Sunburned
2009-07-30
The fun-in-the-sun Italian vacation scandal rocking Czech
politics provides a good excuse for Václav Klaus to veto the law
for gifting Kč 68bn in carbon credits to ČEZ. The ČEZ rider ain't
no Lisbon treaty, but Klaus could easily explain himself by
saying that there are too many questions about a possible quid
pro quo for the jolly vacationers and others who pushed through
the bill. He could ask, for example, why a top ČEZ lobbyist,
Vladimír Johanes, has a consulting gig at the industry ministry.
He could wonder aloud why Alexandr Vondra was still lobbying
in the Senate for ČEZ, given that he already turned his old
lobbying arm, Dutko, over to ČEZ's PR agency, AMI/Pan
Solutions. Or, Klaus could argue that giving away Kč 68bn in
state money would violate his own appeal for politicians to enact
"maximum savings." Perhaps most convincingly, Klaus could say
that he's sworn to uphold the Constitution and that riders of the
carbon-credit variety are clearly unconstitutional. Or, he could
veto it just to spite Mirek Topolánek.
[Czech Republic CO2 allowances public relations World Wide]
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