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News / Nation & World

Manafort charges spark hunt for Europeans paid to lobby

Former European leaders allegedly took pay to lobby U.S. on behalf of Ukraine

By DMYTRO VLASOV, Associated Press
Published: February 24, 2018, 11:09pm
3 Photos
In this file photo dated Friday, Nov. 14, 2008, Austrian Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer, talks during a news conference in the Bulgarian capital Sofia. Ukrainian opposition lawmaker Serhiy Leshchenko, who helped uncover off-the-books payments to President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort, said Saturday Feb. 24, 2018, that Gusenbauer had lobbied for Ukraine when Yanukovych was in power, although Gusenbauer told the Austrian national news agency APA that he never acted on Yanukovych’s behalf.
In this file photo dated Friday, Nov. 14, 2008, Austrian Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer, talks during a news conference in the Bulgarian capital Sofia. Ukrainian opposition lawmaker Serhiy Leshchenko, who helped uncover off-the-books payments to President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort, said Saturday Feb. 24, 2018, that Gusenbauer had lobbied for Ukraine when Yanukovych was in power, although Gusenbauer told the Austrian national news agency APA that he never acted on Yanukovych’s behalf. (AP Photo/Valentina Petrova, FILE) Photo Gallery

KIEV, Ukraine — A new indictment against former Donald Trump campaign chief Paul Manafort focused a spotlight Saturday on uncovering the former European leaders who prosecutors contend were secretly paid by Manafort to lobby on behalf of Ukraine.

The U.S. indictment handed up Friday by a grand jury doesn’t name the European politicians, although it notes they worked in coordination with Manafort, his deputy Rick Gates and two Washington lobbying firms — the Podesta Group and Mercury Public Affairs — to lobby U.S. officials and lawmakers.

At least four leaders — former Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi, former Austrian Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer, former Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski and former Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko — were named last year in public filings by the two lobbying firms. The firms said the politicians were involved in U.S. speaking events and meetings with U.S. lawmakers and others to promote Manafort’s client at the time, Ukraine’s pro-Moscow president, Viktor Yanukovych.

The filings did not disclose any payments to the former officials, and it’s unclear if they are the same politicians referenced in the U.S. indictment.

U.S. law requires people who are lobbying U.S. officials on behalf of foreign governments or political parties to register, and a Justice Department database doesn’t show that those former European officials did.

But it’s unclear from the U.S. indictment how much the former European politicians knew about their funding or if they could be covered by some legal exemption.

The lobbying by the European political figures, identified in the indictment as the “Hapsburg Group,” allegedly took place in 2012-13, when Ukraine was moving toward closer integration with the European Union. But the indictment doesn’t formally charge any of the leaders or refer to them as co-conspirators of Manafort and Gates.

None of the four politicians responded to requests for comment Saturday from The Associated Press but three of them were quoted as denying the reports.

Gusenbauer told the Austrian national news agency APA that he never acted on Yanukovych’s behalf.

“I never undertook activities for Mr. Yanukovych” or his party, the news agency quoted Gusenbauer as saying. He said his interests in 2012 and 2013 were in bringing the nation of Ukraine closer to Europe.

“In public events in Paris, Brussels and Berlin, I advocated for the European Union concluding an association agreement with Ukraine,” he said.

The press office for Prodi, the former Italian premier and European Commission president, denied that he was ever involved or paid by a secret lobbying group.

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Prodi “never took part in any kind of secret activity, let alone in secret lobbying groups, nor has he ever received compensation for this kind of activity,” said the statement, carried by the Italian news agency ANSA.

The statement said “Prodi has long worked so that Ukraine’s growing nearer to Europe can become concrete” and added that his activity “was public and thus easily traceable.”

Kwasniewski was quoted as saying he had no financial or political agreements with Manafort and was not familiar with the term “Hapsburg Group.”

The leading Polish news outlet Onet quoted him as saying that he knows Manafort, having met him in 2012 when he and Patrick Cox, a former European Parliament president from Ireland, led a mission to Ukraine to try to persuade Yanukovych to release his rival, former Ukrainian prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko, from prison.

“We met several times, with the hope that Manafort would help convince Yanukovych” to release Tymoshenko, Kwasniewski was quoted as saying. “I have not seen him since November 2013, when Yanukovych refused to sign the association agreement with the EU.”

“No money came into play. I did not have any financial or political agreements with him. This is some kind of misunderstanding,” he said.

He said there were many debates and conferences on Ukraine in 2012 and 2013, and he took part in them, “sometimes with Prodi, sometimes with Gusenbauer.”

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