Yes, maybe he is. There is no plausible reason that the architects
of the 2008 collapse are not in jail and been hounded for all their money to
the ends of the earth except an utterly supine regulatory cadre who need to
join their friends in jail. Elliot is certainly
able to make it work as he recovers from the effects of his own hubris.
He even has something
to prove. At some rating level, failure
must mean treason. That has to be felt
out there or we will have another round of all this in about another decade. I was never quite a fan of his, but that was
when a fair part of Wall Street appeared to be decently regulated. I saw him then as an opportunistic prosecutor
but not as a regulatory reformer able to effect sound change.
Sadly, today we need
both desperately and starting with him is a good beginning. It will make the election worth the watch.
Not Too Big to Jail:
Why Eliot Spitzer Is Wall Street's Worst Nightmare
Tuesday,
20 August 2013
By Ellen Brown
Before
Eliot Spitzer’s infamous resignation as governor of New York in March 2008, he
was one of our fiercest champions against Wall Street corruption, in a state
that had some of the toughest legislation for controlling the banks. It may not
be a coincidence that the revelation of his indiscretions with a high-priced
call girl came less than a month after he published a bold editorial in the
Washington Post titled “Predatory
Lenders’ Partner in Crime: How the Bush Administration Stopped the States
from Stepping in to Help Consumers.” The editorial exposed the collusion
between the Treasury, the Federal Reserve and Wall Street in deregulating the
banks in the guise of regulating them, by taking regulatory power away from the
states. It was an issue of the federal government versus the states, with the
Feds representing the banks and the states representing consumers.
Five
years later, Spitzer has set out to take some of that local regulatory power
back, in his run for New York City comptroller. Mounting the attack
against him, however, are not just Wall Street banks but women’s groups opposed
to this apparent endorsement of the exploitation of women. On August 17th, the
New York Post endorsed Spitzer’s opponent and ran a scathing cover
story attempting to embarrass Spitzer based on the single issue of his personal
life.
Lynn
Parramore, who considers herself a feminist, countered in
an August 8th Huffington Post article that it is likely to be in the best
interests of the very women who are opposing him to forgive and move on.
His stand for women’s reproductive rights and other feminist issues is actually
quite strong, and his role as Wall Street watchdog protected women from
predatory financial practices. As New York Attorney General, he was known as
the “Sheriff of Wall Street.” He is one of the few people with not only the
insight and experience to expose Wall Street corruption but the courage to go
after the perpetrators.
Targeted
for Take-down
The
February 2008 Washington Post article that preceded Spitzer’s political
travails was written when the state attorneys general were being preempted by
the Federal Reserve as watchdogs of the banks. Critics called it a case
of the
fox guarding the hen house. Spitzer wrote:
Several
years ago, state attorneys general and others involved in consumer protection
began to notice a marked increase in a range of predatory lending practices by
mortgage lenders. . . . These and other practices, we noticed, were having a
devastating effect on home buyers. In addition, the widespread nature of these
practices, if left unchecked, threatened our financial markets.
Even
though predatory lending was becoming a national problem, the Bush
administration looked the other way and did nothing to protect American
homeowners. In fact, the government chose instead to align itself with the
banks that were victimizing consumers. . . . [A]s New York attorney general, I
joined with colleagues in the other 49 states in attempting to fill the void
left by the federal government. . . .
Not
only did the Bush administration do nothing to protect consumers, it embarked
on an aggressive and unprecedented campaign to prevent states from protecting
their residents from the very problems to which the federal government was
turning a blind eye. . . . The administration accomplished this feat through an
obscure federal agency called the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
(OCC). . . . In 2003, during the height of the predatory lending crisis, the
OCC invoked a clause from the 1863 National Bank Act to issue formal opinions
preempting all state predatory lending laws, thereby rendering them
inoperative. The OCC also promulgated new rules that prevented states from
enforcing any of their own consumer protection laws against national banks. The
federal government’s actions were so egregious and so unprecedented that all 50
state attorneys general, and all 50 state banking superintendents, actively
fought the new rules. But the unanimous opposition of the 50 states did not
deter, or even slow, the Bush administration in its goal of protecting the
banks. In fact, when my office opened an investigation of possible
discrimination in mortgage lending by a number of banks, the OCC filed a
federal lawsuit to stop the investigation.
Less
than a month after publishing this editorial, Spitzer had been exposed,
disgraced, and was out of office. Greg Palast
pointed to the fact that Spitzer was the single politician standing in
the way of a $200 billion windfall from the Federal Reserve, guaranteeing the
toxic mortgage-backed securities of the same banking predators that were
responsible for the subprime debacle. While the Federal Reserve was trying to
bail them out, Spitzer was trying to regulate them, bringing suit on behalf of
consumers.3 But he was quickly silenced, and any state attorneys general
who might get similar ideas in the future would be blocked by the federal
“oversight” then being imposed on state regulation.
A
Rooster to Guard the Hen House
In
a July 2013 article titled “Why
Eliot Spitzer’s Return Terrifies Big Finance,” Thomas Ferguson, Professor
of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts and a senior fellow at
the Roosevelt Institute, wrote of Spitzer’s bid for comptroller:
\
Suddenly,
the Masters of the Universe were staring at their worst nightmare: the prospect
of a comeback by the only major politician in the U.S. whose deeds — and
not simply words —prove that he does not think corporate titans are too big to
jail.
Who, when
the Justice Department, Congress, and the Securities and Exchange Commission
all defaulted in the wake of a tidal wave of financial frauds, creatively used
New York State’s Martin Act to go where they wouldn’t and subpoena emails and
corporate records of the malefactors of great wealth, winning convictions and
big settlements.
Who in
2005, as New York State Attorney General, actually sued AIG instead of thinking
up ways to hand it billions of dollars of taxpayers’ money. . . .
And
who in 2013 with business as usual once again the order of the day, is
promising to review how the Comptroller’s Office, which controls New York
City’s vast pension funds, does business with Wall Street and corporate
America.
Yves
Smith, writing on her blog Naked Capitalism on July 25th, expanded
on this threat. She noted that private equity [PE] investment managers had
persuaded their clients that their limited partnership agreements [LPAs] were a
form of “trade secret,” and that nobody was looking closely at whether PE firms
were complying with the fee and expense provisions of their agreements:
Public
pension fund investors have almost universally acceded to the demands of PE
firms to exempt the LPAs and cash flow reports from state FOIA laws, which
keeps the eyes of the press and the public off the documents.
.
. . However, the New York City Comptroller has access to this critical information. Hence
the freakout at the prospect that Spitzer might get the job.
Hence
also the
$1.5 million ad campaign against Spitzer brought by a coalition of
business leaders, labor unions and women’s groups.
The
Issues that Matter to Women
On
July 10th, the head of the local chapter of a national women’s advocacy
group asked
a small gathering outside City Hall:
Do
we want an elected official who has broken the law and who has participated in
sustaining an industry that we all know has a long history of exploiting women
and girls?
The
speaker lumped Spitzer with Anthony Weiner, who is running for mayor after
sending out sexually explicit tweets, and Vito Lopez, who is running for City
Council after resigning from the Assembly over sexual harassment allegations.
She asked whether these men would address the issues that matter to women, “or
are they just going to see us as objects?”
Sexual
exploitation is an issue that matters to women, but the best way to save women
from the sort of desperation that leads to exploitation is to keep them out of
ruinous debt. Wall Street fraud, corruption and abuse have caused millions of
homeowners to lose their homes and have tipped cities toward bankruptcy; and
Spitzer is one of the brave few who has exposed and attempted to prosecute
those predatory practices. As comptroller, he could make more information
available to the public concerning the companies in which public pension funds
are invested, look out for exploitive fees, insist on plain English reporting
of derivatives exposure, and take steps to ensure that nurses and teachers are
not being financially exploited. He can monitor contracts and business
dealings and help protect the city from the kinds of rip-off schemes that
deplete city funds for education, infrastructure, and the social safety nets
that women, particularly, rely on.
In
a December 2011 article in Slate titled “We
Own Wall Street,” Spitzer argued that bad corporate behavior could be
stopped by a political movement uniting shareholders, pension funds and mutual
funds – the actual owners of the corporations – who could then take coordinated
action to demand transparency and accountability.
This
is the sort of creative thinking that will be needed if we the people are to
take back our power from Wall Street and the corporatocracy. We need a mass
movement, coordinated action, and leaders who can organize it; and Eliot
Spitzer is one of the few people in a position to play that role who have the
experience, vision and courage to carry it through.
This
piece was reprinted by Truthout with permission or license. It may not be
reproduced in any form without permission or license from the source.
Do we want Eliot Spitzer elected in public office again? I don’t because I cannot forgive his hypocrisy in his use of prostitutes at the same time he was pushing laws to prosecute sex workers. And it’s not only that. While Governor, Spitzer not only used prostitutes, he tried to choke them!
ReplyDeleteeven the vice he indulged in was only possible because of the incredible hypocrisy of Wall Street itself which underwrote even that. My Friend, they deserve him.
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ReplyDeleteI hope he gets elected, watch "Client 9: the Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer". I forgive him his actions AND his hypocrisy on prostitution. The fact that he was "choking" the banks to their knees is all that matters to me. Screw all Too Big To Fail Banks, they are financial terrorists.
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