Evans Liberal Politics
March 31, 2011
Banks Rob Taxpayers – Bailout Payback Scam
The Young Turks explode the myth put by banks
that they’ve paid back the TARP money.
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The Young Turks explode the myth put by banks
that they’ve paid back the TARP money.
WI Repub Senator lives outside district with mistress, says wife, The Raw Story, March 13, 2011, by David Ferguson, used with permission, quoted verbatim: Evans Liberal Politics is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news.
Protesters who marched at the home of Wisconsin state senator Randy Hopper (R-Fond du Lac) were met with something of a surprise on Saturday. Mrs. Hopper appeared at the door and informed them that Sen. Hopper was no longer in residence at this address, but now lives in Madison, WI with his 25-year-old mistress.
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Blogging Blue reports that the conservative Republican’s much-younger new flame is currently employed as a lobbyist for right-wing advocacy group Persuasion Partners, Inc., but was previously a state senate staffer who worked on the Senate Economic Development Committee alongside Mr. Hopper. Her bio has been scrubbed from the Persuasion Partners’ website, but a screen-grab is available here.
Sen. Hopper has worked closely with Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker to implement the state’s new anti-labor laws and enact policies favorable to the interests of big business. Like Walker, Hopper is one of the Republican politicians named in a massive recall effort spearheaded by Wisconsin Democrats.
According to Wisconsin law, state elected officials who have served at least one year of their current term are eligible for recall by voters. Hopper was elected state senator for district 18 in the fall of 2008, making him eligible for recall, whereas Governor Walker will not be eligible until 2012.
Blogging Blue also reports that Mrs. Hopper intends to sign the recall petition against her husband. The petition has already been signed by the family’s maid.
Anonymous To Announce “Operation ‘Empire State Rebellion.’” Demands Bernanke’s Ouster., Daily Kos, March 13, 2011, by Bob Swern, used with permission, quoted verbatim:
As of this weekend, we’re hearing from one member of the hacker group, Anonymous, that they will open their long-awaited can of whoop-ass against Bank of America on Monday. Kossack Badabing provided a great post on this which is now on the DKos rec list.
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However, Anonymous is now telling us, directly, via their just-issued “Communication #1″ on Saturday evening, that they will announce the commencement of “Operation ‘Empire State Rebellion’” on Monday.
Obviously, the two actions are not mutually exclusive–if anything, they’re complementary–and it’s quite likely that they could announce both initiatives come Monday morning.
More on this from Zero Hedge, from 9:30PM, EST, Saturday: “Hacker Group Anonymous Brings Peaceful Revolution To America: Will Engage In Civil Disobedience Until Bernanke Steps Down.”
Hacker Group Anonymous Brings Peaceful Revolution To America: Will Engage In Civil Disobedience Until Bernanke Steps Down
Zero Hedge
03/12/2011 21:30 -0500 The world’s most (in)famous hacker group – Anonymous – known for effectively shutting down their hacking nemesis security firm (with clients such as Morgan Stanley and, unfortunately for them, Bank of America)- HBGary, advocating the cause of Wikileaks, and the threat made by one of its members that evidence of fraud by Bank of America will be released on Monday, has just launched communication #1 in its Operation “Empire State Rebellion.” The goal – engage in “a relentless campaign of non-violent, peaceful, civil disobedience” until Ben Bernanke steps down and the “Primary Dealers within the Federal Reserve banking system be broken up and held accountable for rigging markets and destroying the global economy effective immediately.”
You may learn more about “Operation ‘Empire State Rebellion’” by clicking on this link to Anonymous’ new group, named “A99,” right HERE.
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Here’s their manifesto…
The Anonymous manifesto:We are a decentralized non-violent resistance movement, which seeks to restore the rule of law and fight back against the organized criminal class.
One-tenth of one percent of the population has consolidated wealth in unprecedented fashion and launched an all-out economic war against 99.9% of the population.
We are not affiliated with either wing of the two-party oligarchy. We seek an end to the corrupted two-party system by ending the campaign finance and lobbying racket.
Above all, we aim to break up the global banking cartel centered at the Federal Reserve, International Monetary Fund, Bank of International Settlement and World Bank.
We demand that the primary dealers within the Federal Reserve banking system be broken up and held accountable for rigging markets and destroying the global economy, effective immediately.
As a first sign of good faith we demand Ben Bernanke step down as Federal Reserve chairman.
Until our demands are met and a rule of law is restored, we will engage in a relentless campaign of non-violent, peaceful, civil disobedience.
In our next communication we will announce Operation Empire State Rebellion.
The reality here, IMHO, is somewhat different than the perception. I would posit that (while it might be technically incorrect to say so), for all intents and purposes, Bank of America and Countrywide execs are (and have been) all but officially “on-the-record” as acknowledging their bank committed massive fraud on an ongoing basis for many years.
And, IMHO, the real issue is summed-up in one question: Why aren’t folks like former BofA CEO Ken Lewis and BofA subsidiary, Countrywide, CEO Angelo Mozilo doing time right now?
For more on this, checkout 122+ of my diaries — posted since December 2007 and from as recently as early yesterday morning — w(h)ere I specifically mention, in great historical detail, the multitude of reasons how and why Bank of America and its Countrywide subsidiary are a big part of the reason why our country’s in the economic mess it’s in today. (Use the DKos “search” function; enter “Bank of America” and/or “Countrywide” in the subject area; and use my screen name in the “author” slot of the form. You’ll see a veritable shopping list of fraud-related titles.)
See Anonymous To Release Document Proving BOA Committed Fraud on Monday, Daily Kos, March 12, 2011, by Badabing.
Bob Swern’s favorite diary: NYT “Blows Cover Off Trading Scam.” Schumer Flips On Wall St., Daily Kos, July 25, 2009, by Bob Swern.
See Stealing Home: Main Street’s Final Sacrifice, Daily Kos, March 12, 2011, by Bob Swern.
AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka ‘thanks’ Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, The Raw Story, March 10, 2011, by Eric W. Dolan, used with permission, quoted verbatim: Evans Liberal Politics is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news.
The head of the largest federation of unions in the United States, AFL-CIO President Richard L. Trumka, jokingly thanked Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker Thursday for igniting an impassioned debate on workers’ rights.
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“Well, thank you, Scott Walker,” Trumka said during a speech in Washington, DC to the group Campaign for America’s Future. “We should have invited him here today to receive the Mobilizer of the Year award! Because Gov. Walker’s over-reaching has brought us to this moment to talk about jobs. This is the debate we’ve wanted to have. Well, guess what? Suddenly the debate came to us, and we’re winning.”
“In your lifetime, have you ever seen this much solidarity, this much excitement, this much activism?” he continued. “As progressives, it is our job to transform the outrage and make this moment a movement – to ensure that this corruption in the Midwest does not stand.”
On Thursday, the Republican-led Wisconsin Assembly passed a bill to bust public workers unions, after Republican state senators managed to bypass Senate Democrats who fled the state and pass the legislation Wednesday night. Trumka called the move an “absolute corruption of democracy.”
“Last night Scott Walker and his Republican tools in Wisconsin showed just how far they’re willing to go to pay back their corporate donors,” he said. “Destroy the rights of nurses, teachers, snow plow drivers and EMTs? Done. Blow up the constitution and state law to take away those rights? Absolutely.”
The bill to strip public employee unions of their collective bargaining rights was passed by a 53 to 42 vote in the Wisconsin Assembly and will now head to Gov. Walker’s office to be signed into law.
Trumka said the massive protests that erupted in Wisconsin because of the bill were the result of Americans being “pushed to the brink” by intense fear and anger about employment.
“We have been in a jobless recovery,” he said. “And into the economic pain and the political vacuum stepped the corporate-powered right wing and its politicians—using insecurity and fear to divide us. To pit worker against worker, to blame an economic crisis caused by Wall Street on teachers and the immigrant poor.”
Also See: Wisconsin GOP Senators Pass Stand-Alone Anti-Union Bill Without Democrats Present, The Huffington Post on Evans Liberal Politics, March 10, 2011, by Sam Stein and Amanda Terkel.
Leverage For Main Street? It’s In Front Of Your Nose., Daily Kos, March 3, 2011, by Bob Swern, used with permission, quoted verbatim:
A week ago, I posted a diary about the government’s proposed $20B “Mortgage Fraud Whitewash,” wherein we learned it was being floated by the Obama administration, the soon-to-be-official Consumer Financial Protection Bureau staff, and others that Wall Street would receive a $20 billion wristslap for pillaging Main Street via the mortgage industry for the past decade, and bankers would end up in a “…get-out-of-jail-free program…” and they would “…be excused for the abundant mortgage fraud they’ve committed.”
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In a lead story in the Business section of (Thursday) morning’s NY Times (SEE: “Officials Disagree on Penalties for Mortgage Mess“), we’re once again reminded that when one initiates negotiations with the status quo at such a pathetically low mark–essentially, at a point where it’s a travesty from the get-go–it’s all downhill from there.
After we review this latest status quo turd, we’ll do a slightly deeper dive on a fairly simple proposal by Yves Smith which would actually enable our government to–at the very least–put a very real threat of incarceration on the table for many of these assh*les, virtually overnight; and, if nothing else, humiliate these sociopaths in $4000 suits into ponying up a few hundred billion to cover some real mortgage relief for us poor and unwashed types on Main Street, too.
What? Leverage for Main Street? It’s right in front of our collective nose.
In between, some background from my diary from last week; words that give us hope that at least one of President Obama’s new appointees to the Federal Reserve might just have the spine we’ve been looking for; and then coverage of this latest Wall Street bullsh*t (i.e.: the feigned indignation(s) of a financial services sector that comprehensively owns the agencies that regulate it); and, finally, Yves Smith, with an awesome, Wall-Street-ass-kicking concept.
As I noted in >my diary, (Wednesday), it is now widely-acknowledged that the U.S. mortgage/residential real estate sector is in a double-dip recession which has already reached and/or eclipsed levels set during our country’s Great Depression. When one realizes that equity in one’s home — not stock market investments, where over 95%+/- of all marketable securities are owned by the top 10% of our society — represents the largest single asset for most Americans, one may begin to achieve some factual context for the state of our economy and the housing industry’s depressing effect upon Main Street, today.Late yesterday, as Naked Capitalism’s Yves Smith and FireDogLake’s Marcy Wheeler note, below, the Obama administration proposed a $20 billion “…get-out-of-jail-free program…” so, in the words of FDL’s Wheeler, “…banks could be excused for the abundant mortgage fraud they’ve committed.”
HAMP II: The $20 Billion Get Out of Jail Free Card
By: emptywheel
FireDogLake
Wednesday February 23, 2011 6:44 pmA day after the Case-Shiller Index confirmed that the housing market is in a double dip, the Powers that Be (a subsidiary of the Masters of the Universe, currently CEOed by one Barack Obama) have floated their proposal for a mortgage fraud settlement.The settlement terms remain fluid, people familiar with the matter cautioned, and haven’t been presented to banks. Exact dollar amounts haven’t been agreed on by U.S. regulators and state attorneys general.
For the low, low price of $20 billion, the Administration proposes, banks could be excused for the abundant mortgage fraud they’ve committed….
…$20 billion won’t even begin to compensate those victims of fraudulent appraisals for the fraud committed on them.
IMHO, in light of the fact (as I also noted in my diary, Wednesday) that it’s projected by some of our country’s most highly-respected housing finance experts that approximately half of all U.S. mortgageholders will be underwater (owing more to the bank than the value of their home) on their mortgages by mid-year, this represents the equivalent of a minor wristslap to Wall Street, as our country’s middle class faces ongoing pillaging at the hands of a status-quo-gone-wild; all thanks to the unbridled, ongoing support of our bought-and-paid-for federal government…
So, a week passes, and here we have the already-pathetic narrative becoming an even greater travesty than it was just a week ago: “Officials Disagree on Penalties for Mortgage Mess.”
Officials Disagree on Penalties for Mortgage Mess
By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ and DAVID STREITFELD
New York Times
March 3, 2011 Even as state attorneys general and regulators in Washington approach the end of their investigation into abuses by the nation’s biggest mortgage companies, deep disputes are emerging over how much to punish the banks as well as exactly who should benefit from a settlement.The newly created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is pushing for $20 billion or more in penalties, backed up by the attorneys general and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
But other regulators, including the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which oversees national banks, and the Federal Reserve, do not favor such a large fine, contending a small number of people were the victims of flawed foreclosure procedures.
As the negotiations grind on, there are signs that the banks still have not come to grips with the problems plaguing the foreclosure process….
…The nation’s largest mortgage servicer, Bank of America, is already readying what will be among the industry’s main arguments: that it is unfair to reward homeowners who are delinquent or underwater but cannot point to specific errors in their case…
(It’s definitely worth reading this whole article!)
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So, let me get this right…Bank of America, one of the biggest recipients of taxpayer bailouts and ongoing government backstops, to the tune of billions upon billions of dollars, even to this day, is saying it’s unfair to reward homeowners that have been royally screwed over–and moreso by BofA’s own Countrywide Financial subsidiary, perhaps, than any other corporate entity on the planet–but, when it comes to Main Street, f*ck ‘em?
The Times’ piece quotes a spokesman for the bank who’s “concerned” that…“Too broad a rescue package, he said, ‘could forestall the housing market recovery or even create perverse incentives.’”
And, to get a picture of how pathetically “captured” Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s former righthand man, Ass’t Treasury Secretary Michael Barr, truly is, we have this gem in the article…
“There has been a tension in this country during the financial crisis,” said Michael S. Barr, a former Treasury official now at the University of Michigan Law School. “People want those who are in economic trouble to get a fair shake. But they don’t want them bailed out for making their own mistakes, like buying too big a home.”
So, in Mr. Barr’s view of the universe (as long as we overlook origination fraud, appraisal fraud, investor fraud, conveyance fraud, ratings agency fraud, foreclosure fraud, and on and on…), it’s okay for the too-big-to-fail, Wall Street banks to get permanent, trillion-dollar taxpayer backstops for committing rampant fraud, but when it comes to Main Street, “…they don’t want them bailed out for making their own mistakes, like buying too big a home.”
Uh, huh.
While regulators worry about how punitive any eventual settlement should be, lawyers and other advocates for the foreclosed who were hoping for criminal charges are set to be disappointed. That sanction, everyone seems to agree, is off the table. In testimony in December about the improper foreclosures by banks, Daniel K. Tarullo, a Federal Reserve governor, floated the notion of imposing fines on individuals found responsible for violations or banning them from banking, but officials involved in the talks said this idea had not gotten much traction either.
Well, Yves Smith has come up with a GREAT idea to obtain some “traction” for our government and for Main Street as far as obtaining some leverage with Wall Street is concerned. It’s a great concept: jail the bastards! (SEE: “A Straightforward Criminal Case Against Wall Street CEOs and Senior Executives.”)
(Or, at least threaten to do so with some real teeth in that effort, for a change!)
(Diarist’s Note: Naked Capitalism Publisher Yves Smith has provided written authorization to diarist to reprint her blog’s posts in their entirety for the benefit of the DKos community.)
A Straightforward Criminal Case Against Wall Street CEOs and Senior Executives
Yves Smith
Naked Capitalism
Wednesday, March 2, 2011 4:04 AM Various people who ought to know better, such as the New York Times’ Joe Nocera, have taken to playing up the party line of the banking industry and I am told, the SEC, that we should resign ourselves to letting senior financial services industry members get away with having looted their firms and leaving the rest of us with a very large bill.It is one thing to point out a sorry reality, that the rich and powerful often get away with abuses while ordinary citizens seldom do. It’s quite another to present it as inevitable. It would be far more productive to isolate what are the key failings in our legal,
prosecutorial, and regulatory regime are and demand changes.The fact that financial fraud cases are often difficult does not mean they are unwinnable. And a prosecutor does not need to prevail in all, or even most, to serve as an effective cop on the beat.
Contrary to prevailing propaganda, there is a fairly straightforward case that could be launched against the CEOs and CFOs of pretty much every US bank with major trading operations. I’ll call them “dealer banks” or “Wall Street firms” to distinguish them from very big but largely traditional commercial banks like US Bank.
Since Sarbanes Oxley became law in 2002, Sections 302, 404, and 906 of that act have required these executives to establish and maintain adequate systems of internal control within their companies. In addition, they must regularly test such controls to see that they are adequate and report their findings to shareholders (through SEC reports on Form 10-Q and 10-K) and their independent accountants. “Knowingly” making false section 906 certifications is subject to fines of up to $1 million and imprisonment of up to ten years; “willful” violators face fines of up to $5 million and jail time of up to 20 years.
The responsible officers must certify that, among other things, they:
(A) are responsible for establishing and maintaining internal controls; (B) have designed such internal controls to ensure that material information relating to the issuer and its consolidated subsidiaries is made known to such officers by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which the periodic reports are being prepared; (C) have evaluated the effectiveness of the issuer’s internal controls as of a date within 90 days prior to the report; and
(D) have presented in the report their conclusions about the effectiveness of their internal controls based on their evaluation as of that date;
These officers must also have disclosed to the issuer’s auditors and the audit committee of the board of directors (or persons fulfilling the equivalent function):
(A) all significant deficiencies in the design or operation of internal controls which could adversely affect the issuer’s ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial data and have identified for the issuer’s auditors any material weaknesses in internal controls; and (B) any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the issuer’s internal controls
The premise of this requirement was to give assurance to investors as to (i) the integrity of the company’s financial reports and (ii) there were no big risks that the company was taking that it had not disclosed to investors.
This section puts those signing the certifications, which is at a minimum the CEO and the CFO, on the hook for both the adequacy of internal controls around financial reporting (to be precise) and the accuracy of reporting to public investors about them. Internal controls for a bank with major trading operations would include financial reporting and risk management.
It’s almost certain that you can’t have an adequate system of internal controls if you all of a sudden drop multi-billion dollar loss bombs on investors out of nowhere. Banks are not supposed to gamble with depositors’ and investors’ money like an out-of-luck punter at a racetrack. It’s pretty clear many of the banks who went to the wall or had to be bailed out because they were too big to fail, and I’ll toss AIG in here as well, had no idea they were betting the farm every day with the risks they were taking.
Not surprisingly, it isn’t difficult to find widespread shortcomings in risk management at major dealer banks. Risk management deficiencies most relevant to Sarbanes Oxley are related to pricing. The accuracy of the accounts, meaning the valuations, is the primary focus. Risk management weaknesses that impact reportable disclosures (in the accounts or the notes) have highest relevance. However, crappy risk management that leads to poor positioning may not be germane to the Sarbanes Oxley violations issue.
We discussed the issue at some length in ECONNED. Risk management was kept weak; if push came to shove, it was subordinate to the producers. Richard Bookstaber, a former chief risk officer, discussed at some length how most chief risk officers were engaged in what amounted to busywork. While they might indeed prevent particularly egregious excesses, their form over substance exercises also provided useful cover for the top brass and the board of directors. As he noted in 2007:
If you are the Chief Risk Officer and everything blows up, don’t you bear some responsibility?…In the CRO job 99% of the days there is nothing going wrong. The only test you get of how well you are doing – short of pouring out risk reports and looking ponderous and prudent in meetings – is what happens to the firm during times of market crisis. Every few years something calamitous happens in the market; if the firm gets blown away, that suggests you did not do a very good job.
Readers may have better suggestions of where to start, but I’d target Lehman. First, it already has a smoking gun: a May 2008 letter written by former senior vice president Michael Lee to senior management, including the CFO Erin Callan. It describes numerous accounting shortcomings, none of which look to be new and many of which look to be Sarbanes Oxley violations.
Second, its derivatives books were by all accounts an utter disaster at the time of its collapse: multiple non-integrated systems, to the point where the bank did not even have a good tally of how many positions it had (bankruptcy overseers Alvarez & Marsal first said the bank had 110,000 positions; they later changed their tally to 120,000). This is important because despite all the efforts to identify why the Lehman losses were so massive, most analysts have focused on the asset side, and the numbers don’t add up. That means understatement of positions and/or gross understatement of risk on the liability side is the probable culprit.
This is an egregious accounting 101 control breakdown, It indicates that the most basic operatonal controls, reconciliation of accounts, were not effective (see here for further support). Lehman would have to take the position that its basic control weaknesses were all immaterial. At all times there’s an inventory of control weaknesses that exist. That inventory must be constantly monitored and reviewed (and attested to in the 404 internal control assessments signed by the responsible officers). Materiality determinations are decided by managers, internal and external audit and ultimately the CFO and CEO. Dick Fuld also made statements in Congressional testimony about his ignorance of his ignorance of Repo 105 and a failure to include commercial real estate in stress tests starting with the end of 2007 that also seems consistent with a lack of adequate risk controls.
At other banks, prosecutors will probably need to proceed in a bottom’s up manner. The structured credit and CDO desks are targets even now for criminal securities fraud actions (the statue of limitations has not expired). These units, as Bloomberg’s Jonathan Weil has pointed out, were also ground zero of misreporting at Citigroup. The bank’s defenders claim it has a free pass by virtue of a letter from the bank lapdog OCC that did not rise to the level that would force disclosure but its basis was that the valuations Citigroup used were with market ranges. This seems a dubious argument.
The fact that a defective speedometer happened to provide a 60 mile per hour reading when the car was going 57 miles per hour does not prove the device was reliable.
Moreover, anyone with an operating brain cell knows “market prices” were being gamed by dealer banks passing small trades between them or with friendly clients, typically hedge funds who might also like to show high valuations, to establish flattering marks. If the marks Citi was relying on were the result of collusion, and the bank was either involved in or aware of the collusion, this undermines the OCC view of the validity of the marks at Citi and other banks. If yours truly knew of this practice, it had to be widespread and well known at the firms themselves.
My understanding (and reader input is welcome here) is that the authorities could file a civil suit for Section 302 certification violations. If they prevailed in that, a criminal case under Section 902 should be an easy win. The 906 certification basically says the reports are fully compliant with all regulations, including those specifically certified in the 302.
(Note that the SEC initiated a criminal case against HealthSouth CEO Richard Scrushy which included Section 302 charges. Scrushy was acquitted in a jury trial, but having followed the proceedings a bit, and also seeing another example of a trail in Birmingham, I’d be careful of generalizing from Alabama courts to other jurisdictions. The deck, even more than in other jurisdictions, is stacked in favor of the local bigwigs).
Will any of this happen? Of course not. The decision was made at the time of the TARP, and reaffirmed early in the Obama administration when there was serious talk of resolving Citigroup and Bank of America, that no one at the helm of the senior banks would be subject to serious scrutiny, much the less actually expected to be held accountable for actions that wrecked the economy and have imposed serious costs on ordinary Americans.
The case we described above is relatively simple to explain to a jury and has the advantage of being the sort where the plaintiffs could build on their experience in one action in subsequent cases.
But that sort of truth, that most, probably all, of the major Wall Street banks were engaged in the same sort of misconduct and the violations extended to the very top of the firms, would expose numerous other parties as complicit. So we’ll permit the cancer in our society to metastasize rather than threaten the power structure. But at least we citizens can make it clear, even if we cannot change the outcome, that we are not buying the canard that nothing can be done to fight this disease.
Leverage for Main Street?
It’s more than just a concept.
In fact, it’s staring us in our face.
Please feel encouraged to visit Bob Swern’s blog on Daily Kos.
Scott Walker Gets Punked By Journalist Pretending To Be David Koch, The Huffington Post, February 23, 2011, by Jason Linkins, excerpts quoted verbatim:
Here’s something for your “can this possibly be for real” file this morning. Over at the Buffalo Beast — the former print alt-weekly turned online newspaper founded by onetime editor Matt Taibbi, typically best known for its annual list of “The 50 Most Loathsome Americans” — there appear to be recordings of a phone call between Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and current editor Ian Murphy. Now, why on earth would Scott Walker want to talk on the phone with the editor of an online site in Buffalo? Well, he wouldn’t.
But what if said editor pretended to be David Koch of the famed Koch Brothers? Well, that’s a different story altogether, apparently! And so Walker, believing himself to be on the phone with his patron, seems to have had a long conversation about busting Wisconsin’s unions.
Buffalo Beast Publisher Paul Fallon told The Huffington Post that the audio is “absolutely legit.” That the call took place as described by the Beast has been confirmed by Walker spokesman Cullen Werwie.
“Basically what happened was, yesterday morning [Murphy] was watching television about this Wisconsin stuff and he saw a report where he saw Walker say he wasn’t going to talk to anybody,” Fallon said. “And he said, ‘I bet he would talk to somebody if he had enough oomph behind him.’”
This all apparently went down Tuesday afternoon, hours before Walker made his “fireside chat.” It took some doing: Murphy-as-Koch said he had several hoops to jump through before he was granted access to Walker, beginning with a receptionist, leading to the governor’s executive assistant, and finally ending up with his chief of staff, Keith Gilkes.
…SNIP….
At any rate, yesterday afternoon, Murphy says he and Walker had their own chat. The other man on the tape dutifully briefs “Koch” on the latest news, telling him that one tactic they are exploring to bring the wayward Senate Democrats back to the state is stopping the direct deposit of their paychecks. “Koch” asks, “Now you’re not talking to any of these Democrat bastards, are you?” The other man replies that there is one, state Sen. Tim Cullen, who might be approachable, though he cautions, “He’s pretty reasonable, but he’s not one of us.”
Read the full article here.
WATCH (here on site, just click the little arrow): Koch Whore: Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, part 2 – 10:00.
See Gov. Walker Informed That Bill Targeting Unions May Cost State $46 Million In Federal Funds, The Huffington Post, February 23, 2011, by Sam Stein, excerpt quoted verbatim and used with permission:
WASHINGTON — Budget referees and transportation officials in Wisconsin have informed Gov. Scott Walker (R) that if he were to pass his controversial anti-union legislation into law, he could be forfeiting tens of millions of dollars in federal funds for transportation.
Under an obscure provision of federal labor law, states risk losing federal funds should they eliminate “collective bargaining rights” that existed at the time when federal assistance was first granted. The provision, known as “protective arrangements” or “Section 13C arrangements,” is meant as a means of cushioning union (and even some non-union) members who, while working on local projects, are affected by federal grants.
It also could potentially hamstring governors like Walker who want dramatic changes to labor laws in their states. Wisconsin received $74 million in federal transit funds this fiscal year. Of that, $46.6 million would be put at risk should the collective-bargaining bill come to pass — in the process creating an even more difficult fiscal situation than the one that, ostensibly, compelled Walker to push the legislation in the first place.
Read the full article, here.
ALSO by Sam Stein: See Wisconsin Democrat: Scott Walker Exposed As ‘Cocky’ And ‘Gullible,’ Has Pushed Us Away From Negotiations, The Huffington Post, February 23, 2011.
See Meet the Kochers, Daily Kos, February 23, 2011, by the nekkidtruth, excerpt quoted verbatim:
Drill down a little into the Koch brothers’ black and unctuous oil industry past, and it won’t be long before you find wholesale fraudulent business practices, deals with the godless Soviets, and orchestrated theft from Native Americans. And what rightwing self-proclaimed superpatriot would be worth his reputation if it wasn’t for the coverup?
AS YOU MIGHT EXPECT: See “Use live ammunition on Wisconsin protesters”, Daily Kos, February 23, 2011, by Kristina40: This from a tweet by an Indiana Deputy Attorney General. Law and Order all the way!
ALSO Worth Watching: Rev. Jesse Jackson: Economic Justice is a Civil Right, supporting the workers in Wisconsin and elsewhere – 7:40.
See The Coming Shutdowns and Showdowns: What’s Really at Stake, Evans Liberal Politics, February 22, 2011, by Robert Reich.
WATCH (here on site): Ed Schultz Exposes Governor Scott Walker For Balancing The Budget On The Backs Of The Poor, MSNBC video – 8:36.
INSPIRING: Watch Wisconsin Protesters High-Five, Shake Hands With Police , YouTube news video – 2:20.
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Why Obama Is No Change
Evans Liberal Politics
March 18, 2011
Why Obama Is No Change
Opinion by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: My Democrat friends are going to kill me for this, but even though I will be accused of betrayal, I felt the need to put my version of the truth out there. We always try to tell you the truth on Evans Liberal Politics. Let me explain what’s going on for those who are not politically knowledgeable. It really is, unfortunately, fairly simple.
Right now in America, 400 people own more wealth than the entire lower 50 percent of the population. The bottom 80% control only 7% of the nation’s financial wealth. Can you imagine the sort of money we are talking about? Can you imagine the kind of influence with politicians – both Republican and Democrat – that this sort of money can buy?
If you are interested in seeing the facts about politicians, who’s giving what to whom, lobbying and influence, please visit Open Secrets.org, the Center for Responsive Politics.
Politicians are interested in two things, power and popularity. Money is for most of them an important but secondary motivator because they could be making a LOT more money in the private sector. (Of course they do need money to stay in power, which is why they can be “bought” so easily).
Obama came into power in 2008 on a wave of reformist zeal and for a while, it seemed that real reform would happen. But then influence (vis lobbyists) happened, and, for example, the Affordable Health Care Act turned into a giveaway to Big Pharma and the health care industry, and a broadening of government and the control over health care by the big conglomerates, almost the opposite of any true reform, although there ARE some good things in the legislation. This is just one example.
Obama went into campaign 2012 mode at the very least right after the big Democratic defeat in the 2010 elections. He said recently that he was going to only do what what is right even if that meant he would be a one term President, but, unfortunately, that is not what we’re seeing. Obama has turned out to be, unfortunately, a rather conventional politician, bringing conventional people who mainly had staffed the Clinton Administration into high administrative office. There was no real reform. There was no real change, there was only a traditionally Democratic administration that was able to enact some legislation because of Obama’s popularity and the economic crisis.
This is NOT to say that Obama does not have more principles than most of these politicians. But he is quite conventional and is personally rather conservative, quite willing to move to the center and be “bipartisan” and to do whatever it takes to stay in office in the election of 2012. He is not actually some “new” or “different” sort of politician. And the conventional wisdom is that, because the 2010 election, he had to move to the center to have any chance in 2012. This is the then-effective tactic that Bill Clinton used to get re-elected after the debacle of 1982 – even though these are very different times and Obama needs to take that into consideration. No one ever said the President’s advisers were anything except conventional Democrat power pushers. (Well, they DID say that, but not recently….)
Progressives – and I mean here those of idealism, not pragmatists and not people who are conventionally political – believe Obama has it all wrong. We feel the President should have stood on principle, done what’s right no matter what, and let the chips fall where they may. We feel that if he and the Democrats had done this, their popularity would have taken care of itself. People with political experience call that naive and starry eyed. I call it the platform Obama was elected on.
On the other hand, Obama is a likable, very decent man, and although something of a corporatist and a militarist, from the position of the left, I feel that his heart is still in the right place but that possibly he was in over his head and had the wrong advisers from the start. And it needs to be said for some of my readers that Obama is much better than any possible nominee for the 2012 election that the Republican Party might put up, including Ron Paul. That is true in terms of science, in terms of infrastructure, or social justice and economic justice.
Obama’s failure to be anything other than a pragmatic, conventional politician is why he is no longer so popular, and why the Democrats are in trouble. Control through influence over the political system by the very rich is why America is in trouble and NOBODY can make a real difference right now, even if they were true reformers. It is the system itself, in particular the system of influence/lobbying in this nation, which MUST be changed, whether incrementally or through some sort of popular tumult and/or clamor.~ Paul Evans
See Paul Krugman: The Forgotten Millions, Evans Liberal Politics, March 18, 2011, by Paul Krugman.
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