Obama and
McCain Suck
Up to the
Bankers
By Robert
Scheer
30/07/08
"Truthdig"
-- This is a
time to
condemn the
bankers, not
to embrace
them. They
are the
scoundrels
who got us
into the
biggest
economic
mess since
the Great
Depression,
lining their
own pockets
while
destroying
the life
savings of
those who
trusted
them. Yet
both of our
leading
presidential
candidates
are
scrambling
to enlist
not only the
big-dollar
contributions
but, more
frighteningly,
the
"expertise"
of the very
folks who
advocated
the
financial
industry
deregulations
at the heart
of this
meltdown.
Republican
candidate
John McCain
even
appointed as
his campaign
co-chairman
Phil Gramm,
who went
from being
chairman of
the Senate
Banking
Committee,
where he
sponsored
disastrous
legislation
that
empowered
the banking
bandits, to
becoming one
of them at
UBS Warburg.
Gramm was
forced to
resign from
McCain's
campaign
only after
he went
public with
his contempt
for the
financial
concerns of
ordinary
Americans,
calling them
"whiners"
and
perpetrators
of a "mental
recession."
But Gramm
and the
Republicans
couldn't
have done it
without the
support of
leading
Democrats.
The most
egregious of
Gramm's
legislative
favors to
the
financiers
took the
form of
legislation
named in
part after
him -- the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act, which
became law
only after
then-Treasury
Secretary
Robert Rubin
prevailed
upon
President
Clinton to
sign the
bill. The
bill's
immediate
major effect
was to
legitimize
the
long-sought
merger
between
Citibank and
insurance
giant
Travelers.
Rubin's
critical
support for
the bill was
rewarded
with an
appointment,
within days
of its
passage, to
a top job at
Citibank
(later
Citigroup)
paying more
than $15
million a
year.
That is the
same Rubin
with whom
Democratic
candidate
Barack Obama
met, along
with other
influential
advisers, on
Tuesday to
figure out
what to do
about the
sorry state
of our
economy. But
what in the
world did he
expect to
learn from
Rubin? And
why did he
appoint
Rubin's
protégé,
Jason
Furman, who
ran the
Rubin-funded
Hamilton
Project, to
be the Obama
campaign's
economic
director?
Hopefully,
during their
encounter
Tuesday,
Rubin
offered
himself as a
contrite
model of
everything
that the
candidate of
change needs
to change.
After all,
Goldman
Sachs, where
Rubin spent
25 years of
his business
career
before
entering the
Clinton
administration,
has been one
of the prime
corporate
villains in
the
financial
shenanigans
that led to
the subprime
mortgage
scandal. As
co-chairman
of the firm,
surely he
had
knowledge of
the
financial
hanky-panky
that would
prove so
disastrous
down the
road.
Indeed, as
Treasury
secretary,
he favored
an extension
of the
deregulation
that enabled
this
explosion of
banking
avarice. Not
surprisingly,
the current
Treasury
secretary,
Henry
Paulson,
also
previously
headed
Goldman.
When Rubin
assumed a
top position
at Citibank
after his
stint at the
Treasury, he
was not
above
influencing
his former
employees in
the
government.
In one
notorious
instance
during the
fall of
2001, when
Enron was
going down
the tubes
Rubin
telephoned a
Treasury
undersecretary
and asked
him to
consider
intervening
with
credit-rating
agencies to
hold off
downgrading
Enron's
ratings.
When the
story was
leaked, some
media
accounts
noted the
possibility
of a
conflict of
interest
because
Enron owed
Citibank
$750
million,
which it
could not
pay if
bankrupt.
Despite his
skills and
his vaunted
position as
Citibank's
chairman,
Rubin was
not spared
the
disastrous
consequences
of
Citibank's
own wild
financial
manipulations,
which, if
anything,
exceeded
those of
Enron. Tens
of billions
in bad
mortgage and
credit card
debt placed
the bank at
the
forefront of
the current
economic
crisis, and
so it is
weird that
Obama would
now turn to
Rubin for
advice.
It's even
weirder that
the
presumptive
Democratic
nominee
would pick
Rubin's man
Furman as
his campaign
economic
director at
a time when
cleaning up
the mess
left by the
bankers is
the highest
priority.
Furman
hardly
distinguished
himself four
years ago in
that role in
John Kerry's
failed
presidential
campaign,
with its
muffled
economic
message that
could not be
blamed on
the
candidate's
stiff style
alone.
The bigger
problem is
that folks
such as
Rubin and
Furman,
perhaps best
known as an
economist
for his bold
but woefully
misguided
defense of
the Wal-Mart
business
model,
clearly do
not feel the
pain of the
voters who
are losing
their homes.
But then
again, why
should
Rubin, or
Gramm on the
Republican
side, be
expected to
care when he
has made so
many
millions off
the
suffering of
those
voters? Not
good at a
time when we
need a
presidential
candidate
who sticks
it to the
bankers
instead of
sucking up
to them.
Robert
Scheer is
the
co-author of
The
Pornography
of Power:
How Defense
Hawks
Hijacked
9/11 and
Weakened
America.
