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Is Obama's 'Economic Populism' for Real?
There is a lot to digest in a recent series of events on the Prosecuting Wall Street front – the two biggest being Barack Obama’s decision to make New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman the co-chair of a committee to investigate mortgage and securitization fraud, and the numerous rumors and leaks about an impending close to the foreclosure settlement saga.
President Barack Obama delivers his State of the Union speech. (Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
There is already a great debate afoot about the meaning of these two news stories, which surely are related in some form or another. Some observers worry that Schneiderman, who over the summer was building a rep as the Eliot Ness of the Wall Street fraud era, has sold out and is abandoning his hard-line stance on foreclosure in return for a splashy federal posting.
Others looked at his appointment in conjunction with other recent developments – like the news that Tim Geithner won’t be kept on and Obama’s comments about a millionaire’s tax – and concluded that Barack Obama had finally gotten religion and decided to go after our corruption problem in earnest.
At the very least, Obama’s recent acts were interpreted as a public move toward economic populism: if the president was looking to associate himself with that word, he did a good job, since there were literally hundreds of headlines about Obama’s "populism" the day after his State of the Union speech.
I think it’s impossible to know what any of this means yet. There is a lot to sort out and a lot that will bear watching in the near future. Just to recap, here’s what’s at stake right now:
The impending, much-discussed foreclosure settlement is the Obama administration’s great bailout initiative. If it goes through with the kind of tiny numbers being discussed ($25 billion from the banks if California is in the deal, $19 billion if California AG Kamala Harris stays out), then what we’re talking about is a bailout on par with TARP.
The potential liability each of the banks faces from foreclosure litigation is vastly greater than $25 billion, and uncertainty surrounding that litigation is holding the stock prices of all of the major companies (in particular struggling ones like Bank of America) down.
A settlement would release those firms from that potential liability and likely bring massive surges in stock-market investment. It would therefore have a profound strengthening effect on the Too-Big-To-Fail banks. If the Obama administration wanted to be 100% real on the Wall Street crime front, it would suspend this deal pending the investigation by the new mortgage committee. But if the deal does indeed go through, we’ll know that the banks still have major influence with our populist president.
Some people have been confused about Schneiderman’s new role. The new Unit on Mortgage Origination and Securitization Abuses will not be investigating the same abuses covered in the foreclosure settlement. When the public thinks about corruption in the housing markets on the part of the big banks, what it mostly thinks of is robosigning and the other mass-perjury issues, which is the stuff targeted in the foreclosure settlement.
But in fact those problems were a tawdry little sideshow to the more serious crimes of the housing crisis. Schneiderman himself outlined the difference after the announcement of the new unit’s creation:
Schneiderman said Wednesday his dual roles — raising concerns about a multi-state settlement with the major banks and investigating the mortgage problem — wouldn’t be at odds.
“These are abuses in the foreclosure process. Our working group is focusing on the conduct related to the pooling and the creation of mortgage-backed securities and issues relating to the conduct that created the crash, not the abuses that happened after the crash.”
My first thought, when I heard about this deal, was that Schneiderman was deciding to compromise on robosigning and other post-securitization abuses, in exchange for a mandate to go after the much bigger crimes, which took place in the origination/securitization stages.
The securitization offenses were massive criminal conspiracies, identically undertaken by all of the big banks, to defraud investors in mortgage-backed securities. If you’re looking for an appropriate target for a massive federal investigation, one that would get right to the heart of the corruption of the crisis era... well, they picked the right target here.
If they were to do a real clean sweep on securitization, the federal prisons would end up literally teeming with senior executives from the biggest banks. A lot of very big names would end up playing ping-pong and cards in Otisville and Englewood.
The question is, how real of an investigation will we get? The fact that Schneiderman’s co-chairs are Lanny Breuer and Robert Khuzami make me extremely skeptical. I’m actually not sure that both men, in an ideal world, wouldn’t be targets of their own committee’s investigation.
Before joining the SEC, Khuzami was senior counsel of the fixed-income desk at Deutsche Bank, which was creating exactly the sort of dicey CDOs that this investigation ought to be targeting.
Breuer, meanwhile, worked for the hotshot defense firm Covington and Burling, which among other things provided legal help that led to the creation of the electronic mortgage registry system MERS.
The MERS issues are probably more the province of the foreclosure settlement, but the banks’ joint efforts to evade the paper registry system are certainly an element of the larger effort to defraud MBS investors that will be covered by this committee. In fact, I’m not sure that mortgage securitization and the proliferation of CDOs and CDS could have taken place on anywhere near the scale that it did without MERS.
So having those two guys attached to Schneiderman’s hip makes me wonder what is going on here. Khuzami’s presence is especially odd. The theoretical reason we need a committee like this in the first place is because the federal agency that is supposed to be doing this work – the SEC – has stubbornly refused to do so.
If as SEC enforcement chief Bob Khuzami has not investigated the vast corruption involved with the creation of mortgage backed securities (it’s called “securitization” – it should be policed by the SECURITIES and exchange commission), then why would he start now? Even leaving out his potential culpability from his Deutsche days, Khuzami has been part of the problem, if anything.
I would feel better about a committee that not only didn’t have a White House flack and a failed/compromised SEC enforcement chief sitting on it, but had nobody with any ties to Wall Street at all. The argument for them would be that we need someone with expertise on the committee, but I’m not buying it. I’d rather see Schneiderman hole up in an abandoned warehouse with ten vice detectives from someplace like Detroit or Miami. And Charles Martin Smith, if they can get him.
Charles Martin Smith in 'The Untouchables.' (Paramount Pictures/courtesy Everett Collection)
Seriously: despite what people think, the crimes we’re dealing with are not terribly complicated, and any veteran investigator would grasp the basic concept – taking worthless crap and selling it as high-end merchandise – within ten minutes. The most important element contributing to the success of a committee like this is a locked room full of clean hands. And Breuer and Khuzami are not a good start.
But it’s too early to say what is going on. Everything that I’ve heard about Schneiderman in the last year leads me to believe that he’s the genuine article. I haven’t heard a single thing suggesting otherwise. But there are certainly a lot of curious elements here. For one thing, as Yves Smith points out, Schneiderman really isn’t getting much extra authority by taking this post. As New York AG he could already have taken this investigation anywhere he wanted:
It’s clear what the Administration is getting from getting Schneiderman aligned with them. It is much less clear why Schneiderman is signing up. He can investigate and prosecute NOW. He has subpoena powers, staff, and the Martin Act. He doesn’t need to join a Federal committee to get permission to do his job. And this is true for ALL the others agencies represented on this committee. They have investigative and enforcement powers they have chosen not to use. So we are supposed to believe that a group, ex Schneiderman, that has been remarkably complacent, will suddenly get religion on the mortgage front because they are all in a room and Schneiderman is a co-chair?
One thing we do know: Obama’s decision to tap Schneiderman publicly, and dump Geithner, and whisper about a millionaire’s tax, signals a shift in its public attitude toward the Wall Street corruption issue. The administration is clearly listening to the Occupy movement. Whether it’s now acting on their complaints, or just trying to look like it’s doing something, is another question. It’s way too early to tell. But it’s certainly very interesting.




148 Comments so far
Show AllOh boy oh boy. Another Taibbi piece. It's like addictive candy. Like "turkish delight".
So true. All that substance, and the style of this line ". I’d rather see Schneiderman hole up in an abandoned warehouse with ten vice detectives from someplace like Detroit or Miami. And Charles Martin Smith, if they can get him" and picture, to boot. So many reasons to smile.
Exactly. The fraud isn't complicated. But the smoke screen is thick.
don't forget the mirrors and shell game - weapons of mass distraction.
I seem to recall Charles Martin Smith wound up getting shot dead by a Capone hitman in an elevator towards the end of the Untouchables.....
Bill from Saginaw
Obama's people no doubt let Schneiderman know that if he didn't play nice, blackmail (or worse) awaited him.
Always look forward to Matt's articles! They're always well thought out and...well... amazing!
Yeah, exactly, And his approach rings true......
I always appreciate Matt Taibbi's knowledgeable and sane take on the Wall Street mob.
It looks like a matter of timing to me. Obama first had to make sure the economy couldn't be pushed over the cliff by Wall Street to install Romney as President. Then he had to wait two years so Holder would not have to recuse himself from any investigations. Third, he wanted public outrage to build. Fourth, he wanted to tee this up as the next election approached.
"The administration is clearly listening to the Occupy movement. Whether it’s now acting on their complaints, or just trying to look like it’s doing something, is another question. It’s way too early to tell. "
Based on the last 3 years, I think it's possible to make an educated guess.
at least prior to the election.
2orangey4crows, you are right with what I quess is your "educated guess" --- particularly based on the last 3 years from ol' Mr. OKie Doke.
When Taibbi says, "Obama’s recent 'acts' were interpreted as a public move toward economic populism", the emphasis (as I have added) should be on the word 'acts'.
Obama is far from listening to the Occupy Empire movement.
Obama is the Predator drone that this damn global corporate/financial/militarist (and media) Empire is stealthily using to put a HellFire missile up the Occupy movement's arse --- in another of his infamous 'targeted assassination' orgasms of his 'Executive Power' .
As I recently commented on the following You Tube video, "When it comes to disguising, camouflaging, and anesthetizing "all the people, all the time" to the fact that our country has been 'captured' and fully "Occupied" by a global corporate/financial/militarist (and media) EMPIRE that hides behind the facade of its modernized Two-Party 'Vichy' sham of faux-democratic and totally illegitimate government --- just as surely as the Nazi Empire tried to hide behind its single-party 'Vichy" facade in France c. 1940 --- "Nobody Does It Better" than Obama."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMOd1JJvwlM
Bust luck and love to the Occupy Empire educational and revolutionary movement.
Liberty, democracy, justice, & equality
Over
Violent/Vichy
Empire,
Alan
I'll make an uneducated guess. It's on their radar. The more people come out to protest, the more they listen.
A foreclosure settlement would take the teeth out of any findings of wrong doing from an investigation. Obama is putting the cart before the horse and playing dumb. What is the point of an investigation when immunity from harm has effectively been granted to all involved? Like Obama letting the statute of limitations run out on Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld.
Obama is all talk. He is talking populist lingo now before the election. An arrow shot has a trajectory and does not make a u-turn. Obama is not likely to make a u-turn either. We know Obama's trajectory. Obama is just jiving US again for votes. Obama's new found populism will be lost again January 1, 2013. We are being fooled again.
Obama's new populism will disappear at dawn on November 7, 2012 when he commits to being even more "bipartisan" than he has been.
"Bipartisan" in Obamaspeak means doing whatever it takes to get more corporate contributions than the GOP gets.
Obama is all talk when it comes to the interests of the struggling and suffering working class people.
He is all action when it comes to the desires of wealthy and powerful people.
Methinks Obama is playing us again. Maybe he's desperate but I just don't take anything he sez seriously. I'm tired of playing the chump.
---SWL
Chin up! How about this for a take on it....
Skip over to the YES! conversation with Chris Hedges and Lawrence Lessig.
You are no chump, but rather somebody in for the long haul and sifting wheat from chaff. Each of us is experiencing this shedding of the media veil. Take your time, celebrate when you find a point of resolve, and keep on building community.
TaxiManSteve you are so right. What's to investigate? The entire mortgage fraud has been under investigation since 2004. You would think that enough investigation has been done on just about ever aspect of the mufti-fraud that these big shot bankers have done. I say 'investigation' is just a put off till I'm (Obama) re-elected making it appear Obama is on the side of the 99% and yet showing the criminal bankers they have nothing to fear so give my campaign money. Time to hold Obama's feet to the fire...90 days and indictments issued or face the voters wrath. Get all those MoveOn, Obama apologist to push for this instead of thank you letters for doing the job that should have been done in 2008.
The fix is in.
The FBI probably rummaged through Schneiderman's personal files and found the dirt necessary to "flip" him.
If Obama wanted to see Jamie Dimon and Brian Moynihan in pinstripe pajamas instead of pinstripe suits he would've given the nod to Eric Holder long ago.
The Wall Street crime wave is so extensive that everyone from the girl at your bank's drive thru window to the president himself could be swept away thus ensuring that nothing will ever be investigated.
Schneiderman is now being given the "opportunity" to join the "family" and become a "made man".
....unless of course they decide to dump his body on the side of the road after they've used his golden image to remove the tarnish from theirs.
Cygnus notes that "the fix is in". This would also seem to apply to the Democratic Party as the [alleged] progressives who reside within the Democrats have capitulated by not offering any challenge whatsoever to Obama for the presidency in 2012.
To paraphrase from a Simon and Garfunkel song from long ago:
Where have you gone, Gene McCarthy?
Our nation turns its lonely eyes toward you.
I would flip the "fix" to a drug overdose metaphor - the needle seems to be permanently stuck in the vein of the addicted system.
Taibbi is giving a pass to Obama and Holder for doing nothing against the foreclosure fraudsters. Why no investigations by the White House's FBI? Why no credible hearings from Congress? Schneiderman lends his name as a rubber stamp to the do nothings. Meanwhile the crooked banks that continue the illegal foreclosures are being offered a get-out-of-jail-free card by Obama and Obama has come up with a plan to sell off the foreclosed homes to hedge funds who will rent them out to the foreclosed owners. It pays to be a bankster or a hedge fund, not, according to Obama, a foreclosed home owner.
The Dems, Repubs and Wall street more than likely have their own private investigators to find "dirt" who would be more likely to be loyal to them than to the American public.
Come on, Matt. This is no time to play dumb.
No. It's not for real. Move on to something real.
Let's see, during the 2008 election season, the O supported universal health care. How'd that one play out?
Not true. He said he would support universal health care if he was starting from scratch. Any progressive who doesn't think Obamacare is a step in the left direction isn't paying attention.
First of all it is better called RomneyCare. Second, anyone who doesn't think it is a step in the insurance corporate lobbyist direction did not read the fine print.
You damn the administration with these remarks while thinking you are praising it. So, Obama was slitting hairs and only talking in hypothetical? Do you think people supported him upon that basis? So, Obama is "a step" - a step!!! - to the "left" when compared to Bush? Do you think that is what people voted for? No, you think that your guy is in power, that people have no choice but to accept that, and you are telling all of the people who supported him that it is just too bad if they don't like it and furthermore, insulting their intelligence.
Do you really thing what you are saying here could possibly inspire or persuade anyone? I doubt that you do. No, bashing the Left is your goal.
Do you really think you can still fool people about this? Do you think you can gloss over the fact that what was said before the election - by the candidate and his zealous followers - is diametrically opposed to what was actually done once the election was over?
Do you really think that if you had been saying before the election what you are saying now about the administration that anyone would have voted for Obama?
its refreshing to see at least some of the comments deriding yet another obummer fake out
and i am surprised to see taibbi suggesting there is a chance that some justice will come to the banking sector
the general rule of justice for rich people is you give back 5% of what you stole and you keep the rest
if obummer were serious - and he is not serious about anything except the destruction of the country, which is a project that has a full head of steam, he would have asked william black to head this investigation
william black put 1500 bankers in jail during the savings and loan scam that took place under the senile reagan, and that scandal was literally peanuts compared to the bank scam
any nation of people who would put up with an obvious manchurian candidate like obummer deserves whatever it gets
and believe me, we are gonna get
i am disappointed in this piece, from one of the best journalists on the banking scam
matt says: "The administration is clearly listening to the Occupy movement."
is that right matt - where is the proof of that i wonder
dumping geitner - oh really. i guess the fact that he looks like he is about to have a massive brain hemorrhage/heart attack has nothing to do with it. clearly the stress of lizardness is getting to him - ergo time to go
there's more where that came from - as david icke calls them - the suits that come and go
they are listening to occupy - is that before or while or after they beat the shit out of them and arrest them and throw them in jail as they have done all over the country
maybe matt is just trying to stay out of the fema camps once the impending bank holiday/martial law edict comes down from the emperor obummer the first - not the emperor with no clothes but the one with no past...
My thoughts exactly....
Hire Bill Black - a guy with a track record of actually jailing Banksters.....
And get a guy who is not a current democrat looking for campaign funds.....
Lets all singalong to the Jim page song - "they say they will incorporate the world.... Over my dead body, over my dead body over my dead body, over mine, they have got the guns but we have got the will, and I'd rather be a match than a paper dollar bill,
http://ia600804.us.archive.org/22/items/gat2011-11-20.TractorTavernWA/s1t07.mp3
People tell me that Matt Taibbi hesitates to draw clear distinctions because of the mental difficulties which afflict the majority of the readers of Rolling Stone.
Here we have Mr. Taibbi encouraging people to get all hot and bothered over an investigation which is Clearly a sham for electioneering manipulation.
We do not need ANOTHER investigation when the cause of all of these corrupting deceits has not been (and will not be) challenged.
Does anyone really believe that this "investigation" will result in the re-application of LAWS against corrupt banking and investment practice by the corporate-owned political parties?
If you do, then you are part of the problem.
Apparently, Mr. Taibbi still believes that there is a possibility that this blatantly corrupt corporate government will bite the hand that owns it.
The most offensive part of this article is that we are told, "the administration is clearly listening to the Occupy Movement."
Disgusting BS.
BbA:"The most offensive part of this article is that we are told, "the administration is clearly listening to the Occupy Movement."
You're right on. A more accurate analysis would read :the administration is clearly exploiting the success of the Occupy Movement."
Or one might say; "the admin is calculating the necessary course corrections for its' up-coming propaganda campaign for 2012".
Politicians often make small concessions to neutralize popular resistance movements. When that happens, you know that they are scared. That is the topic of this article.
Well I think this "holier than thou" thing is not exactly constructive either. Taibbi is no radical leftist (at least not yet) - he clearly believes in the basic structures of liberal democracy, and seems to be pretty honest about it. As long as he has his integrity, even if he is not as radical as we want him to be, he is a positive force. I think opinions like his that are more "conservative" (in the best sense of the word) and the articles he expresses them in are worth a lot.
He only provides a "technical" criticism of the system ("it's not working the way it's supposed to be"), so his opinion seems to me to be a very respectable liberal-centrist opinion - the problem is not with him but that the more leftist radical analyses are completely unacceptable to the mainstream press so basically what he can debate with is a very radical rightist set of ideas and this distorts the entire dialog. If this makes sense. Basically, Taibbi's opinion should be considered a traditional centrist opinion in the mainstream, not a far left one, as it seems to be now :-/ But it doesn't mean what writes is bullshit imo.
Atomsk -
I feel the same way about Matt Taibbi's investigative reporting and political slant - he renders comprehensible some largely incomprehensible stuff involving Wall Street, banking practices and global finance (a very valuable service for those of us who hate the business section of the newspaper and the business cable TV offerings), but then remains quite agnostic about which individuals or institutions remain worthy of trust (if any).
Sort of like former US Army colonel Andrew Bacevich's writing and commentary on the Pentagon and militarism, Taibbi's efforts help fill a void and further public discourse about how to identify and meaningfully deal with the consequences of white collar corruption. Neither claims to know the answers, but they identify a few major malefactors by name, keep working at it, and have been known to come up with some colorful prose passages in the process.
Bill from Saginaw
Atomsk & Bill from Saginaw..... good points. Taibbi does extremely valuable work. Very creative and entertaining prose to boot. He's a true populist.
"Atomsk"
Dream on.
Taibbi's ending of the article makes it sound like Obama Inc. is listening to the Occupy movement AND that the corporate tool might actually act on things differently than he has up to this point. This is BS.
If Taibbi can't see that this is BS, then he is too stupid to take seriously AND I very much doubt that he is that stupid. So I am left with his deliberate promotion of BS.
Maybe read what I wrote. I disagree with the political conclusions he draws but his technical analysis is spot on. It is stupid to dismiss the content of his arguments and logic because he isn't as far to the left as we are. All you need is some independence of thought to be able to differentiate between what's worth something and what isn't. I don't give a shit what his opinion on Obama is and I most certainly will not base my evaluation of his work on it - that is plain stupid. I just can't accept arguments that dismiss the entire work of someone based on a single mistake/idiocy/reactionary opinion/whatever. How else could I keep reading Marx, Engels, Lukács or Baran? I very much disagree with him on these issues, but I accept that he is probably honest about it and I'm very thankful for his detail arguments and analyses - I would certainly not be able to gather all the information and put it together the way he did.
"Atomsk"
I understand what you are saying and the point you make about Taibbi's gathering of information is what makes his Concluding remarks very troubling.
He decided to end his article with the assessment that it is "too early to tell" what Obama will do.
The corporate criminal whose most recent assault (after years of other assaults) on the Constitution was the signing of the National Defense Authorization Act CANNOT be treated as if he might have any good intentions.
This article could have been written by John Nichols for the conclusions it draws.
Atomsk, I agree on all points.
Furthermore, the notion that the corporatist/militarist ruling elites have only one possible reaction to popular resistance is prima facie false. Ruling elites always compromise in one way or another with popular classes-- the extent and nature of that compromise varies though. That is what is at issue in Obama's "listening" to OWS and other expressions of popular discontent and resistance.
Political analysis doesn't suddenly stop once Obama has been identified as a corporate/militarist.
I agree with you and Bill, Atomsk-- without quibbling over whether "very respectable liberal-centrist opinion" is arguably an oxymoron.
Here's another aspect of corrupt collusion.
The democrats will be holding their Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina this year.
Charlotte is the headquarters home of Bank of America and Duke Energy.
Instead of letting the "struggling" corrupt "Bank" of America collapse, AS IT SHOULD, the democrats have decided to go there to try to prove that they (as a party) will do whatever they can to support this corrupt "bank" instead of doing what will benefit the majority of the people because the democrats want to be republicans.
Hey Mat, thanks for the heads up. CAN'T YOU GET ON THE COMMITTIE ?
From the people chosen and the process described its obviously more of the same ole thing, BEING CO-CHAIR with the people who caused the problem
should say it all. I hope Mr. Schneiderman knows whats happening around him.
The robo signing issue was about to enter the prosecution phase, now it appears a compromised agreement will be reached in order for the larger criminal investigation to take precedence. Again a committee to decide if there were crimes committed, which will go nowhere.
The only WAY any and ALL this insanity will end is by creating a Citizens Agenda and providing candidates who support the agenda.
CITIZEN CENTRAL
"lorifromthetribe"
Here is one to support.
Jill Stein.
Why not also mention Stewart Alexander?
Two, thanks for the reminder. We need to alert others on SA. That makes 3 progressive indies so far.
Call me a cynic.
Tell me I'm jaded.
I voted enthusiastically for Obama. I couldn't wait to hear his speeches.
What an incredible let down.
I didn't ask for much--just that he FIGHT for what he said during the 2008 campaign that he was going to change.
He didn't....he's essentially been an absentee POTUS.
My only conclusion from the past 3 1/2 yrs is that he's a Trojan horse...a calm, intelligent man who calls himself a Dem and gives great speeches, yet works for his Repub corporate masters.
He says one thing, then does another. Classic bait and switch.
We were played for fools, and he's playing us again, only because it's campaign season...otherwise, we're irrelevant "whiners".
So, my choice, Matt, would be #2, he's "just trying to look like he’s doing something".
2012 choices: Obama vs Newt/Romney. No choices.