boston.com your connection to The Boston Globe

Magazine probes votes, holdings of N.H.'s Bradley

WASHINGTON -- US Representative Jeb Bradley, Republican of New Hampshire, voted to allow oil drilling in the Great Lakes and opposed several energy-related environmental conservation bills while holding nearly $1 million in oil and energy company shares, according to a Harper's report posted on the magazine's website Monday.

The report set off a spark in this fall's New Hampshire House race, where several Democratic contenders are vying to unseat Bradley, a two-term incumbent considered one of the more liberal Republicans in Congress and who rarely faces negative press.

According to the report, Bradley also voted against $15.5 million in energy conservation funding, voted against stricter penalties for industry price gouging, opposed a measure intended to curb no-bid government contracts for Iraqi oil operations while holding Halliburton stock, and supported several pharmaceutical-friendly bills while holding more than $300,000 of drug company shares.

In a statement issued Monday, Bradley declared he had ``never read such an inflammatory piece in all my life" and accused Harper's reporter Ken Silverstein of taking the voting record out of context. Bradley said he has ``continually" voted against big subsidies for corporate oil, voted for environmental protections, and introduced a bill allowing import of prescription drugs from Canada under certain conditions.

Jim Craig, the New Hampshire House minority leader and the best-known Democratic candidate taking on Bradley, used the report to slam the Republican.

``Three things seem to be going up: gas prices, prescription drug prices, and now we see there's a third thing -- Jeb Bradley's stock portfolio," Craig said. ``That's what I take from the piece."

The most recent University of New Hampshire poll had Bradley leading Craig by 28 percentage points in a hypothetical matchup.

Silverstein said the report on Bradley was intended to underscore the ethical issues that well-heeled politicians sometimes confront. ``Bradley is a very wealthy man, and it's not likely that he reads the stock tables before voting," Silverstein wrote. ``But his votes have, at times, tended to increase his personal net worth."

Andrew E. Smith, a University of New Hampshire political science professor, said Bradley ``is probably not going to be damaged by this" because voters don't believe he's beholden to corporate interests. Bradley's reputation is that of a pro-environment moderate, Smith said.

Dante Scala, a professor of politics at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, said the Harper's story may be fodder for a Democratic attack ad, but little else. ``I didn't see any kind of smoking gun, so to speak," he said.

The League of Conservation Voters, a nonpartisan environmental watchdog group, gave Bradley a 44 percent rating in its last congressional scorecard, placing him just under the House average. Bradley was also ranked far ahead of the Republican average of 13 percent.

SEARCH THE ARCHIVES
 
Today (free)
Yesterday (free)
Past 30 days
Last 12 months
 Advanced search / Historic Archives