Posts Tagged ‘government reform’

Stunning Statistic of the Week:

$9.1 million: The amount that former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney raised through his political action committee during the 2010 election cycle. He didn’t declare his candidacy for president until this week.

Source: http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2011/06/ceo-6-2-2011.html

Not so fast … judge reconsiders ruling on corporate donations to candidates
We told you last week about a federal court decision that corporations can give money directly to candidates – despite the fact that the law is quite clear that they can’t. Even the U.S. Supreme Court has agreed with that. Now, the judge is reconsidering. Perhaps he didn’t realize his ruling ran counter to the law?

Groups, lawmakers call for disclosure order
U.S. Reps. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.), Michael Capuano (D-Mass.) and 25 other lawmakers sent a letter this week to President Barack Obama expressing their strong support for his draft executive order requiring disclosure of campaign spending and contributions by companies that seek federal government contracts. Public Citizen and five other good government groups cheered them on and called for Obama to sign the order.

GOP contenders scramble for big-donor support
As the field of GOP presidential contenders firms up, those who plan to run are scrambling to shore up support from big-money donors. Not only could this help boost their races, but it could scare off potential opponents.

California treasurer backs corporate disclosure of political spending
Warning about the pernicious effects of the Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission ruling, the California state treasurer is urging the boards of two state pension funds to support shareholder initiatives that require corporations to fully disclose their political spending. The Supreme Court’s decision gave corporations the go-ahead to spend as much money as they want to influence elections.

Colbert’s pursuit of Super PAC could be damaging
Comedian Stephen Colbert may be trying to form a Super PAC to make a point about the corruption of the political system, but if he succeeds, it would set a bad precedent, some say. “We appreciate that Mr. Colbert submitted his advisory opinion request in the spirit of political comedy, but we’re not going to stand by and watch potentially damaging unintended consequences to decades of important campaign finance law,” Paul Ryan, associate legal counsel for the Campaign Legal Center, said this week. Funny thing is, the head of the Campaign Legal Center is acting as Colbert’s lawyer to help him pull the stunt.

Nevada campaign finance measures go to governor
Nevada’s Legislature has approved measures that would require candidates to file campaign finance reports electronically, require them to file earlier so voters would be able to see the data sooner, and prohibit candidates from taking money from foreign sources (already against the law but apparently it wasn’t clear). The measures will become law if signed by the governor.

Tennessee gives corporations green light to contribute to candidates
Tennessee’s governor has signed a measure permitting corporations to donate money directly to candidates.

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"Bart Naylor" "Financial policy"An important report by John Wasik of Demos called: “How Safe are your Savings: How Complex Derivative Products Imperil Senior’s Retirement Security,” came out yesterday.

Fair warning—this report may ruin your day, maybe even your entire week, when you see how the financial industry blatantly prey’s on senior citizens.

This report, a year in the making by an award winning investigative journalist, concerns how financial institutions such as Morgan Stanley and Bank of America currently betray trust by selling so called risk-hedging derivatives to senior citizens. Seniors, of course, care more about risk than any other demographic. They’re generally out of the job market, and depend on that savings account they’ve been socking away for all those decades ideally to make their golden years bright.

For far too long, brokers have been selling their older clients complex investments known as structured products,” writes Wasik. “These products are so risky, and so costly in fees, that some of them are almost sure money losers. They entered retirement portfolios like Trojan horses, and then destroyed people’s life savings. Yet the financial meltdown of 2008 has not chastened Wall Street. Brokers and banks continue to sell these high-risk investments to people who can’t afford major losses.”

Wasik’s monograph documents that in 2010, banks and brokers sold more than $52 billion of these products. Why? “Mostly because they are hugely profitable to the banks and brokers themselves,” Wasik finds.
Profitable for the banks and brokers, certainly, but genuine losers for seniors, as individual investors have lost at least $113 billion. And counting.  That $113 billion in losses could be a tenth the actual number from these toxic time-bombs, “since most burned investors don’t confront their brokers or win back their money,” Wasik speculates. “Even when investors discover that they’ve lost money, the system is designed to thwart efforts to recover such losses.”
The products hide under inscrutable names: reverse convertibles, equity-linked, buffered or enhanced notes.  A derivative is a gamble based on the outcome of some other instrument, such as a stock, bond, a collection thereof, or an index such as interest rates, or foreign exchange rates. They’re called “derivatives” because their value “derives” from that other instrument.

Chief culprits?  They may be on the list of the largest firms Wasik names: Morgan Stanley, which controls 18 percent of the market; Bank of America with 16 percent; Barclays, with 13%; JPMorgan, with 9 percent; and rounding out the Top Five is Goldman Sachs, with 8 percent.

“Many individual investors are still struggling to recover catastrophic losses suffered from investing in complex derivative-based vehicles that tanked in 2008,” Wasik writes colorfully. “Now, long after the top banks were bailed out and recapitalized by taxpayers and the Federal Reserve, Wall Street continues to sell these dangerous complex products, which lie in wait, ready to unleash a shocking new wave of financial pain.”
There may be a role for these complex instruments. Derivatives, based on complicated mathematical formulas, once traded only in the province of sophisticated institutional investors, who only held small portions of them in multi-billion-dollar portfolios. But, observes the Reuters columnist and author of “The Cul-de-Sac Syndrome,” “In recent years, these complex “structured” derivative products — wagers based on other financial instruments — have been falsely repackaged by Wall Street as ways to preserve principal for yield-starved Main Street investors.”
This trend was documented by more than a year’s worth of research involving interviews with investors, state securities regulators, investors’ attorneys and officials with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

Wasik also proposes solutions, namely for Congress to fund the SEC more appropriately so it can police this mugging ground better. Wasik’s report comes from Demos. Demos is a non-partisan, New York-based public policy research and advocacy organization founded in 2000. But perhaps Wasik stops short; why not ban the sale altogether to any but the sophisticated investor? That’s the suggestion of Janet Tavakoli, a consultant Wasik interviewed: “These notes flunk the suitability and appropriateness test for retail investors. They also flunk the test for most investment managers, investment advisors and pension fund managers.”

Or we could simply read Wasik’s report and weep.

Back in the days when laws were laws and regulators were regulators, a young investigator/examiner named Bart Dzivi marched into Consolidated Savings Bank. It was purportedly a mobbed-up bank, run by gangsters. But the 25-year old employee of the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco (FHLBSF) was undaunted. Black Bart Dzivi (as only I call him) grew up in Montana, the grandson of a miner who, like the Great Gatsby, had reportedly shot a man.  Black Bart is the kind of man who runs toward the fire, not away. A Dalmatian gene in his make-up, I reckon.

Black Bart was supported by William Black, litigation director of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. Wild Bill (as I shall call him) wasn’t one to shy away from the bad guys either.  Wild Bill wasn’t supposed to be involved in the Consolidated case, but he got an emergency call late East Coast time on Good Friday from the FHLBSF about Consolidated.  One of Consolidated’s top officers, Mr. Angotti, had threatened the FHLBSF’s examiner-in-charge and Consolidated employees were taking photos of the license plates of the cars driven by the FHLBSF examiners.  The threat led the FHLBSF’s leaders to ask the Enforcement Division to bring an emergency enforcement action against Consolidated and the senior officer who made the threat.  The Enforcement Division, however, refused to take any action against the threat.  (This was so typical of the Enforcement Division that Black and the FHLBSF’s lawyers began to refer to the Division as the “land of the invertebrates.”)  The Enforcement Division advised the FHLBSF to complain about Mr. Angotti’s threats to Consolidated’s CEO – Mr. Ferrante.  The FHLBSF informed the Enforcement Division that the FBI had told the FHLBSF that Consolidated was a “mob shop” and that Mr. Ferrante had once been severely injured by an attempted mob hit.  The FHLBSF decided that the Enforcement Division was hopeless and called Wild Bill instead. Wild Bill scrambled and hired one of them law firms in Southern California and brought a civil suit and demand for a temporary restraining order (TRO) against Consolidated’s threats early the next week.  (There were some claims by Consolidated’s controlling officers that the regulators had some thing about Italians. Crazy talk, really:   The agency’s top supervisor was Frank Passarelli, the FHLBSF’s CEO was James Cirona, the FHLBSF’s top supervisor was Michael Patriarca, and Wild Bill’s spouse is June Carbone – four proud Italian-Americans.  The court rejected Consolidated’s claims that the agency was biased against Italian-Americans.)

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"CEO Pay Watch"The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) can count many accomplishments in its long, proud history: the weekend;  safer workplaces; improved race relations (Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated while supporting a strike by workers at AFSCME, which is the largest affiliate of the AFL-CIO) and much, much more.

But one of the AFL-CIO’s  most popular, current efforts is a website called “Executive PayWatch.”

This annually updated mother lode of compensation information came live this week with the 2010 numbers and analysis.

It ain’t pretty.

  • “Overall, CEOs of the 299 companies in the AFL-CIO Executive PayWatch database received a combined total of $3.4 billion in pay in 2010, enough to support 102,325 jobs paying the median wages for all workers.”
  • “The Wall Street executives who helped create the financial crisis and economic recession also did well. While cash bonuses fell, total compensation for Wall Street firms increased in 2010. The Wall Street Journal estimates that total compensation at large financial services companies rose 5.7 percent to a record $149 billion in 2010.”
  • “During the past decade, CEOs of the largest American companies received more in compensation than ever before in U.S. history. They supposedly deserved this money for increasing stock prices. Did they? On Dec. 31, 2010, the S&P 500 Index closed 19 percent below its high on March 24, 2000.”

Conceived by AFL President Richard Trumka and the inestimable William Blake Patterson, the nifty web technology PayWatch initially allowed anyone to check the ratio between their pay and that of the boss (technically, the boss needed to be the CEO of a publicly held company). PayWatch came out when many of those overpaid CEOs were revealed to be cooking the books, such as at Enron, Tyco, and WorldCom, so we enjoyed their pay cuts.

Now, what began as an exercise in schadenfreude, (that German word for the delight in the downfall of the mighty) has become the go-to resource for executive compensation data.  “It’s the most popular suite of pages on our website,” says Brandon Rees, deputy director of the AFL-CIO Office of Investment.   The CEO database allows searching by company, state, name and more.  Any shareholder can learn how to apply their share ownership  prerogatives in the “What Can You Do” page.

PayWatch is awesome repository of applied information. We encourage all to enjoy and spread the data and help shine a spotlight on the immoral disparity between Main Street and Wall Street pay.

We also encourage all to take action against Wall Street’s outrageous pay practices which, in addition to being unjust and unfair, threaten the long-term stability of our economy.

Stunning Statistics of the Week:

  • $15 million: Amount U.S. Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) wants to collect through his Senate Conservatives Fund, a political action committee, for the 2012 elections
  • $9 million: The amount his PAC raised in 2010, which was more than any other politician’s PAC raised during that time

Republicans from Wisconsin state Senate to be rewarded at Washington fundraiser
Fresh off a vote to end collective bargaining rights, Republican leaders of the Wisconsin state Senate are heading to a March 16 fundraiser in their honor at the Washington, D.C., lobbying firm of BGR Group, founded by Mississippi Gov. and big-time Republican fundraiser Haley Barbour. Donors are asked to give $1,000 to the state Republican Party; sponsors are asked for $2,500 while hosts must pay $5,000.

Rove group runs TV ad criticizing unions
We told you last month about how Crossroads GPS, a group co-founded by Republican strategist Karl Rove, was running radio ads on the budget in nearly two dozen House districts. The group is continuing to help ensure the financial health of television networks: It is spending three-quarters of a million dollars to run an ad critical of unions on CNN, CNBC and Fox News for a week.

Watchdog asks IRS to investigate group run by former Minnesota senator
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) is asking the IRS to look into whether a group run by former U.S. Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.) violated tax laws during the midterm elections. The American Action Network may have engaged in political campaign activity as its primary purpose, contrary to IRS rules, CREW says.

Corporate cash bolsters Republicans in Florida
The state political parties in Florida are seeing a flood of corporate cash come their way as the legislative session ramps up — likely because of proposed measures that favor business. Most of the money is going to the Republican Party. “We have an extremely pro-business governor, pro-business House speaker, pro-business Senate president, and I think the business community knows this is going to be a very good year and they want to have input,” said state Sen. Mike Bennett, R-Bradenton.

Wisconsin Dems file complaint over governor’s comments to Koch mimicker
For the Wisconsin Democratic Party, the taped conversation that Governor Scott Walker had with a blogger pretending to be billionaire David Koch was more than just a prank call. It showed the governor engaging in behavior that could violate campaign finance and ethics laws. The party has filed a complaint with the state Government Accountability Board.

‎What would Granny D say?
It’s been a year since Doris Haddock, known as “Granny D,” died, but she isn’t forgotten. This week she was honored by Keene State College, which will house her travel journal notes, a campaign reform banner she carried when she trekked across the United States, and her shoes. New Hampshire’s governor issued a proclamation too.

Don’t forget to tell your friends about the Citizens United video
We told you last week about the release of “The Story of Citizens United v. FEC” video, a new 8-minute animated short by Annie Leonard, of “The Story of Stuff” fame. Haven’t viewed it yet? Do it now!  Visit DemocracyIsForPeople.org to learn more! And, if you are on Facebook, “like” our page www.facebook.com/democracyisforpeople and become a part of our online activist community!

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