WASHINGTON - George W. Bush's rising political fortunes provided a windfall for Harriet Miers' law firm.
Campaign records show Bush's Texas gubernatorial campaigns paid Miers a total of $163,000 in legal fees, most of it for work done during the future president's 1998 re-election bid.
Some senators are planning to explore Miers' legal work for Bush during her confirmation process to be the newest Supreme Court justice, but the White House says it won't release any memos detailing that work.
So what did Miers do for that $163,000? Continuing on with the money:
Reports filed with the Texas Ethics Commission show that two payments of $70,000 were made to Miers' Locke, Purnell, Rain and Harrell firm in Dallas within a month of each other during the 1998 campaign. Another $16,000 in payments were made between March and December 1999.
The 1998 totals dwarfed the $7,000 Bush paid Miers' firm during his first run for governor in 1994, and are extremely large for campaign legal work in Texas, an expert said.
"I'm baffled," said Randall B. Wood, a partner in the Austin firm of Ray, Wood and Bonilla, and former director of Common Cause of Texas. "I've never seen that kind of money spent on a campaign lawyer. It's unprecedented."
The amount received by Locke, Purnell for the 1998 Texas race approaches the national tab for the 2004 Bush presidential re-election campaign, when at least $191,000 was spent on lawyers, Federal Election Commission records show.
In 2000, the Bush presidential campaign spent about $365,000 on legal services, the records show.
The Associated Press reviewed Texas records between 1993 and 2000, although detailed reports weren't available for the last half of 1995. A state commission spokeswoman said the panel had planned to retain all of the records because of their historic significance when Bush became president, but some were misplaced.
Dana Perrino, a White House spokeswoman, said the legal fees to Miers' firm were for routine campaign work, but declined to be more specific. Presidential aides declined to say whether Miers ever worked on researching Bush's past, such as his military record.
A spokeswoman for Locke, Liddell & Sapp  the firm created when Miers' office merged with another Dallas law firm  said it wouldn't provide details on the payments, citing attorney-client privilege.
I'm not sure what to make of this. George Bush spent a lot of money for Harriet Miers and her firm to do some type of work--work that is consideresensitiveve to Bush. What was that type of work? Did Miers work to remove whatever traces of inconsistencies regarding Bush's national guard military records? And some of these Texas campaign finance records are also misplaced after 1995. What is with that?
What did Miers do for Bush?
It is certainly interesting to note that whatever work Miers did for Bush during his gubernatorial campaign, Bush is now rewarding her with a Supreme Court seat.
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