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Wall Street's Best Investment: Paying for Policy in Washington
Financial deregulatory mania over the last three decades led directly to the current financial meltdown.
Were the deregulators acting out of principle? Perhaps.
But it couldn't have hurt that the financial sector invested a staggering $5.1 billion in political influence purchasing in the United States over the last decade.
The money flows are laid out in gruesome detail in "Sold Out: How Wall
Street and Washington Betrayed America," a report that my colleague Jim
Donahue and I wrote, along with a team of contributors from the
Consumer Education Foundation and my organization, Essential
Information. The report is available at: www.wallstreetwatch.org/
The entire financial sector (finance, insurance, real estate) drowned political candidates in campaign contributions, spending more than $1.7 billion in federal elections from 1998-2008. Primarily reflecting the balance of power over the decade, about 55 percent went to Republicans and 45 percent to Democrats. Democrats took just more than half of the financial sector's 2008 election cycle contributions.
The industry spent even more -- topping $3.4 billion -- on officially registered lobbyists during the same period. This total certainly underestimates by a considerable amount what the industry spent to influence policymaking. U.S. reporting rules require that lobby firms and individual lobbyists disclose how much they have been paid for lobbying activity, but lobbying activity is defined to include direct contacts with key government officials, or work in preparation for meeting with key government officials. Public relations efforts and various kinds of indirect lobbying are not covered by the reporting rules.
During the decade-long period:
* Commercial banks spent more than $154 million on campaign contributions, while investing $383 million in officially registered lobbying; * Accounting firms spent $81 million on campaign contributions and $122 million on lobbying;
* Insurance companies donated more than $220 million and spent more than $1.1 billion on lobbying; and
* Securities firms invested more than $512 million in campaign contributions, and an additional nearly $600 million in lobbying. Hedge funds, a subcategory of the securities industry, spent $34 million on campaign contributions (about half in the 2008 election cycle); and $20 million on lobbying. Private equity firms, also a subcategory of the securities industry, contributed $58 million to federal candidates and spent $43 million on lobbying.
Individual firms spent tens of millions of dollars each. During the decade-long period:
* Goldman Sachs spent more than $46 million on political influence buying;
* Merrill Lynch threw more than $68 million at politicians;
* Citigroup spent more than $108 million;
* Bank of America devoted more than $39 million;
* JPMorgan Chase invested more than $65 million; and
* Accounting giants Deloitte & Touche, Ernst & Young, KPMG and Pricewaterhouse spent, respectively, $32 million, $37 million, $27 million and $55 million.
The number of people working to advance the financial sector's political objectives is startling. In 2007, the financial sector employed a staggering 2,996 separate lobbyists to influence federal policy making, more than five for each Member of Congress. This figure only counts officially registered lobbyists. That means it does not count those who offered "strategic advice" or helped mount policy-related PR campaigns for financial sector companies. The figure counts those lobbying at the federal level; it does not take into account lobbyists at state houses across the country. To be clear, the 2,996 figure represents the number of separate individuals employed by the financial sector as lobbyists in 2007. We did not double count individuals who lobby for more than one company the total number of financial sector lobby hires in 2007 was a whopping 6,738.
A great many of those lobbyists entered and exited through the revolving door connecting the lobbying world with government. Surveying only 20 leading firms in the financial sector (none from the insurance industry or real estate), we found that 142 industry lobbyists during the period 19982008 had formerly worked as "covered officials" in the government. "Covered officials" are top officials in the executive branch (most political appointees, from members of the cabinet to directors of bureaus embedded in agencies), Members of Congress, and congressional staff.
Nothing evidences the revolving door -- or Wall Street's direct influence over policymaking -- more than the stream of Goldman Sachs expatriates who left the Wall Street goliath, spun through the revolving door, and emerged to hold top regulatory positions. Topping the list, of course, are former Treasury Secretaries Robert Rubin and Henry Paulson, both of whom had served as chair of Goldman Sachs before entering government. Goldman continues to be well represented in government, with among others, Gary Gensler, President Obama's pick to chair the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and Mark Patterson, a former Goldman lobbyist now serving as chief of staff to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.
All of this awesome influence buying has enabled Wall Street to establish the framework for debates in Washington, and to obtain very specific deregulatory actions, with devastating consequences. More on this in tomorrow's column.




8 Comments so far
Show AllI heard that big dopey looking senator from Arizona stand in the well of the senate and say "There is nothing wrong with using money to influence the political process".
Republicans believe that graft, bribes, corruption are the way things are supposed to run. They have no sense of right and wrong. Their whole lives are spent getting money and what they believe to be power.
They have no sense of self except for how much money they have.
This is not a partisan issue. The Democrats have controlled both houses for 26 months and they have not made any effort to re-regulate the financial industry. Congress, along along with the US Federal Reserve have unconditionally given the financial industry trillions of taxpayer dollars.
Obama staffed his "team" with the same insiders that facilitated the financial meltdown and they continue to implement measures that might work if we had a liquidity problem. There is no liquidity problem, just a confidence problem.
Private investors have trillions of dollars to invest, however, none of them will invest until the financial industry is reregulated. We will not see the bottom of this meltdown until $5 of private capital is invested for every $1 of federal stimulus money.
You are so right. This is an equal opportunity to use our government for profit. Not only is Obama's team staffed with insiders who facilitated the financial meltdown, but he rose up through the ranks of the party because he served the same. Real law enforcement has been conspicuous in its absence, and trillions of dollars sit on the sidelines waiting for any sign that organized crime isn't running both our politics and our economy.
Has anyone noticed how Obama's "solutions" to problems always involve a payout to a financial supporter? Climate change? Cap and trade - a huge gift to owners of the electronic trading platforms who will make incredible sums in fees. Healthcare? Again, another electronic bureaucracy to make gaming the system more efficient and profitable. Food supply problems? How about another electronic surveillance program... I think I've spotted a trend in his solutions. He will be the TIA, Total Information Awareness presidency. His only accomplishment will to be to make the current corruption more efficient.
The pain will continue until Wall Street is carted off in trucks to wherever the twin towers went. Wall Street purchased exactly what it wanted from Congress and are completely baffled that when they got it it turned out to be a lead anchor. They are acting like five year olds who were allowed to eat nothing but candy and pizza. They want the pain to stop without taking the purge.
Climate Change and Peak Oil will ensure that any return to debt-financed economic systems will be brutally short lived. The resource growth that fueled the Wall Street boom is gone and never, ever, coming back. Debt refinancing schemes will continue to look ludicrous as economies are hammered by resource destruction. People are going to walk away from their loans and Wall Street will be forced to give them more loans in order to get them to do anything.
Until the focus of investment is on energy conservation and renewable energy supplies failure will be the norm.
True but I understand that they now are opposed to ear marks.lol
Face it - you're a Senator or Congressperson earning $180K/year, and then suddenly you're being offered millions, literally, to shave a few points, look the other way, whatever...
How many of us can truly, honestly say we'd turn down the opportunity to be financially sound for the rest of our lives?
Clearly, not enough of us to even fill 50 Senate seats...
i thought everyone in the united states knew that there is nothing cherished about anything in the united states
except for the first nations - who have a soul
and we have been killing them for a couple of hundred years
everything else is for sale
to the highest briber
cheers, b
With all due respect to Mr. Weissman, this has been going on for a lot more than three decades. It's been going on for nearly two hundred years:
“The real truth of the matter is, as you and I know, that a financial element in the larger centers has owned the government of the U.S. ever since the days of Andrew Jackson.”
Franklin D. Roosevelt, letter to Edward House (1933)
"I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country. . . . corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed."
- Abraham Lincoln
"... the powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent private meetings and conferences. The apex of the system was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basle, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world’s central banks which were themselves private corporations.”
Carroll Quigley, “Tragedy and Hope: A History of the World in Our Time” (1966)
The last fifty years of middle-class prosperity (in the US and Europe, at least) has been an aberration of history, because all other human history has been characterized by a relatively small, wealthy ruling class dominating the rest of the population, virtually powerless and mostly poor.
Having lost much of its domination in the 1930's and 1940's, the wealthy and powerful have since then militated to reclaim its domination and is well on-course to succeed. The Logic of Empire clearly prescribes crushing debt as the usual tool to impoverish and control subject peoples, so this aberration has now been corrected by inducing the middle class to trade its prosperity for debts it can never repay.
Kings and queens will retake their place, under other names, and the world will revert to the historical model, according to the nature of civilization. The ugly will come, and then weird ugly, and that will become normal again, as want and need always have been in the past.
The most likely scenario is that, in the future, all countries will be "third-world" countries and the term will lose its meaning. A few states in the present US will be little better off than the most destitute countries in the world.