November 9, 2009
Meghan McCain’s recent lament in The Daily Beast struck me as rather strange. She really should know better. Ms. McCain expressed her frustration over mainstream media treatment of “two of the most prominent women in politics — Hillary Clinton and Sarah Palin”. Ms. McCain felt the coverage received by those two politicians has been so misogynistic that she has nearly given up on the possibility that she may ever see a woman get elected to the Presidency:
It seems to me the male-dominated media suffers from a Goldilocks Syndrome that keeps women from shattering the glass ceiling. Worse, I fear it will prevent tomorrow’s female leaders from even seeking office.
Of course, if one can see no further than Hillary Clinton or Sarah Palin when seeking female Presidential candidates, then despair is inevitable. In the summer of 2008, after Ms.Clinton faced up to the reality that Barack Obama had won the Democratic nomination, we heard similar doubts expressed by many despondent female supporters of Hillary Clinton — that they would never see a female elected President within their own lifetimes. At that point, I wrote apiece entitled “Women To Watch”, reminding readers that “there are a number of women presently in the Senate, who got there without having been married to a former President (whose surname could be relied upon for recognition purposes).” One of those women, whom I discussed at that time, was Senator Maria Cantwell of Washington. Maria Cantwell has been in the news quite a bit recently and the coverage has been favorable. As I said in June of 2008, those holding out hope for a female Presidential candidate should keep an eye on her.
In our highly-partisan political climate, one rarely hears a national politician break from “party line” rhetoric and talking points while being interviewed by the news media or when writing commentary pieces for news publications and blogs. Nevertheless, Senator Cantwell has taken the bold step of criticizing, not only the administration’s handling of the economic crisis, but the K Street payoff culture enlisting her fellow Democrats as enablers of the status quo.
On October 30, Senator Cantwell wrote a piece for The Huffington Post, decrying the fact that those financial institutions benefiting from the massive bailouts from TARP and the Federal Reserve “have resumed their old habit of using other people’s money to gamble with the same risky unregulated derivatives that led us into this crisis.” The reason for the failure at every level of the federal government to even consider appropriate legislation or regulations to rein-in continuing irresponsible behavior by those institutions was candidly discussed by the Senator:
Look no further than the powerful lobbying arm of the financial services sector, which has spent at least $220 million this year lobbying Congress to stave off new rules to prevent another collapse. That is over $500,000 in lobbying for every member of Congress, which might help explain why, to date, nothing has been fixed in our porous financial regulatory system. Americans want to know when Congress will put an end to the Wall Street’s secret off-book gambling schemes and restore our capitalist system by requiring real transparency and true competition.
Senator Cantwell’s essay is essential reading, coming on the heels of a rebuke, by her fellow Democrats, against efforts at requiring transparency in the trading of credit default swaps:
Imposing full transparency and true competition will require moving derivative trades onto regulated exchanges. That would mean full transparency of trading prices and volumes, reporting requirements for large trader positions, and adequate capital reserves to protect against a default. The government needs full anti-fraud and anti-manipulation authority. Giving regulators this power will ensure a transparent and competitive marketplace and will ensure that violators will go to jail.
On November 2, Senator Cantwell appeared on MSNBC’s Morning Meeting with Dylan Ratigan. At that time, Mr. Ratigan had just written a piece for The Business Insider, expressing his outrage about recent statements by Treasury Secretary “Turbo” Tim Geithner, supporting House bank reform legislation allowing credit default swaps to continue being traded in secret. Since Senator Cantwell had previously discussed that subject with him on October 16, Mr. Ratigan focused on Geithner. Ratigan noted Geithner’s endorsement of the proposed House “banking reform” legislation on the previous day’s broadcast of Meet The Press — despite the bill’s “massive exemptions” allowing opacity in the trading of credit default swaps. Ratigan then asked Senator Cantwell why Tim Geithner still has a job, to which she replied:
I’m not sure because David Gregory had him almost — trying to get a straight answer out of him. What the Treasury Secretary basically said was: yes, banks should take more risks and we should continue the loopholes — and that is really appalling because, right now, we know that lack of transparency has caused this problem with the U.S. economy and Wall Street is continuing, one year later, continuing the same kind of loopholes. And so if the Treasury Secretary doesn’t come down hard against these loopholes and advocate foreclosing them, then we’re going to have a tough time closing them in Congress. So the Treasury Secretary is dodging the issue.
Senator Cantwell sure isn’t dodging any issues. Beyond that, she is demonstrating that she has more cajones than any of her male counterparts in the Senate. So far, all of the publicity concerning her position on financial reform has been favorable. After all, she is boldly standing up to the lobbyists, the Congress they own and a White House that received nearly a million dollars in campaign contributions from Goldman Sachs.
Back in Senator Cantwell’s home state of Washington, The Seattle Times praised her co-sponsorship of Senate Bill 823, the Net Operating Loss Carryback Act, which has already been passed by both houses of Congress. This bill increases the corporate income tax refunds for businesses that were making money during the pre-2008 era but now operate at a loss. As the Seattle Times editorial explained:
The national unemployment rate is still rising. It has just gone double-digit for the first time in 26 years, and is at 10.2 percent.
This is not recovery.
The new law does not have taxpayers underwrite credit default swaps or any of the other alchemic creations of Wall Street investment banks. It is not more aid and comfort for the nationalized and quasi-nationalized corporate giants; it specifically exempts Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and any company in which the Treasury has recently become an owner.
This law is for the businesses that suffer in the recession, not the ones that caused it. It is one of the few things Congress has done that reaches directly to Main Street America. It is a big deal to many local businesses, including businesses here.
Congratulations, Senator Cantwell!
To Meghan McCain and other women remaining in doubt as to whether they will ever see a female sworn in as President: Just keep watching Maria Cantwell as she continues to earn well-deserved respect.
Awareness Abounds
November 12, 2009
When I started this blog in April of 2008, my focus was on that year’s political campaigns and the exciting Presidential primary season. At the time, I expressed my concern that the most prominent centrist in the race, John McCain, would continue pandering to the televangelist lobby after winning the nomination, when those efforts were no longer necessary. He unfortunately followed that strategy and went on to say dumb things about the most pressing issue facing America in decades: the economy. During the Presidential campaign of Bill Clinton, James Carville was credited with writing this statement on a sign in front of Clinton’s campaign headquarters in Little Rock: “It’s the economy, stupid!” That phrase quickly became the mantra of most politicians until the attacks of September 11, 2001 revealed that our efforts at national security were inadequate. Since that time, we have over-compensated in that area. Nevertheless, with the demise of Rudy Giuliani’s political career, the American public is not as jumpy about terrorism as it had been — despite the suspicious connections of the deranged psychiatrist at Fort Hood. As the recent editorials by Steve Chapman of the Chicago Tribune and Vincent Carroll of The Denver Post demonstrate, the cerebral bat guano necessary to get the public fired-up for a vindictive rampage just isn’t there anymore.
President Obama’s failure to abide by the Carville maxim appears to be costing him points in the latest approval ratings. The fact that the new President has surrounded himself with the same characters who helped create the financial crisis, has become a subject of criticism by commentators from across the political spectrum. Since Obama’s Presidential campaign received nearly one million dollars in contributions from Goldman Sachs, he should have known we’d be watching. CNBC’s Charlie Gasparino was recently interviewed by Aaron Task. During that discussion, Gasparino explained that Jamie Dimon (the CEO of JP Morgan Chase and director of the New York Federal Reserve) has managed to dissuade the new President from paying serious attention to Paul Volcker (chairman of the Economic Recovery Advisory Board) whose ideas for financial reform would prove inconvenient for those “too big to fail” financial institutions. As long as JP Morgan’s “Dimon Dog” and Lloyd Bankfiend of Goldman Sachs have such firm control over the puppet strings of “Turbo” Tim Geithner, Larry Summers and Ben Bernanke, why pay attention to Paul Volcker? The voting public (as well as most politicians) can’t understand most of these economic problems, anyway. I seriously doubt that many of our elected officials could explain the difference between a credit default swap and a wife swap.
Once again, Dan Gerstein of Forbes.com has directed a water cannon of common sense on the malaise blaze that has been fueled by a plague of ignorance. In his latest piece, Gerstein tossed aside that tattered, obsolete handbook referred to as “conventional wisdom” to take a hard look at the reality facing all incumbent, national politicians:
Gerstein’s short essay is essential reading for a quick understanding of how and why America can’t seem to solve many of its pressing problems these days. Gerstein has identified the responsible culprits as three groups: the Democrats, the Republicans and the big banks — describing them as the “axis of cluelessness”:
Surprisingly, public awareness concerning the root cause of both the financial crisis and our ongoing economic predicament has escalated to a startling degree in recent weeks. This past spring, if you wanted to find out about the nefarious activities transpiring at Goldman Sachs, you had to be familiar with Zero Hedge or GoldmanSachs666.com. Today, you need look no further than Maureen Dowd’s column or the most recent episode of Saturday Night Live. Everyone knows what the problem is. Gordon Gekko’s 1987 proclamation that “greed is good” has not only become an acceptable fact of life, it has infected our laws and the opinions rendered by our highest courts. We are now living with the consequences.
Fortunately, there are plenty of people in the American financial sector who are concerned about the well-being of our society. A recent study by David Weild and Edward Kim (Capital Markets Advisors at Grant Thornton LLP) entitled “A wake-up call for America” has revealed the tragic consequences resulting from the fact that the United States, when compared with other developed countries, has fallen seriously behind in the number of companies listed on our stock exchanges. Here’s some of what they had to say:
The Grant Thornton study illustrates how and why “as many as 22 million” jobs have been lost since 1997, not to mention the destruction of retirement savings, forcing many people to come out of retirement and back to work. Beyond that, smaller companies have found it more difficult to survive and business loans have become harder to obtain.
Aside from all the bad news, the report does offer solutions to this crisis:
The Grant Thornton website also has a page containing links to the appropriate legislators and a prepared message you can send, urging those legislators to take action to resolve this crisis.
Now is your chance to do something that can help address the many problems with our economy and our financial system. The people at Grant Thornton were thoughtful enough to facilitate your participation in the resolution of this crisis. Let the officials in Washington know what their bosses — the people — expect from them.