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Democracy or “Lobbyocracy”?
In July, the SEC fined Goldman-Sachs $550 million for failing to disclose vital information in selling an investment. But if there were fraud, as alleged, then why not a criminal case? John Paulson at Goldman-Sachs selected packages of mortgage loans that were most likely to fail and bet against them. At the same time, Goldman sold these to clients deceptively as ‘least likely to fail', and, as endorsed independently by ACA Capital Management. Goldman is not alone. In all six major lending institutions investigated, there has been evidence of fraud as well as efforts to conceal it, and, so far, not a single criminal case.
Contrast this with the S&L scandal of the eighties when criminal prosecutions were prompt. That debacle was the natural result of deregulating the Savings and Loans. This time it was the banks that were deregulated and Glass-Steagall repealed. Like clockwork these followed the same cycle of greed, fraud, bust, but with a major difference as noted earlier: no criminal prosecutions. So what has changed?
Here is one answer. There are now over 11,000 lobbyists. Hundreds of ex-legislators and their staffers have joined their ranks. Billions are being spent - more than a half-billion already for the impending November election. The University of Kansas recently conducted research on the benefits of lobbying. Here is just one example they unearthed: A group of major corporations spent less than $300 million in lobbying for a particular tax break. They were successful, saving over $60 billion in taxes. That is twenty times their investment, and a rate of return almost impossible to achieve in a legitimate business venture by established corporations.
Among the largest contributors, the finance industry stands out, and with it Goldman-Sachs in particular as an active source of cash and personnel. It alone has around fifty lobbyists, both employed directly and also hired through lobbying firms. This forceful and highly effective team includes many prominent former elected US Representatives. It supports Congressmen, Senators, and, especially, members of key committees overseeing the industry. It is also Obama's second highest contributor, $994,795 according to OpenSecrets.org. Here is a list of personnel it has serving in the higher echelons of the Obama administration.
- Gary Gensler, Commissioner of Commodity Futures Trading Commission (former GS Partner);
- Larry Summers is a protege of Bob Rubin a former Chairman of GS and Clinton's Treasury Secretary;
- Mark Patterson, Geithner's Chief of Staff and the TARP overseer (former GS lobbyist and Vice President forGovernmental Relations);
- Dianna Farrell, Deputy Director, National Economic Council (former GS Financial Analyst);
- Stephen Friedman, Chairman, President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board - Board Member (former GS Chairman 1990-94; Director, 2005);
- Robert Hormats, Undersecretary for Economic, Energy and Agricultural Affairs, State Department (formerVice-Chairman, GS Group);
- Philip Murphy, Ambassador to Germany (former Head of GS, Frankfurt); and,
- John Thain, Advisor to Geithner (former GS President and Chief Operating Officer).
If all of this signifies an exclusive affinity with Democrats, nothing could be further from the truth. Their support and influence is quite secular. Thus Henry Paulson, the Treasury Secretary under George W. Bush, was a former Chairman of - you guessed it - Goldman Sachs. The revolving door syndrome and the spectacular amounts of money involved become evident if we trace the career of just one staffer: Rahm Emanuel, the current White House Chief of Staff left Clinton's White House near the end of their term to work for Wasserstein Parella. He has a B.A. in Liberal Arts and a M.A. in Speech and Communication - no law or business education or experience to contribute. Yet in two and a half years, he was included in eight deals that ‘earned' him $16.2 million. No surprise then that while the President talks about strict controls on the financial giants, behind the scenes lobbying takes on a different tack.
And any wonder that the toothless nematode of a Financial Reform Bill has been the result. Limits on proprietary trading by the big banks recommended even by that old friend of banks, Paul Volcker, have been excluded. Such trading by commercial banks on their own account has been permitted ever since Glass-Steagall was repealed through the energetic exertions of Bob Rubin and Larry Summers. It was without doubt a major cause of our financial disaster and should have been a central feature of the bill. It is not. Even if all of Glass-Steagall is re-introduced, it would affect and proscribe the activities of only about ten major banks. Yet, despite the havoc they, and other involved companies like AIG, have caused no real restraints are proposed. A cursory look at the daisy chain of personalities lifts the veil high enough to note that nothing can change because the incestuous relationships do not permit different ideas. Stellar economists and Nobel Laureates like Stiglitz and Krugman, can shout their heads off - nobody is listening because profits bolstered by the ‘free market' (read unregulated) win hands down.
To return to the daisy chain, here is an example. Jamie Dimon, often rumored to be the next Treasury Secretary, is a close friend of Secretary Geithner who is then expected to rotate to a bank. Mr. Dimon is the current head of J.P. Morgan-Chase. Prior to that he was at Citigroup as the favored protege of Sanford Weill and rumored to be the next CEO until trouble brewed. Mr. Rubin, a former chairman of Goldman-Sachs and a mentor to Tim Geithner, found a home at Citi after finishing his tenure at Treasury. And so it goes on.
The sad fact remains. We were presented the best opportunity for change (in a couple of decades) by the financial collapse but failed to seize it. Nothing can change, it seems, because a dependent President with no base, and no existing structure as, for example, a powerful former governor might have, is forced to use the scaffolding, already in place, constructed by the power bases in the Democratic Party.
Much worse have been the accusations against the Clintons. The Keiser Report accuses Hillary of "look-back" trading. It can be used as a scheme to transfer money secretly from one person to another and works like this: Two commodity trading accounts are opened. Each day simultaneous buy and sell orders are executed. When the trades are closed, the winning trade is assigned to the account to which money is being transferred. Hillary Clinton made $100,000, starting with $1000, in a commodity trading account over a 10-month period, at a time when her husband's salary was in the low thirties and they were desperate for money. There has never been an adequate explanation why with such extraordinary commodity trading skills, she stopped trading shortly thereafter. Most amateur commodity traders - almost 80% by some estimates - lose their stake within a few months.
Bill Clinton signed in the Commodity Futures Modernization Act in December 2000 just before leaving office. Steered through by Rubin, Summers, Geithner et al, it, among other relaxations, excluded Credit Default Swaps from regulation. The secret unregulated (a far cry from a regulated open market) trading in these yielded enormous profits until greed overtook common sense. Then the government bailout. Since Bill Clinton left office, he has accumulated over a $100 million, half in speaking fees - paid to a man noted for disputing the meaning of 'is' in a deposition. Perhaps it is appropriate to quote the well-known journalist, Christopher Hitchens (no darling of the left himself, yet not a conservative, and one who, like the Clintons, supported the Iraq war) who states in a recent interview in the New Statesman, "Clinton could change his mind on any issue, but couldn't change the fact that he was a scumbag."
Then there is the special relationship Hillary and Bill maintain with Haim Saban, the billionaire entertainment mogul who is obsessed with a biblical prospect for Israel. If you have been wondering whatever happened to the relatively neutral Middle East analysis from Brookings. Well, in 2002, the $13 million dollar - largest gift in Brookings history - Saban Center for Middle East Policy happened; in addition, Saban has doled out $5 million to Bill Clinton's library, untold millions through his group of deep pockets for Hillary's presidential campaign, $7 million for the Democrats' National Committee, etc. Like the bankers, his is the voice that does not cry in the wilderness.
So, who cares if a family's home is foreclosed, or one in five are unemployed, or one in four children live in poverty, or the Gulf has vast dead zones, or that now, after the Israeli blockade, the World Health Organization reports almost half of the children in Gaza are anemic and stunted. Sadly, not our government. We have entered a new phase in our democracy, an era where elected officials no longer need to respond to the needs of the general public ... just the minority who pay to play.
Arshad M. Khan is a retired professor. He can be reached at: backfire@ofthisandthat.org


26 Comments so far
Show AllI've heard that Mexico, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq (just to mention a few countries) are beset by corruption. THE HORROR, THE HORROR. We must clean up those countries immediately.
I'm sorry, professor, but you are so far behind the curve on this it's kind of sad. Still and all, you've constructed another fine, substantial argument about the state of our union. Repetition may have some value, since so many people have still not awakened to the fact that U.S. "democracy" is a complete sham, a sop to make us think we still have at least influence, if not actual power.
Progressives have to organize locally, and start taking local political power away from the fanatics we've allowed to take charge. After all, that's partly how "they" (the oligarchs) got where "they" are.
Lobbyocracy, oligarchy, plutocracy, kleptocracy . . . and several other terms that describe this wretchedly corrupt excuse for a country, a system in which we're expected to strive for success, find our place as productive members, raise thriving families, worship some ancient desert God or be branded heretic at best and atheistic communist at worst--what a load of unmitigated horseshit it all is. And unlike the slithering Clintons, I'm pretty sure of the meaning of "is". And in this cauldron of seething corruption we nobodies who have no stake in it are equally expected to VOTE these criminals into office every two and four years. The propaganda is so thick enjoining us to do our civic duty in this capacity you can't cut it with a buzz saw, and so at least half of us fall for the charade every election year, quarrel amongst ourselves over whether Democrats are at least marginally better than Republicans, so we'd better get to the polls and make sure the Palinoids and the Gingrich that stole Christmas don't take power, when they have it all along regardless, and then we act all Disappointed when an obvious corporate lackey like Obama fails to live up to vague and easily broken campaign "promises", for which he remains as unaccountable as Bush and Cheney for their lies and crimes.
This is the result of liberalism silencing the left, via corporate media where no authentic left voices are EVER permitted to be heard. (See Chomsky for details.) The liberal/conservative (Dem/Repug) coalition works to drown out the left, by lobbying it out of the picture frame, so the most progressive president possible turns out to be, voila!, also the most corporate-friendly and ultimately reactionary, and never listens to a word from so-called progressives. Who knew?
"Nothing can change, it seems, because a dependent President with no base, and no existing structure as, for example, a powerful former governor might have, is forced to use the scaffolding, already in place, constructed by the power bases in the Democratic Party," writes Arshad Khan. The only problem with that assertion is that this president never had the slightest inclination or intention to "change" anything except the name and party of the president. What he and his duplicitous party intended to DO was and is exactly the same as what the former occupant and his despicable party did. Obama isn't being "forced" to abide by existing power structures, he's very willingly doing it. There was never the vaguest intention to do otherwise.
Maybe we should combine terms and call it an Allfuckedupocracy, or FUBARocracy! Which is to say, I completely agree with your post.
Good post today! And especially I like the way you nailed the author for claiming that Obama is "forced" to use existing scaffolding. When a candidate campaigns on "change," voters - naively - expect him to use his bully pulpit to build up a new scaffolding. Obama didn't take that direction and he could have. The reasons for that are clear. For anyone who wants answers, go to the opensecrets website, discover who hired Obama. Why did anyone think that he would pull the rug out from underneath all those who brought him to fame and fortune? duh.
Corporatism ( AKA Fascism) writ large is what it is. Complete I might add a HUGE aggressive MIC. Every President now acts like Napoleon.
"In July, the SEC fined Goldman-Sachs $550 million for failing to disclose vital information in selling an investment."
My first reaction is "pocket change". Why is the fine not more than their profit on the transaction. Why is it not $550 MORE than their profit.
My second was absolutely "why no criminal case"? Why indeed?
"The sad fact remains. We were presented the best opportunity for change (in a couple of decades) by the financial collapse but failed to seize it. Nothing can change, it seems, because a dependent President with no base, and no existing structure as, for example, a powerful former governor might have, is forced to use the scaffolding, already in place, constructed by the power bases in the Democratic Party."
This is absurd on many levels, the least of which that this President needs any help other that to instruct his administration to do the right thing. If you do that, even the other side will get aboard. Obama and his democrats need not study corruption under Goldman Sachs as they daily demonstrate.
Fortunately neither Goldman Sachs nor Obama and Pelosi represent America. Those that think our country and its people are corrupt simply because our government is, because our current business structure is are simply young or misinformed as they have no real experience to rely on.
While our system may be glascial at times it has worked every single time before when we reached this ppoint and there is no reason to doubt it won't again.
Principally, you're correct that Goldman Sachs, Obama, Pelosi, GOP, etc... don't represent what Americans really want. The system is where you get it wrong. The system has worked for people at the top such GS and politicians but for everyone else, the system has worked against us than for us. The American system of allowing excessive lobbying to control how politicians decide a nation's fate is failing other nations. Lobbying and bribery are bound to exist but taking an excessive approach such as the American approach and soon the picture isn't pretty. Sorry but this system must go.
This is a heart-wrenching essay. The rich and powerful capitalists rule the U.S.A. The corporate capitlaists re destroying the world. Democracy has always been a sham in the U.S. And we American citizens sit by seemingly helpless.
Democracy is the only answer. Democracy is the only answer for the future of a just, sustainable and compassionate world. But how do we establish for the very first time a true democracy in the U.S.? Is this even possible? Or is the situation so bad that it will be left up to other nations and other peoples after the U.S. Empire becomes the waste bin of history?
Humankind is at a tipping point in history. Some call it a paradigm shift or "the Great turning". Whatever, do we sit by in the U.S. or get off our asses? Is the U.S. still too comfortable to act? Have we not felt pain enough to understand our own broken humanness as Europe and Japan did after WWII?
We need some kind of revolution and I think the world is looking for it to start in the U.S.A. We need a summit of great minds who understand the problem and fear not the National Security State. But, how do we get it started? Who must we turn to? Who will rise to the occasion? This is the biggest question for the 21st Century.
Let's start naming some names on CommonDreams. Let's put the pressure on greater minds to come together in some kind of national summit. They may not consider it fair, but I will begin with my favorite radical writers: Norm Chomsky, Chalmers Johnson, Chris Hedges, Robert Jensen, and David Korten.
The trouble is "revolution" in this country will start or end with civil war. The most radical active political faction in this country working for change, is the Tea Party. In most ways, they want to precipitate the sort of change that would move the country in a direction opposite of that consistent both with progressive values, and optimal chances of species survival. So long as the populace remains polarized, the oligarchy can sit back secure in the knowledge that the people themselves will prevent any serious challenge to the status quo.
dionski: The tea party is helping the liberal cause, they are making the Republicans look stupid!
Nothing new here, but I think there is one minor mistake. In the list of Goldman Sachs people in the current administration, the last entry is John Thain, listed as former CEO of GS. I think he actually was the CEO of Merrill Lynch when it was acquired by Bank of America (and then quickly fired). He was the guy who had to have a $10,000 waste basket in his office, if I remember correctly.
Since change starts from the bottom, we at the bottom need to send clear and simple messages. They need to resonate with the public and with the least corporatist Dems, and send a signal to the rest.
“Corporations are NOT persons.”
“Money is NOT free speech.”
"Too big to fail is too big"
“Tax the rich. Rebuild America.”
"War makes us LESS safe."
"War destroys our economy"
"War destroys our freedom."
"Creeping Fascism is the enemy."
Corporate media will not convey this for us. Maybe all we need for a decent start are a few million bumper stickers and a few thousand billboards....
"Maybe all we need for a decent start are a few million bumper stickers and a few thousand billboards...." And a few reminders on otherwise non-political blogs read by those not normally in "the leftist choir"? Thank you for the nice clear and simple list which I shall copy and place in the sidebar of my blog.
Khan said: "We were presented the best opportunity for change (in a couple of decades) by the financial collapse but failed to seize it." And, as Khan proves, this is because our government has been prostituted out. But, why focus exclusively on the finance industry? This is a problem everywhere we turn today: healthcare, war, manufacturing, crumbling infrastructure, education. The guys being regulated are the ones writing the 'regulations', in every sector in our economy.
The answer has got to be some form of campaign finance reform. I promote Dylan Ratigan's four steps:
1. a 100% tax on all private campaign contributions. So, if Mike Bloomberg puts in $50 million of his money to run for governor, half of that gets put into a public pile and parsed out to ALL legitimate candidates. Lets diversify the voices in our democracy to include those the 'money powers' would rather shut out of the discussion altogether.
2. full disclosure required of all candidates: who is paying what to whom, including all perks and favors. Jail time for obfuscation.
3. a SEVEN year waiting period before 'public servants' can go to work for firms affected by their service. Lock the revolving door.
4. no closed primaries. In primary elections, vote for whomever you want. Vote for the best candidate, unrestrained by the false restrictions emplaced by our political parties. The most popular two candidates then go on to run in the final election. The current system rewards pols for playing to the most extreme left/right positions. More reasonable independents and moderates get left out in the cold. Some democracy.
Since none of these 4 steps will ever be implemented--no sooner than Bush, Cheney and Obama will be brought before an international criminal court for war crimes--we have no real option besides refusing to vote AT ALL, or voting third party, even if it means we're "throwing away" our vote. If we're powerless to change this rigged and completely corrupt shell game (and all evidence suggests we are), we certainly have no obligation to keep participating in it. I've opted out.
I like your ideas, but it would take much more than that, because there are so many legal ways of transferring money. There are probably 1001 ways, but here is an example:-
The politician has only modest financial reserves. The rich offer a deal. The politician purchases or starts a small cleaning company. That company magically gets all of the cleaning contracts for a major corporation. The politician gets rich.
Further, money transfer is not even needed. Our media is owned by the super rich, and they therefore control all of the talking points, what is worthy of being reported or worthy of continuous attention or who gets to be labeled as a terrorist, etc. People whose thought is guided by our media are no freer from the taint of money than our politicians are.
There is also a third factor here not mentioned. Decent people are not the people that scheme for power or wealth. Decent people find it difficult to lie, and if without that, you cannot succeed. A politician must pretend to be for the people, and at the same time perform deeds for the power brokers who will determine success or otherwise for their career. The system acts as a filter, and since only the corrupt can hope to get to the top, we always have corrupt and corruptible politicians.
This became apparent to me in England when Tony Blair succeeded in replacing half the House of Lords with people who were elected at the same time as the rest of the parliament. The problem was, that the the House of Lords was obstructing some quite nasty bills. By tradition, members of the House of Lords were not elected, but they inherited their seats. By the laws of chance in the lottery of birth, half of the members of the House of Lords were decent people, and nastier laws, such as the nastier bits of the English version of the Patriot Act were not being passed. Tony had them replaced with politicians.
The system is both deeply flawed, and at the same time, perhaps the best we ever had. The following alternative seem as if it from another planet, at first, because it is different, but ultimately seems to work if your think it through:
(1) When we talk about democracy, what we mean is that the parliment represents the people. I would like to propose a system where eligable people (all adults) have a social security number, and the representatives are chosen by means of a televised lotto on a weekly basis. The digits of the lotto will form a social security number, and hence choose a person. That person will be asked to become a politician for 3 years. The position must be paid well enough to make it attractive.
Hence, our politicians will be chosen from our population at random, with no chance for indoctrination or arm twisting by the big money or by AIPAC, and with no need for popularism or raising of funds. By the laws of mathematics and random numbers, a randomly chosen selection of people WILL be completely representative of the people. The peoples representatives will of course need access to experts.
(2) Having the private sector running the media eventually means media monopoly by the elite. It means having a brainwashed population, that will then permit the bending or breaking of the laws to benefit the rich. But having a government owned and controlled media is quite possibly even worse.
I would like to propose limited private media ownership. Each media outlet (TV station, newspaper, etc) needs to have a given number of shares, according to the count of its readership, or audience size. The proposed limitation is simply this:- No one person may own more than a single media share. This way there will be no media power brokers, and Monsanto or rich bankers will not tell the media what it has to say.
Rainbows For The Commons empirePIe August 22cnd, 2010
They copyrighted war and called it ‘peace making’
like a “fair and balanced” monopoly on truth making
a word enclosure for those that ‘do the Dew’
Next ....
We’ll market mountain air ... Nestlybreath
for the Pelopsie generation
the branded O for ‘new think’
awaiting the double dip of W
‘mission accomplished’
like missions at ground zero
Soon ....
the next DOW slide
will surge a sray of bubbles so immense
that celebrities will make trips to the Hubble
While ...
the trickle down mist of piss will refract rainbows
colors from the dew
for the commoners to enjoy
Welcome to the Empire, please check your humanity at the door.
All this bad stuff will continue until we stop requiring the citizen to delegate his political authority to someone else.
We need a third party devoted to methodological reform, whose platform talks only about that, not about taxation, foreign policy, etc. That would make it a big enough tent for everybody. We could say we don't care what you want to do, politically, we just want to change the way we do it.
Seen in the proper light, the current malaise could be a real opportunity to make sorely needed reforms leading to a genuine democracy.
And each day a new asshole announces support for throwing Elizabeth Warren up to her lower lip in this District of Columbia cesspool because said asshole thinks "she is the best person".
RUN, ELIZABETH. RUN FOR YOUR LIFE!!!
Trylon
Lobbying = bribes. It's that simple. That lobbying is somehow accepted as de rigour is a brutal testament to the corruption of the American electoral system. The corruption is built into the system - since Reagan is has merely become more obvious.
This is why I find the argument that America needs to revert to the 'ideals' of its constitution/finding fathers absurd. The original constitution, which reflected the ideas of the founding fathers, held the following 'truths' to be 'self-evident': slavery for non-whites and for women is acceptable, money and the landed class should rule, and militarsim&imperialism are great. America doesn't need to go back to its old constitution. It needs a brand new one.
The Free Market will save us. We just need fewer restrictions on business, and the Magic of the Market Place will make everything all right. After all, we don't need government - The Market is Self Regulating.
"So what has changed? Here is one answer. There are now over 11,000 lobbyists."
That's not a good answer. 11,000 lobbyists are 11,000 cancers on the society but that is an effect, not a cause. The cause is propaganda and opiates that destroyed the people's sense of civic duty. It's true that the production of those were caused by elite greed. But elite greed is not going to change. What has to change is the people regaining their sense of civic duty and taking back their government. Notice that the author doesn't mention it. Most of them don't.
Who really thinks we have a Democracy left in this country. I'd like to see the answer to a Gallup poll, "Do you think that we have in any meaningful sense a Democracy in this Country? "(text your answer here.) When does a popular sentiment which lacks financial backing ever win over one that stuffs money in a politician's shirt? As far as the formal functions of a Democracy, the way to win elections is to get a bigger pile of money and run more 30 second attack ads on TV than your opponent. It only seems to bother a few of us that our elections run on this premise. When Joe Sestak runs against Pat Toomey by calling him a Wall Street candidate, I acknowledge but immediately ask myself, "What about you Joe? Where did your money come from? Who are you protecting?" Oh, by the way calling yourself a "Man of the People, for the working man, working for you, etc." has worn pretty thin. Whether Toomey or Sestak wins in November, the war will go on and any real solutions to the problems this country faces are off the table.
Where is OUR LOBBY?
Who works for us?
(Don't say Congrgess I just ate)
What if the millions average Americans gave (in 5,10 and 50 US increments) to the Obama campaign were instead donated to a Progressive Citizens' Lobby?
We would have gotten representation for their donations instead of a flippant request we take drug tests.
We really reprensent a lot of financial power.
Why don't we use it the way Corporations do?
Is there a law against it?