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In final days, Bush likely to pardon more than turkeys
The headline in The Onion may have nailed it: “In Thanksgiving Tradition, Bush Pardons Scooter Libby In Giant Turkey Costume.”
Skip the turkey costume, and the reality may not be far off: Many are betting that Vice President Dick Cheney’s former chief of staff will be among those granted clemency before the president steps down.
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Libby is unlikely to be the only last-minute pardon. Other top prospects, listed by ProPublica, are said to include:
- Michael Milken, the 1980s junk bond king whose pardon application is being handled by former U.S. Solicitor General Theodore B. Olson – a close friend of the president’s, and the lawyer who successfully argued Bush v. Gore before the U.S. Supreme Court.
- James Tobin, Bush’s 2004 New England campaign chairman who raised more than $200,000 for the president’s re-election bid. Tobin was indicted in October for making false statements to the FBI in connection with the bureau’s investigation of the plot to jam Democratic Party phones in New Hampshire in 2002;
- Brent Wilkes, the defense contractor who was sentenced to 12 years in prison in February for furnishing former California Congressman Randy Cunningham with yachts, vacations and other luxury items in exchange for lucrative contracts, because of his cooperation with federal investigators;
- J. Steven Griles, a deputy Interior secretary during Bush’s first term who pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice charge sin connection with his 2005 Senate testimony regarding the Jack Abramoff political corruption scandal.
Presidential pardons are a long political tradition, embraced by both parties. In his final days, for instance, George H.W. Bush pardoned former Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, along with 10 others who had been convicted in the Iran-Contra scandal, an arms for hostage program during the Reagan administration (when Bush was vice president).
That raised eyebrows, but nothing like the reaction to Bill Clinton’s pardon of fugitive financier Marc Rich, whose ex-wife Denise Rich had been a major contributor to his presidential library and to the Democratic Party.
The Rich decision, which became the subject of Congressional and criminal investigations, is likely to come up again in the confirmation hearings for Eric H. Holder Jr, Barack Obama’s choice for attorney general, given Holder’s involvement in the decision.
(One interesting historic footnote: Rich’s attorney from 1985 until the spring of 2000 was Scooter Libby.)
By comparison with his predecessors, the younger Bush has been downright niggardly in his use of pardons, granting clemency to only 171 people over eight years.
Most of those have been for penny-ante crimes. For instance, Leslie O. Collier – one of 14 people he pardoned last week – was pardoned for his conviction for the unauthorized use of a pesticide in killing bald eagles.
Bush’s most significant clemency to date was commuting Libby’s prison sentence. But of course, he still has almost two months to make up for lost time.
Among those who have submitted applications are disgraced Olympic gold medalist Marion Jones, suspended National Football League quarterback Michael Vick, home living doyenne Martha Stewart, former Enron executives Jeffrey Skilling and Andrew Fastow, jailed lobbyist Jack Abramoff and convicted former California Congressman Randy Cunningham.
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Related posts on Muckety- Libby and Rich: pardon-me boys – July 6, 2007
- Scooter Libby – Knowing people in high places – July 3, 2007
- Of the many pardoned by Bill, few give to Hillary – May 1, 2008
- DC court disbars Scooter Libby – March 20, 2008
- Muck tracker – Bush pardons – November 24, 2008
- Lies led Marion Jones to prison – January 14, 2008
- Sarah’s thankful; the turkey not so much – November 21, 2008
- Muckety this! Snoop Dogg to Laura Bush – June 27, 2008
- Bush nominates former judge as AG – September 17, 2007
- Kevin Ring is the latest Jack Abramoff associate to be indicted – September 9, 2008
This post is tagged with: Brent Wilkes, Crime, George W. Bush, I. Lewis Libby, J. Steven Griles, James Tobin, Marion Jones, Martha Stewart, Michael Milken, Politics, Randall Cunningham
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Small donors played comparable roles in Obama and Bush campaignsNovember 30, 2008 at 7:28am
A new study by the Campaign Finance Institute shows that Barack Obama received about the same percentage from small donors in 2008 as George W. Bush did in 2004.
High-powered group, most from Chicago, plans Obama inaugural
The group overseeing Barack Obama’s Jan. 20 inaugural boasts a bipartisan roster of go-getters, most with deep Chicago roots.
In addition to Democrats William Daley, Penny Pritzker, John W. Rogers Jr. and Julianna Smoot, Republican Patrick G. Ryan, the businessman who heads Chicago’s bid for the 2016 Olympics, is a co-chair.
By drawing big names from both parties, Obama is clearly hoping to emphasize his commitment to a bipartisan governing style.
Ryan’s participation particularly helps boost the image of collegiality. The chairman of Chicago-based Aon Corporation has been a major donor to George W. Bush and the Illinois Republican Party. On the other hand, he is spearheading Chicago’s Olympic bid, and it can’t have hurt that Obama made a video last week extolling the Windy City to the International Olympic Committee.
The other co-chairs of the inaugural committee are longtime Obama pals, as well as fund-raisers.
Pritzker, the hotel heiress, and Smoot, a professional Democratic fund-raiser, are credited with Obama’s record-setting campaign war chest.
Daley, a former Commerce secretary and the brother of Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, is a Chicago bank executive. Rogers, a longtime friend, is the founder of Ariel Capital Management. (His ex-wife, Desirée Rogers, is set to become White House social secretary.)
The committee will go to some lengths to honor another Obama pledge – to reduce the influence of money on government – by limiting donations to $50,000. George W. Bush’s inaugural committees accepted contributions as high as $250,000, according to the New York Times.
It will also bar any contributions from corporations, political action committees, lobbyists who are currently registered with the federal government, people who are not citizens of the United States and from registered foreign agents.
No pricetag has been put on this inaugural, which is expected to draw a record number of people to the Capitol, perhaps in the millions. To get some perspective, Bush spent around $40 million on his inaugural events in 2005, much of which was raised from corporations and lobbyists.
Committee spokeswoman Linda Douglass said higher costs than usual are expected as a result of the president-elect’s intention to open as many events as possible to the public.
“This inauguration is more than just a celebration of an election,” she said. “This is an event that can be used to inspire and galvanize the public to act. That is what we’re aiming for.”
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Related stories on Muckety- The Pritzker fortune and the Obama campaign – June 2, 2011
- Obama supporters find a place on financial advisory council – June 14, 2011
- Smoot rakes in millions for Obama campaign – February 21, 2008
- Social Secretary Desiree Rogers is decades-old Obama pal – November 25, 2008
- Chicago connections helped Ebony snag Obama interview – December 3, 2008
- Education nominee Arne Duncan gets some help from his friends – December 16, 2008
- Penny Pritzker says no thanks to Commerce post – November 20, 2008
- Obama’s short list may include Jarrett, Daley, Pritzker, Goolsbee – May 27, 2008
- Warren Buffett does doubleheader to raise money for Barack Obama – June 26, 2008
- Smoot replacing Rogers as White House social secretary – February 28, 2010
This post is tagged with: Barack Obama, Barack Obama inaugural committee, Chicago, John W. Rogers Jr., Julianna Smoot, Patrick G. Ryan, Penny Pritzker, Politics, Recent Stories, William Daley0 Comments
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New owners take charge of Houston AstrosNovember 23, 2011 at 7:38am
After a long vetting process by Major League Baseball, ownership of the Houston Astros passed Tuesday to businessman Jim Crane and his partners.
Congratulations on your big promotion. . .and your cut in pay
Here’s a switch. XTO Energy, the Fort Worth oil and gas company, promoted two executives last week and cut their pay potential for next year. It also eliminated the chairman’s bonus.
Bob Simpson, the chairman, explained to the Star-Telegram that XTO previously paid officers in “an entrepreneurial fashion,” linking bonuses to increases in the company’s stock price.
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Exxon dwarfs XTO in size.
“We chose to address that now, to make it less controversial,” Simpson told the Star-Telegram, referring to XTO’s entrepreneurial pay plan.
On Dec. 1, Simpson, who remains chairman, is relinquishing his CEO title to Hutton, who was president. Vennerberg becomes president.
Going forward, Simpson will receive an annual salary of $3.6 million, but no bonus. Total salary and bonus for Hutton and Vennerberg are capped at $12.5 million and $7.5 million, respectively, according to a company filing with the SEC.
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Related posts on Muckety- XTO Energy buys, and hedges, its way into the big time – June 30, 2008
- Big bonuses before the crash – August 12, 2007
- Sam Nunn should share Chevron’s hot seat – April 2, 2008
- Muckety trading: Blackrock pay and Southwest stock – April 29, 2008
- Kerry Killinger sets the tone at Washington Mutual – February 2, 2008
- Losing money but getting a bonus at D.R. Horton – December 26, 2007
- The Dons of D.R. Horton – October 4, 2007
- Making lots of hay at Deere & Company – January 23, 2008
- O’Neal, Prince and Mozilo questioned about pay – March 7, 2008
- Lessons from Bob Simpson’s $100 million cashout at XTO – October 12, 2008
This post is tagged with: big promotion but a cut in pay, Bob Simpson, executive compensation, Exxon Mobil, Fort Worth, Keith Hutton, oil and gas, Rex Tillerson, Vaughn Vennerberg, XTO EnergyRead related stories: Business · Recent Stories0 Comments
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Small donors played comparable roles in Obama and Bush campaignsNovember 30, 2008 at 7:28am
A new study by the Campaign Finance Institute shows that Barack Obama received about the same percentage from small donors in 2008 as George W. Bush did in 2004.
Social Secretary Desiree Rogers is decades-old Obama pal
It is testament to her close relationship to Barack and Michelle Obama – and to members of their inner circle – that Desiree Rogers threw an intimate birthday party for her friend, Valerie Jarrett, last week. Among the guests were the president-elect and his wife.
“She has extraordinary flair and exquisite taste,” Jarrett, co-chairman of Obama’s transition team, told the Washington Post. “My party was perfect – she had my favorite food, my favorite flowers.”
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And she has been a close friend of the Obamas for decades. Rogers was once married to John W. Rogers Jr., another old pal of the Obamas, who played basketball with Michelle Obama’s brother Craig Robinson at Princeton. John Rogers, the founder of Ariel Capital Management and also a major Obama fund-raiser, is co-chairman of the president-elect’s inaugural committee.
“This appointment sends a strong message that the Obamas want to use the White House strategically . . . [to] open it to a broader range of people,” Jarrett said.
“Desiree is a heavy hitter – she comes with her own range of contacts from around the country. She’s close to Michelle and she knows everyone who will be working in the West Wing, so she will be able to create a synergy.”
The Post notes that the position of social secretary is more influential than commonly realized. Best known for staging state dinners, the social secretary is also responsible for every event or ceremony that occurs in the White House or on the grounds.
The day after the inauguration, for example, Rogers will be responsible for organizing the swearing-in of the Cabinet.
Ann Stock, a social secretary in the Clinton White House, was once charged with pulling together the signing of the historic Mideast peace agreement in four days, for 4,000 guests.
“It’s like running a small agency,” said Stock, who briefed Rogers on the job last week. “Her business savvy, her marketing skills will all come into play. Her close relationship with the Obamas is very important because she comes to the job already understanding their preferences.”
Rogers, 49, will come to the White House from Allstate Financial, where she was hired to create a social network of consumers and clients.
Prior to that, she was president of Peoples Gas and North Shore Gas, a $2-billion utility which she had headed since 2004. She worked at the company starting in 1997 as its chief marketing officer.
Besides serving on business boards like Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois, Rogers is vice chairman of the board for both Lincoln Park Zoo and the Museum of Science and Industry, and is a member of the Commercial Club of Chicago.
Perhaps her most important qualification for the job of White House social secretary, Jarrett said, is that she understands the Obamas’ desire to bring in all sorts of people, “so it’s the people’s house again.”
“This campaign engaged a lot of people in ways they had not engaged before,” Jarrett said. “This is about continuing to capture that excitement.”
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Related posts on Muckety- Muck tracker – Desiree Rogers to be White House social secretary – November 24, 2008
- High-powered group, most from Chicago, plans Obama inaugural – November 26, 2008
- As senior White House adviser, Valerie Jarrett will be loyal networker – November 16, 2008
- Obama’s short list may include Jarrett, Daley, Pritzker, Goolsbee – May 27, 2008
- Warren Buffett does doubleheader to raise money for Barack Obama – June 26, 2008
- Aspirants jockey for Obama, Biden seats – November 6, 2008
- RNC creates BarackBook.com to showcase Obama’s ‘friends’ – August 20, 2008
- Craig Robinson helped brother-in-law build connections off the court – November 12, 2008
- Penny Pritzker says no thanks to Commerce post – November 20, 2008
- From Chicago’s South Side to the Senate: The political education of Barack Obama – May 23, 2008
This post is tagged with: Allstate Financial, Barack Obama, Desiree Rogers, John W. Rogers Jr., Michelle Obama, Peoples Gas and North Shore Gas, Politics, Recent Stories, Valerie JarrettRead related stories: Politics · Recent Stories0 Comments
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Small donors played comparable roles in Obama and Bush campaignsNovember 30, 2008 at 7:28am
A new study by the Campaign Finance Institute shows that Barack Obama received about the same percentage from small donors in 2008 as George W. Bush did in 2004.
Brent Scowcroft is Back in the Tent
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House Panel to Probe What Triggered Spitzer Inquiry
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Robert Rubin’s disciples dominate Obama economic team
No team of rivals, this.
If anything, Barack Obama’s economic team is stunning for its homogeneity. Timothy Geithner, Lawrence Summers and Peter Orszag are all proteges of former Treasury Secretary Robert E. Rubin, a centrist economist who was one of the key Democratic architects of the financial deregulation undertaken in the Clinton years.
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Liberal economist Robert Kuttner, editor of The American Prospect, expresses bafflement at Obama’s decision to pack his team with disciples of Rubin, an advocate of balanced budgets, free trade and financial deregulation – especially given Rubin’s central role at Citigroup, now on the brink of financial disaster.
“What kind of magic does this man Rubin have?” Kuttner asked in a recent Huffington Post column:
He was one of the key Democratic architects of the extreme financial deregulation that brought the economy to this pass. At Citi, he was one of the grand strategists of the speculation in securitized loans and off-balance-sheet gimmicks that has brought Citi to the edge of bankruptcy. Yet he continues to fall upwards. Surely Barack Obama must have noticed that Rubin is a false prophet. So why is his entire senior economic group a Team of Rubinistas?
. . .In fairness, adults are not merely tools of their patrons. In recent months, Larry Summers has disagreed with Rubin on the scale of the needed stimulus. Tim Geithner is for far more regulation than Rubin. Jason Furman, though suggested by Rubin for his campaign post of economic policy director, actually spent more of his career working for Joseph Stiglitz than for Robert Rubin. Peter Orszag has done a fine job as director of the Congressional Budget Office, and is not averse to large scale public spending.
Kuttner urges Obama to pick at least one senior economic adviser from outside Rubin’s centrist circle who would reflect the more muscular view of the government’s role favored by liberals.
But New York Times columnist David Leonhardt suggests the old, ideological battles of the Clinton years – known as the “Battle of the Bobs, Rubin versus Reich” – are now irrelevant.
Explaining the old divide, Leonhardt wrote: “On one side was Clinton’s labor secretary and longtime friend, who argued that the government should invest in roads, bridges, worker training and the like to stimulate the economy and help the middle class. On the other side was Bob Rubin, a former Goldman Sachs executive turned White House aide, who favored reducing the deficit to soothe the bond market, bring down interest rates and get the economy moving again.”
But today, against the backdrop of the most severe economic downturn since the Great Depression, Leonhardt suggests the “Battle of the Bobs” has given way to a consensus on the need for a vigorous government intervention in the economy.
Certainly, Geithner is on record in support of regulating financial instruments and Obama himself has pledged to ushering in a period of re-regulation.
Both the president-elect and his team have also agreed on a massive stimulus plan that if passed by Congress would pump hundreds of billions into an economic jumpstart – hardly Rubin’s old recipe of balanced budgets, deficit reduction and deregulation.
“Everyone recognizes that we’re looking at deficits of considerable magnitude,” liberal economist Jared Bernstein told the New York Times. “Whether it’s Bob Rubin, Larry Summers or the most conservative economist, that’s a widely shared recognition.”
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Related stories on Muckety- Muck tracker – Obama economic team – November 23, 2008
- Obama convenes economic advisers, calls for swift action on economy – November 7, 2008
- Obama to pick Timothy Geithner as Treasury secretary – November 21, 2008
- Gene B. Sperling may return to familiar turf – January 14, 2009
- Geithner, the Fed’s point man in NYC – August 29, 2007
- Christina Romer may not be Harvard material, but she suits Obama – November 26, 2008
- Former McCain adviser Phil Gramm tied to financial turmoil – September 21, 2008
- Muck tracker: Robert Rubin leaving Citigroup – January 9, 2009
- NY Fed’s Timothy Geithner has high-powered mentoring group – June 1, 2008
- Robert Gibbs, another tough guy in Obama inner circle – November 9, 2008
This post is tagged with: , Barack Obama, James P. Rubin, Lawrence Summers, Michael Froman, Peter Orszag, Politics, Recent Stories, Timothy Geithner0 Comments
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College presidents may be wearing too many hatsJanuary 30, 2009 at 9:42am
Should university presidents sit on corporate boards? Sen. Chuck Grassley doesn’t think so.
South Financial Group’s Mack Whittle offers to renegotiate his retirement deal
The curious timing of Mack Whittle’s retirement as CEO of The South Financial Group continues to test the boundary of what constitutes a golden parachute at a bank receiving emergency aid from the federal Troubled Assets Relief Program.
In early September, well before Congress passed the bailout, Whittle said he would retire from the bank he founded, South Carolina’s largest, before the end of the year. His actual retirement came in late October, just days after his bank applied for TARP funds.
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The size of Whittle’s package is as least $12 million, according to TheStreet.com, which first reported the controversy. Others place the value higher.
Late last week, TheStreet.com said the Treasury Department was reviewing Whittle’s deal and quoted a letter from the former CEO defending his arrangement and saying he’d be willing to renegotiate to “mutually agree to something that allows the TARP investment to be made.”
The South Financial Group says it has received preliminary approval for a $347 million investment from the government.
John C.B. Smith Jr., the bank’s chairman, has defended Whittle, who remains on the company’s board of directors. But South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford and Rep. Bob Inglis, both Republicans, have been critical.
The most prominent member of the bank’s board is probably Darla Moore. The Moore School of Business at the University of South Carolina is named after her.
Moore, who is married to investor Richard Rainwater, sits on the bank’s compensation committee.
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Related posts on Muckety- Michael Moore defends the car guys, sort of – December 4, 2008
- WaMu seized by federal regulators, sold to JPMorgan Chase – September 26, 2008
- Jim Cramer: A beacon of hope to all journalists – April 10, 2008
- Kenneth Lewis continues his buying spree at Bank of America – September 16, 2008
- Retired AIG exec pays $3.45 million cash for Central Park South coop – October 2, 2008
- Offspring enjoy legacies at the Golden Globes – November 18, 2007
- O’Neal, Prince and Mozilo questioned about pay – March 7, 2008
- Philip Milne: Another well-paid victim of the mortgage crisis – June 27, 2008
- Muckety trading: Blackrock pay and Southwest stock – April 29, 2008
- Citigroup to buy Wachovia’s banking assets – September 29, 2008
This post is tagged with: Darla Moore, golden parachute, Mack Whittle, renegotiate retirement package, TARP, The South Financial Group, Treasury Department, Troubled Assets Relief ProgramRead related stories: Business · Recent Stories0 Comments
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Caroline Kennedy’s ties to Bloomberg may hurt her prospectsDecember 25, 2008 at 10:13am
Caroline Kennedy has friends in high places, including President-elect Barack Obama, whom she supported in his quest for the presidency.
Feinberg and Cerberus: out of the frying pan
What’s in a name? Ask the folks at Cerberus Capital Management, named for the three-headed dog that guards the gates of hell.
Managers of the private equity firm like to stay out of the limelight, an impossibility given Cerberus’ ownership of Chrysler.
As Reuters noted yesterday, Cerberus co-founder Stephen Feinberg is in the untenable position of seeking government funds to rescue a privately held company:
Feinberg – a frequent contributor to Republican coffers — seems content to let fellow executives John Snow, a former treasury secretary in the current Bush administration, and Dan Quayle, who was vice president under former president George H. W. Bush, be the famous names at his company.
Snow’s title is chairman of Cerberus Capital Management. Quayle is chairman of Cerberus Global Investments.
It has been Snow who has been the public face of the Chrysler deal. Snow talked in a press release at the time of the deal about the “inherent strength of U.S. manufacturing and of the U.S. auto industry” – a judgment called into question by the current economic crisis.
Cerberus has pledged that federal assistance would be used to shore up Chrysler, and would not flow back to the investment company.
Chrysler chief Bob Nardelli told a Senate committee Tuesday that Cerberus “has made it clear that it will forgo any benefit from the upside that would, in part, be created from any government assistance that Chrysler LLC may obtain.”
Although Republicans have vociferously opposed a bailout for the automakers, Feinberg is a generous supporter of the GOP. Earlier this year, he gave $28,500 to the National Republican Senatorial Committee.
When Cerberus bought Chrysler in 2007, Feinberg was hailed as a man who might save Detroit. In retrospect, the task seems as impossible as Katie Couric saving network news.
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Related stories on Muckety- Cerberus: The public face of private investment – February 19, 2008
- Secretive Cerberus keeps a high profile on K Street – September 4, 2008
- GM discussing merger with Chrysler, Times reports – October 11, 2008
- Feds rescue GMAC despite Ezra Merkin’s leadership – December 31, 2008
- Feinberg promises quick payment of Gulf claims – July 1, 2010
- Darwin Deason at loggerheads with ACS directors – November 6, 2007
- Soft landings for Merrill’s O’Neal and other ex-chiefs – October 31, 2007
- Muckety movers – Cerberus & its books – December 11, 2008
- Roger Penske one of the few heroes left standing in Detroit – June 8, 2009
- Media humming about Rattner’s departure from auto task force – July 15, 2009
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The relationship map to the left is interactive.• Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations.• Expand items with + signs by double-clicking or by selecting multiple items in the map and pressing the “e” key.• Move an item in the map by clicking and dragging.• You can also delete items, separate boxes and save maps. Right-click on the map or select Map Tools for these options.• Find out more about an item in the map by right-clicking on the item and choosing Information about…• View map color key.• This interactive map requires Flash player.
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FDR knew networksJuly 29, 2010 at 8:03am
A 75-year-old document released Wednesday by the National Archives highlights Franklin Roosevelt’s keen understanding of network dynamics.
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