The Rally Against Obamacare for the Banks
The large number of people who protested against Barack Obama's healthcare plan in Washington last week drew an enormous amount of media attention. Clearly some of the leaders are certifiably crazy, questioning whether Obama is an American and likening him to Hitler. But many of the protesters had reasonable concerns about how the plan would affect the quality of care that they and their loved ones receive.
It was also striking how often the protesters complained about a government that was out of control and not responsive to ordinary people. One of the items that often came up in the interviews reported in the media was the bank bailout. Clearly this is an enduring and deeply felt cause of resentment.
It would be very hard to tell these people that their concerns on this topic are misplaced.
At a time when tens of millions of people are facing unemployment or underemployment, when millions are at immediate risk of losing their homes, the banks seem to be doing better than ever. Goldman Sachs used its government-guaranteed loans to make risky bets that paid off big time. It now plans to distribute $9bn in bonuses to its executives and top traders at the end of the year. Why shouldn't the protesters be absolutely furious about an administration that used taxpayer dollars to make some of the richest people in the country even richer?
It would be great if the anger of these protesters could be turned in a productive direction. Instead of trying to prevent the government from extending healthcare coverage, how about going after the banks that pillaged the country?
The obvious place to start in this effort is the break-up of the "too big to fail" behemoths. It is now pretty much official policy that financial giants like Citigroup, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs will not be allowed to fail. If their bad investment decisions again bring them to the edge of bankruptcy, the federal government will again rush to the rescue, handing out whatever cash and loans are needed to keep the banks afloat.
This status gives these banks a clear edge in credit markets against their smaller competitors. If everyone knows that the government can be counted on to come to the rescue of these banks, then there is less risk in lending them money. Therefore, they pay lower interest rates than if they had to borrow in a free market.
The Obama administration has proposed to correct this inequity by having higher capital requirements and tighter restrictions on risk-taking that will make it undesirable for banks to be too big to fail. In principle, the government could impose restrictions that are sufficiently onerous to offset the advantages of the government safety net, but no one outside of the Obama administration believes this will happen.
The simpler course is to just break them up. We don't have to turn Citigroup and Bank of America into hundreds of small community banks, just large regional banks that can be safely put through a bankruptcy/resolution process if they mismanage their assets. My guess is that most of people protesting healthcare reform last weekend would support this idea.
A second issue likely to draw the support of the protesters is the democratisation of the Federal Reserve. There is already a left-right coalition in the House of Representatives behind a bill calling for an audit of the Fed.
This is a case where the centrist elites have shown complete contempt for the American public. In fact, Federal Reserve Board chairman Ben Bernanke had the gall to argue against an audit of the Fed, warning that it would lead to increased instability.
Did Bernanke forget that less than a year ago he told Congress that the policies pursued by him and his predecessor had brought the economy to the brink of a complete collapse? How do you get less stable than that? This is the sort of nonsense that shows the contempt that the elites have for the masses on both the left and right.
This suggests a great opportunity for a joint effort by the left and right to democratize the Fed. It is absurd that the US has a central bank that is more accountable to the financial industry than to the public.
A joint effort has enormous potential. It will be hard for the elites to even understand such a joint effort of the left and right against the center. As an example, the New York Times actually asserted that the bill to audit the Fed has "250 Republican" co-sponsors in the House, ignoring the fact that the Republicans are a minority in the 435 seat chamber.
But the ignorance of the elite only increases the probability of success. And, if there is one thing this economic crisis demonstrates, the elite can be very very ignorant.




















250 Republican co-sponsors? Yep, all the news that is...ummmmm, never mind.
No wonder most of the tea baggers think that it was Obama who gave Wall Street $1T+ to begin with. How can anything be done when there is that much of a disconnect from reality by the general public.
September 22, 2009 12:03 AM | Reply | Permalink
Great post, Dean. When you talk to people in the streets, left and right don't mean anything on this issue. The "let them eat cake" attitude coming from Wall Street and from the White House cuts across party lines.
September 22, 2009 12:10 AM | Reply | Permalink
Dean, the American worker had his attention, towards the greedy Wall Street crowd
UNTIL
They were distracted by the Healthcare debates, and even that is beginning to fail.
I'm cynical enough to believe the working class, had the rope a dope, move put on it.
What's the next diversion Afghanistan?
Pull the troops out and then blame the tea-baggers, who were so concerned about the Deficit. That will get the attention of the Military/ industrial complex.
We have no money for you. No money for healthcare, so evidently we don't have money for war either?
But I suspect Obama will hem and haw, and lo and behold, he'll give in to the capitalists who love war profiteering.
Health insurance CEO’s and War machine CEO’s anyone else want to come to the trough?
“ Sorry peasant there’s nothing left for you. But hey, could you pick up the tab”
September 22, 2009 12:59 AM | Reply | Permalink
All you folks are over thinking this whole thing.
The plan was, " Wham Bamm Thank You Mam ", Sign the bill and PPPPPAAAAARRRRTTTYYYY. But the stupid congress could not deliver the goods. This would not have happened back in Chicago. So don't worry Rahm has a suprize, remember her is a "Can Do" guy...
September 22, 2009 1:00 AM | Reply | Permalink
All you folks are over thinking this whole thing.
The plan was, " Wham Bamm Thank You Mam ", Sign the bill and PPPPPAAAAARRRRTTTYYYY. But the stupid congress could not deliver the goods. This would not have happened back in Chicago. So don't worry Rahm has a suprize, remember he is a "Can Do" guy...
September 22, 2009 1:03 AM | Reply | Permalink
Yeah we are all over it...
September 22, 2009 1:05 AM | Reply | Permalink
You are a fucking idiot Dean. The next teabagger who has a coherent understanding of what was done by whom will the first.
If you think putting these poeple in charge is going to fix things, you're out of your fucking mind.
I never figured you for a birther.
September 22, 2009 1:11 AM | Reply | Permalink
You didn't read past the first sentence, did you.
September 22, 2009 1:27 AM | Reply | Permalink
You think these people would support Obama if he went after the big banks? Rush and Beck would just tell them breaking up the big banks is "socialism," and they'd be milling about fantasizing about lynching Obama for doing that. They were just assembling to protest in favor of health care insurance company profits, for God's sake.
September 22, 2009 1:32 AM | Reply | Permalink
You called Dean Baker a "birther" and a "fucking idiot." What the fuck is wrong with you? How is that even remotely justified? (Hint: It's not.)
Why don't you go away? Take a break. You obviously need one. Your infantile temper tantrums are dragging TPM into the gutter.
September 22, 2009 1:47 AM | Reply | Permalink
In your case, I'm merely sick and tired of the anti-Obama rages by you and your cohort. I'm also sick of your smug sense of moral superiority.
And, in Dean's case, he completely fails to understand the nature of the opposition represented by the demonstrators of a couple of weeks ago. If he and you think that this pig-ignorant pseudo-populism, with racism at its core, is a movement progressives want to make common cause with, sputtering rage on my part seems like the only sensible reaction.
And I'm not going anywhere, so if you don't like it, take a fucking hike yourself. We've got twenty other commenters (at least) polluting this site with the same nonsense you're spouting.
September 22, 2009 1:25 PM | Reply | Permalink
Free country, free speech. Deal.
September 23, 2009 10:43 AM | Reply | Permalink
You're the one trying to police this site, not me.
Self-awareness isn't your strong suit, is it?
September 23, 2009 10:47 AM | Reply | Permalink
Again, "fucking idiot" is unjustified.
September 23, 2009 1:46 PM | Reply | Permalink
Dean's a mensch,
but I think you're right - let's not forget it's Dick Armey with his Freedom works who has wound up these angry little toy soldiers. Do you think Freedom Works wants to crush CHASE? I'd like to hunt down their president and torture him to death... (I've been the victim of Chase's clever manipulation of debit charges and their "Loans" of $35 to cover a $2 coffee, then another $35 for the $4 sandwich - precious hours before my direct deposit comes in)
...but I can't get a ticket to the ninth circle of hell to find the moffo.
Think about conversations you've had with Repubs. Everything they say centers around rationalizing some evil. The majority of synapses in the Republican brain are devoted to the practice of being assholes.
I've seen some other posters on TPM ponder a populist coalition of the reasonable and the unreasonable - but you couldn't get past the visceral revulsion. We're progressives and conservatives are our natural enemies for very good reasons.
September 24, 2009 2:13 PM | Reply | Permalink
And, yes, my language was over the top re Dean, whom I generally like and respect. However, I am very concerned with a growing meme on the left that we should be on the side of the teabaggers. The political blindness exhibited by such a sentiment is mind-boggling.
If John McCain (OK, maybe not the best example, given the wingnuts distrust of him), but let's say Jeb Bush, had undertaken the exact same actions that the Obama administration has, there would probably be grumbling among certain fringes of the right, i.e the Paulites. Beck and Limbaugh would not be beating the anti-administration drum daily, and 75,000 people would not have been demonstrating in Washington two weeks ago.
The teabagger movement's only animating principle is partisan opposition to liberals and Democrats, and to bring back to power the people who deserve the lion's share of the blame for our current problems. To pretend otherwise is delusional.
September 24, 2009 2:28 PM | Reply | Permalink
"the elite can be very very ignorant."
And you've proven it with this insane post.
September 22, 2009 1:13 AM | Reply | Permalink
I don't think it's insane at all. There is no doubt that when Obama pretty much went along with the Bush Wall Street bailouts that he lost some credibility with populists from both the left and right.
The first teabaggers were out protesting the stimulus, it's true. But those people were, months before, out protesting against the bailouts, alongside people on the left. For a little while there were strange bedfellows in the populist left and populist right. That ship has maybe sailed but we should look at why.
September 22, 2009 7:30 AM | Reply | Permalink
"But those people were, months before, out protesting against the bailouts, alongside people on the left."
You'll have to provide some proof for this, because I don't recall hearing anything about it and I have a very hard time believing these people were openly protesting anything Bush did, except his foolish attempt to reform immigration.
And my general point is that these yahoos have a blind, irrational hatred for all things Obama, liberal or Democratic. It's not about issues; it's about their perception of who is "Us" and who is "Them."
September 22, 2009 11:26 AM | Reply | Permalink
Check out MichaelMoore's new movie.
September 22, 2009 7:11 PM | Reply | Permalink
Off-topic but, Capitalism: A Love Story premieres tomorrow at The Angelika in NYC. I thought it would be sold out but was able to get tickets yesterday. I think some are still available for any TPM NYers who are interested in seeing it.
September 22, 2009 9:01 PM | Reply | Permalink
Bummer! Wish I had seen this comment before now. However, I finally posted my contact info under my profile, dijamo. Sorry it took so long.
September 23, 2009 1:54 PM | Reply | Permalink
According to Dave Weigel on NPR today, the whole teabag movement started with opposition to the stimulus bill. So I'll see your Moore and raise you a Weigel.
I'm not saying there weren't people grumbling about the bank bailout, left and right. But there simply wasn't the level of organization and vitriol inovled in the protests until we had a "liberal" Democrat in charge. To pretend the teabaggers getting all the attention are acting on principle and not merely following the tune of the Pied Piper of Skousen is giving them far more credit than they observe.
September 23, 2009 7:18 PM | Reply | Permalink
Anyone who doesn't realize that there is a great deal of anger in this country because the country's leaders, both Republican and Democratic, have bailed out the banks and bailed on the middle class is the intellectual equal of Glenn Beck, at best.
And the anger is justified.
The real enemies of America go to work on Wall Street every day, and their fifth column goes to work in the halls of Congress and the offices of lobbyists.
Democracy is dead (if it ever lived). Plutocratic corporatism IS the United States today.
September 22, 2009 2:10 AM | Reply | Permalink
Why do you have to be so right? I wish you weren't but you are.
It's becoming very obvious when Chris Dodd is on NPR just last night rationalizing his whoredom to the Pirates, I mean Big Banks.
Literally half the "profits" of big banks like Chase come from manipulating accounts and assessing 'fees' - as if stealing were some kind of "productive" activity.
Dick Durbin said it best, regarding the hallowed chamber of the Senate "They basically own the place."
September 24, 2009 2:18 PM | Reply | Permalink
The banks and insurance industries have totally corrupted congress, both republicans and democrats.
There is no real fix for this that falls inside any normal process. That is, the blogosphere and polling are clearly in favor of strong reforms but Washington isn't listening. So too, I strongly suspect those who have taken the time to write their reps are demanding strong reforms. People like Matt T. have shed a lot of common sense light on this and their writings are being ignored as well.
For persons with a working moral compass they can see how corrupt congress is. Some have just thrown up their hands and some are making a lot of noise.
IMHO the view from out here in America is one of disbelief. How banking and insurance can go off on a tangent with our regulators ignoring multiple warnings etc paints a dim picture. Even worse than what occurred is the fix from congress. Handing banks trillions of taxpayer dollars without the least of reforms in place, can only be described as lunacy. The same is true for healthcare reform. Single payer is the only real alternative to curtailing costs so we can compete on the global stage for sustainable job creation.
September 22, 2009 4:43 AM | Reply | Permalink
If you like what Marik calls "Plutocratic Corporatism" now, just wait untill Roberts, Alito, Scalia and company hand down the verdict that corporate contributions to political campaigns cannot be restrained.
September 22, 2009 6:17 PM | Reply | Permalink
To add to the thoughts of others --
September 24, 2009 12:08 AM | Reply | Permalink