The Michael Fanone Show
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit michaelfanone.substack.com [https://michaelfanone.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_7] Look at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool right now. It isn’t red, white, and blue. It’s green — a vivid, soupy, algae-bloom green. And the brand-new blue waterproofing on the bottom is already peeling up and floating to the surface. That pool just went through a $14.2 million repair. And the company brought in to keep the water clean — the one that was supposed to install the system that stops exactly this from happening — traces back to a man who lives down the street from Mar-a-Lago. His name is John J. Cafaro. Longtime Trump donor. The president once called him a “fantastic man” from a stage. And the firm hired to purify the water, Greenwater Services, is ultimately owned by Cafaro’s investment trust. Here’s how the contract worked. The National Park Service skipped competitive bidding. No open competition, no comparing offers — they handed Greenwater a $1.7 million contract directly. And by the Park Service’s own public filing, other firms had expressed interest in the work. They just never got the chance. The justification was urgency. The Park Service invoked an exemption meant for genuine emergencies, claiming there was no time to weigh other bids because the system had to be ready for the country’s 250th birthday events. But the document making that case never named a deadline. No date. Just the word “urgent” doing an enormous amount of heavy lifting. I spent twenty years watching how the “no time for process” argument gets used, and it’s almost always the tell. When somebody says the rules have to be suspended because the clock’s running, the next question is the same every time: who benefits from skipping the line? Here, the beneficiary’s address tells the story. Greenwater listed Cafaro’s Palm Beach mansion as its address in Florida corporate records. It listed his investment trust’s phone number and email in Ohio lobbying records. Same phone. Same email. A water-treatment company in Ohio and a Trump donor’s mansion in Palm Beach, sharing contact information. And before this, the company had exactly one other federal contract in its entire history. Founded in 2019. One prior federal job. Then suddenly it’s trusted with a high-profile installation at one of the most recognizable monuments in the country. Now, the Interior Department says the White House had nothing to do with picking the firm. A White House spokeswoman says the president wasn’t involved. Interior’s spokeswoman says they didn’t even know about Cafaro’s politics when they awarded it. Take that at face value if you want. But remember what the Times already reported: the general manager of Trump’s own golf club in Bedminster advised the Park Service on this project — and was in contact with Greenwater back in January. So the people who claim they had no idea who they were dealing with were being advised by a Trump employee who’d been talking to the contractor months before the deal was signed. The money isn’t subtle either. Campaign finance records show Cafaro has given more than $300,000 to political committees tied to Trump since 2016. His wife chaired the Red Cross Ball at Mar-a-Lago. This isn’t a stranger who happened to have the best bid. There was no bid. It’s worth knowing who Cafaro is. His family made its money developing shopping centers. He branched into aerospace. And in 2001 he pleaded guilty to conspiracy to bribe a sitting congressman, then testified against him. That’s the man whose company just got handed a no-bid federal contract at the Lincoln Memorial. And here’s the part that should bother you whether or not you care about the politics: it didn’t even work. The pool is green. The algae came back. Interior is now dumping hydrogen peroxide into the water and sending crews in with vacuums to suck the bloom out by hand. The permanent purification system the no-bid contract was supposed to deliver still wasn’t installed when reporters visited this week. And the Park Service won’t explain why it refilled the pool before that system was in place — the one decision that basically guaranteed it would cloud over again. So step back and look at what we’ve actually got. A monument repair running into the tens of millions. Two separate no-bid contracts, both justified by an urgency nobody will put a date on. One of them going to a company tied to a Trump donor with a bribery conviction in his past. Blue paint peeling off the bottom. Green water on top. And a federal agency that won’t answer basic questions about its own decisions. This is the pattern worth watching, because it’s bigger than one pool. When the bidding process gets waved away in the name of a deadline, the public stops getting the cheapest or the best work. It starts getting whatever’s most convenient for whoever’s connected. And we end up paying premium prices for results we can watch falling apart with our own eyes. The Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool is supposed to reflect the monument. Right now it’s reflecting something else. 🟧 Paid subscribers get 15% off your next merch order🟧 Founding Members get 20% off for life You’ll get the link in your welcome email. GET DISCOUNTS BELOW! ENJOY!
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