Speakers Bureau couldn't be reached.

    White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Mr. Plouffe's visit was
    entirely private. "He's not there at the behest of, and not delivering
    a message on behalf of, the president of the United States," he said.
    "If the president had a message for Azerbaijan, he'd pick up the
    phone."

    Mr. Plouffe began offering himself as a public speaker recently
    through the Washington Speakers Bureau, which on its Web site says the
    consultants' "fees vary based on event location." The Azerbaijan
    speech by Mr. Plouffe, according to one person who attended, dealt
    with using the Internet in elections and he didn't address the
    country's domestic political issues.
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