By insidesources. Originally published at ValueWalk.
During the 2016 campaign, California billionaire Tom Steyer donated nearly $90 million to Democratic candidates but got a poor return on his investment. The very next morning, the Los Angeles Times began asking if he might be prepping for a gubernatorial run in 2018. Steyer has yet to make an official announcement on the race, but his poll numbers have hovered around 5 percent, 21 points behind the frontrunner. With the future of his potential candidacy looking rocky, Steyer opened up a new public relations front on Twitter. Steyer’s tweets ignore his own ties to Russia while calling for investigations into the Trump administration.
Tom Steyer
By Helloaloe (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0 or GFDL], via Wikimedia CommonsInvestigating the Trump administration for ties to Russia is one of Steyer’s favorite tweet topics. In the past week, he brought up Russia nearly every other day.
Trump may deny working with Russia to win the White House but he sure is acting guilty.
— Tom Steyer (@TomSteyer) February 24, 2017
Something’s rotten in Washington. We need to know the truth about Trump’s ties to Russia. Serious reckoning ahead.
— Tom Steyer (@TomSteyer) February 22, 2017
American people need to know what Washington knows about Trump’s Russian ties. Declassify truth NOW! #PresidentsDay https://t.co/fQI1i4tuSn
— Tom Steyer (@TomSteyer) February 20, 2017
Steyer’s Twitter followers hear less about the billionaire’s own ties to Russia, where as the lead in hedge fund Farallon Capital Management, Steyer made millions from investments in petroleum companies. One of these investments involved dealing with a Russian energy czar who was a confidant of Vladimir Putin.
In the early 2000s, Farallon Capital Management, the firm where Steyer served as managing partner, invested in Geotech Services, one of the largest oilfield exploration companies in Russia. Geotech was one of the companies most responsible for the development of Russia’s energy resources in the post-Soviet period. In 2010, Farallon Capital sold a portion of its stake in Geotech Services to the Volga Group, a privately-held Russian investment group. The Volga Group specifically manages the consolidated assets of Gennady Timchenko, an associate of Putin who has been investigated for money laundering.
After the invasion of Crimea in 2014, the U.S. Treasury Department announced that it was placing sanctions on the Volga Group for “materially assisting, sponsoring, or providing financial, material, or technological support” to the Russian government. Steyer’s connections to the Volga Group and Timchenko, as well as Russian oil, were enough to spark a divestment campaign by college students whose university endowments invested with Steyer in 2004.
Steyer’s biography according to NextGen, the climate advocacy group he founded, does not mention Geotech Services or Russia. But even as Steyer plays coy about his own business dealings in Russia, he has called for Trump to be investigated.
Since leaving Farallon Capital, Steyer has adopted a very different opinion of energy development. Rather than helping develop oil reserves, he has become a vocal opponent of fracking.
After Trump signed an executive order allowing construction of the Keystone XL pipeline, Steyer accused the administration of putting “corporate interests ahead of American interests.”
Steyer echoed environmentalist complaints, saying that the pipeline would lead to air and water pollution while doing little to promote job growth.
“The idea we’re puppets of Putin is so preposterous that you have to wonder what they’re smoking over at NATO HQ,” said Greenpeace, also pointing out that several of its members had been arrested during a Russian protest.
Rasmussen wasn’t the only government official to acknowledge Russia’s role in the anti-fracking movement. According to emails released by WikiLeaks, Hillary Clinton talked about “phony environmentalist groups…funded by the Russians,” in a 2014 speech in Canada.
“We were even up against phony environmental groups, and I’m a big environmentalist, but these were funded by the Russians to stand against any effort, oh that pipeline, that fracking, that whatever will be a problem for you, and a lot of the money supporting that message was coming from Russia,” she said in the speech.
Since then, the campaign against fracking has only continued. An intelligence report released in January shows that the connection was real. According to the report, Russia’s government-funded foreign media outlet RT began a propaganda campaign against fracking in response to the growth in American oil production.
Over a period of just seven months in 2015, RT ran 62 different anti-fracking television stories and news reports, as well as an hour-long, largely discredited anti-fracking documentary. Reporters on RT routinely framed stories and interview to focus on the risks of fracking, leaving out information about the likelihood of these disasters taking place.
The propaganda push was serious enough to warrant inclusion in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence’s report about Russian interference in the U.S. election.
“RT runs anti-fracking programming, highlighting environmental issues and the impacts on public health,” the report read. “This is likely reflective of the Russian Government’s concern about the impact of fracking and U.S. natural gas production on
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