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Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem

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  • Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem

    POLITICS
    2016 Elections, Corporations, Elections, Hillary Clinton, Top Stories

    Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem


    She talks populism, but hobnobs with Wall Street.

    —By David Corn
    | Wed Jun. 4, 2014 6:00 AM EDTandon Marshall/REX/AP


    A few weeks ago, Hillary Clinton delivered a much-touted policy speech at the New America Foundation in Washington, where she talked passionately about the financial plight of Americans who "are still barely getting by, barely holding on, not seeing the rewards that they believe their hard work should have merited." She bemoaned the fact that the slice of the nation's wealth collected by the top 1 percent—or 0.01 percent—has "risen sharply over the last generation," and she denounced this "throwback to the Gilded Age of the robber barons." Her speech, in which she cited the various projects of the Bill, Hillary, and Chelsea Clinton Foundation that address economic inequality, was widely compared to the rhetoric of Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), the unofficial torchbearer of the populist wing of the Democratic Party. Here was Hillary, test-driving a theme for a possible 2016 presidential campaign, sticking up for the little guy and trash-talking the economic elites. She decried the "shadow banking system that operated without accountability" and caused the financial crisis that wiped out millions of jobs and the nest eggs, retirement funds, and college savings of families across the land. Yet at the end of this week, when all three Clintons hold a daylong confabwith donors to their foundation, the site for this gathering will be the Manhattan headquarters of Goldman Sachs.
    Goldman was a key participant in that "shadow banking system" that precipitated the housing market collapse and the consequent financial debacle that slammed America's middle class. (A system that was unleashed in part due to deregulation supported by the Clinton administration in the 1990s.) This investment house might even be considered one of the robber barons of Wall Street. In its 2011 report, the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, a congressionally created panel set up to investigate the economic meltdown, approvingly cited a financial expert who concluded that Goldman practices had "multiplied the effects of the collapse in [the] subprime" mortgage market that set off the wider financial implosion that nearly threw the nation into a depression.



    Hillary Clinton's shift from declaimer of Big Finance shenanigans to collaborator with Goldman—the firm has donated between $250,000 and $500,000 to the Clinton Foundation—prompts an obvious question: Can the former secretary of state cultivate populist cred while hobnobbing with Goldman and pocketing money from it and other Wall Street firms? Last year, she gave two paid speeches to Goldman Sachs audiences. (Her customary fee is $200,000 a speech.)
    In recent years, Goldman Sachs has hardly exemplified the values and principles Clinton earnestly hailed in her speech. A few reminders:
    • In April 2011, Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), who chairs the Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, released a report, based on a two-year investigation, that concluded that Goldman had misled clients and Congress about its investments in securities related to the housing market. Levin called on the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission to investigate if Goldman had violated the law by selling complicated securities to customers without informing the buyers that Goldman would pocket profits if these financial products dropped in value. Goldman denied the charge, but the previous year Goldman had paid $550 million in a civil settlement with the SEC regarding its sale of these securities. (When the case was first filed, the SEC maintained that Goldman had committed fraud by creating and peddling a mortgage investment that was secretly designed to fail.)
    • In March 2012, Greg Smith, a top Goldman executive who was resigning, wrote an op-ed for the New York Times slamming the screw-the-client culture that permeated Goldman: "To put the problem in the simplest terms, the interests of the client continue to be sidelined in the way the firm operates and thinks about making money…I attend derivatives sales meetings where not one single minute is spent asking questions about how we can help clients. It's purely about how we can make the most possible money off of them…It makes me ill how callously people talk about ripping their clients off. Over the last 12 months I have seen five different managing directors refer to their own clients as 'muppets,' sometimes over internal e-mail." The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission's report also described Goldman as a first-class predator: "Despite the first of Goldman's business principles—that 'our clients' interests always come first'—documents indicate that the firm targeted less-sophisticated customers in its efforts to reduce subprime exposure." In other words, the firm knowingly peddled junk to suckers who trusted it. The report quoted an expert who noted that Goldman's actions were "the most cynical use of credit information that I have ever seen" and who compared Goldman's wheeling-and-dealing to "buying fire insurance on someone else's house and then committing arson."
    • Last year, the New York Times published a fascinating investigative article that revealed how Goldman Sachs and other financial firms engaged in shrewd maneuvers to drive up the cost of aluminum. This rigging of the market, the paper reported, "ultimately costs consumers billions of dollars." That did not help struggling middle-class families.

    Given Hillary Clinton's Warrenesque address at the New America Foundation, I asked a spokesmen for the potential 2016 candidate if there was anything incongruous about her association with Goldman, and he forwarded this statement:
    The support the Clinton Foundation receives from companies such as Goldman Sachs, organizations and individual donors helps maximize the impact of our philanthropic work. This support is helping enterprise partnerships in South America that are creating jobs; efforts to improve access to early childhood education in the U.S.; development programs that help small holder farmers in Africa; and rebuilding and economic development efforts in Haiti.
    Goldman Sachs has been a long time supporter of the Clinton Global Initiative where they have advanced a commitment designed to support 10,000 women across the world through business training and education. We are grateful for their support.
    A longtime Hillary Clinton adviser said, "She's not giving any more speeches to Goldman Sachs."
    Clinton's relationship with Goldman Sachs is not unique. Bill and Hillary Clinton have always nurtured cozy ties with Wall Street—in terms of policies and funds-chasing (for their campaigns and the foundation). The chief economic guru of the Clinton administration was Robert Rubin, a former Goldman Sachs chairman, and the financial deregulation and free-trade pacts of the Clinton years have long ticked off their party's populists. In his new book, former Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner recalls visiting Bill Clinton at his Harlem office and asking his advice, as Geithner puts it, on "how to navigate the populist waters" and respond to the American public's anger about bailouts and Wall Street. The former president didn't seem to have much sympathy for these popular sentiments and replied by referring to the CEO of Goldman: "You could take Lloyd Blankfein into a dark alley and slit his throat, and it would satisfy them for about two days. Then the bloodlust would rise again."
    If Hillary does decide to seek a return to the White House, can she straddle the line? Assail the excesses of Wall Street piracy and tout the necessity of economic fair play yet still accept the embrace, generosity, and meeting rooms of Goldman Sachs and other Wall Street players? During her speech, she offered a good summation of populism, remarking "working with my husband and daughter at our foundation, our motto is 'We're all in this together,' which we totally believe." Yet her association with Goldman might cause some to wonder how firmly she holds this belief—and how serious she is about reining in those robber barons.

    http://www.motherjones.com/politics/...-sachs-problem







  • #2
    Re: Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem

    Originally posted by vt View Post
    POLITICS
    2016 Elections, Corporations, Elections, Hillary Clinton, Top Stories

    Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem


    She talks populism, but hobnobs with Wall Street.

    —By David Corn

    http://www.motherjones.com/politics/...-sachs-problem


    Fair and balanced, vt. I like MoJo and David Corn especially, so it definitely piques my interest seeing this here.


    "My advice to you, from the bottom of the heart: Don't play poker."

    Only I expect you could prefix the name of just about any viable candidate in the widest possible of fields to the phrase "Goldman Sachs Problem." It's not just Hillary's problem, it's largely THE problem.

    "[politician] talks populism but hobnobs with Wall Street."

    And this I understand is the best left of center critique permitted in polite company these days. Good grief. I probably won't read the rest of the story because I know how it ends.


    "He's not a Communist, Mother. As a matter of fact, he's a Republican."

    But what really gets me is the irritating reality of revisiting the silly season once again. Honestly, I'm feeling rather cool to the whole idea of it.

    And so inspired by your post, vt, I've adopted a sure fire cognitive strategy for defense against the nonsense. Its essence is a rational fatalism as expressed in five words: First Dude William Jefferson Clinton.


    "A little humor, my dear Zilkov, always with a little humor."

    If Corn is right and Goldman owns Hillary, well then surely JPMorgan Chase owns a controlling interest too. It's all my opinion, of course, but then ipso facto Hillary wins and we "get two for the price of one" all over again.


    "I'm just interested, you know, in principles of modern banking
    and the history of piracy..."


    Well big whoopteedoo! It's not like anything fundamentally changes our trajectory. We'll see nothing new the morning of November 9, 2016. Except of course the customary shuffling of chairs; who's in, who's out, who's left. And then it's on to the good stuff - whose pockets get filled and whose get picked.

    Same as the old boss, like the kids said. Too bad for us. At least we get a front row seat in the theater of the absurd that's become our politics to watch the blockbuster sequel "First Dude - Bill's Excellent Adventure!"


    "If a young lady answers, tell her I've gone to Washington."

    We get eight years to watch Bill Clinton erect out of thin air his life's destiny; his greatest gift to history and his country - the role of First Dude. Backstop that with eight years watching Hillary ying yanging between the fundamentals of her nature (just like Bill did, or rather, didn't)... well let's just say that I'm feeling pretty lucky to be an American right now.

    Why is this man smiling? Oh, you know why.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem

      "Only I expect you could prefix the name of just about any viable candidate in the widest possible of fields to the phrase "Goldman Sachs Problem." It's not just Hillary's problem, it's largely THE problem."

      Woodsman Agreed.

      The reason I posted is that the article shows that extent that BOTH parties have been captured by FIRE. As Lextrode has been saying: no one of any significance has been sent to jail for the AFC.
      How do we change this?

      Thus the reason for my posts recommending a New Majority Party to replace the two FIRE twins we vote for now.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem

        Originally posted by vt View Post
        "Only I expect you could prefix the name of just about any viable candidate in the widest possible of fields to the phrase "Goldman Sachs Problem." It's not just Hillary's problem, it's largely THE problem."

        Woodsman Agreed.

        The reason I posted is that the article shows that extent that BOTH parties have been captured by FIRE. As Lextrode has been saying: no one of any significance has been sent to jail for the AFC.
        How do we change this?

        Thus the reason for my posts recommending a New Majority Party to replace the two FIRE twins we vote for now.
        Great article and breakdown of the "problems" in our political and economic system tied to the "Goldman" problem above.

        The purchase of our Republic:
        http://www.oftwominds.com/blogjune14/Falkson6-14.html

        Pre-Selected.png

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem

          Good article you posted TBBNF.

          Here is Lessig's proposal to fund elections fairly:

          http://equalitybylot.wordpress.com/2...racy-vouchers/

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem

            The US has 1300 to 1500 billionaires. Their combined wealth is over a trillion dollars. The 2012 federal elections came in at 6 billion. Feel free to make up the rest of how it would work.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem

              you mean to say they're all on the take . . .
              New Jersey governor Chris Christie. The subsidy for Luxury Point was awarded by Christie’s economic development authority (EDA). Photograph: Terry Wyatt/AP


              A major new shopping mall and housing development in New Jersey, which is controlled by the biggest corporate funders of Chris Christie’s official mansion, has been awarded a $223m public subsidy by the governor’s administration.

              Luxury Point, a vast retail, residential and entertainment complex to be built in Sayreville, was last month given one of the biggest corporate tax breaks handed out so far by the Republican governor's state authorities, which are facing a $2.7bn budget shortfall over the next year.

              The $223.3m, 10-year subsidy was awarded without fanfare to Sayreville Seaport Associates LP, a corporate partnership that owns the 440-acre development alongside the Raritan river, where construction on a shopping mall targeted at millennials is due to begin later this year.

              But a detailed proposal for the $2bn venture discloses that the project is majority-owned by Prudential, the New Jersey-based financial and insurance giant, which has in the past three years given more than $125,000 to the Republican Governors Association, which Christie chairs.

              The company is also the most generous corporate backer of a foundation that raises as much as $1m a year to maintain and restore Drumthwacket, Christie’s official mansion in Princeton, which the governor uses to host private dinners, receptions and other events. Prudential contributes at least $50,000 a year, securing it “diamond” status from the foundation.

              Prudential’s chairman and chief executive, John Strangfeld, chairs the Drumthwacket Foundation, and his wife, Mary Kay, is the vice-chair. The couple has donated at least $5,000 a year to the foundation themselves since Christie entered office, according to its website. FEC filings say that in 2012, John Strangfeld gave $25,000 to the Republican presidential campaign of Mitt Romney, which Christie served as a top fundraiser, and the party’s national committee.

              The subsidy for Luxury Point was awarded by Christie’s economic development authority (EDA) one week after Prudential posted a profit of $1.24bn for the first quarter of 2014.

              Bob DeFillippo, a spokesman for Prudential, said of the financial contributions by the firm and the Strangfelds: “None of these activities had any impact on this project”.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem

                i'll definitely have a few lines/links for this one, mr don ;)
                but am bizzy (rhymes with dizzy) - humping piles of dirt/gravel around the backyard - before it gets any hotter...
                "are you really going to get all this done b4 sunday?" she said...
                you just watch me, babe: now lead, follow or get outa the way and go fix me another one, would ya...

                "...summer time... and the livin is eeeeasy..."

                huh ?
                if ya live in a condo, maybe.... ;)

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem


                  This certainly makes the bipartisan nature of government corruption clear:













                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Hillary Clinton's Goldman Sachs Problem

                    I like the graphic. I think it could be done for a lot more people in a lot more industries/government positions. It would be the world's largest graphical image.

                    Comment

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