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Mary Bottari

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Chicago to Wall Street: Pay Us Back!

Posted: 10/12/11 10:49 AM ET

While the Occupy Wall Street movement is sweeping the country and peaceful arrests are mounting, Chicagoans took to the streets this week to hold the big banks accountable for crashing the economy and to demand city, state and federal policies that work for working families.

For many, the goal was stopping the foreclosure mill, creating jobs, and telling the big banks it was time to pay us back for the $4.7 trillion bailout. For others, the demands focused on the fallout from the financial crisis, including contentious contract negotiations with the administration of Chicago Mayor Rahm Emmanuel.

For most, the range of issues were inextricably linked.

Emanuel Goes to Bat for the Big Banks

At the height of the financial crisis in March of 2009, a new president was grappling with an unprecedented meltdown. Huddled with his closest advisers, his instincts were sound.

As described in Ron Suskind's riveting new book, Confidence Men, Obama wanted to restructure the largest insolvent banks to "strike a blow for prudence" and "change the reckless behavior of Wall Street to show accountability flows in both directions."

His economic advisers chewed it over, discussing the pros (Larry Summers and Christina Romer) and cons (Tim Geithner) of breaking up a big bank, but when the President left the room for a moment, his chief of staff spoke up.

"Listen, its not going to fucking happen. We have no fuckin' credibility. So give it up. The job of everyone in this room is to move the President, when he gets back, to a solution that works," said Rahm Emanuel. Emanuel's last foray into the global economy was as President Clinton's point man on NAFTA, a trade agreement that cost the United States some 700,000 manufacturing jobs.

After this display of tough love and a subsequent trillion dollar bailout, Wall Street bonuses are bouncing back. The U.S. economy, however, remains in a in a dead stall with zero job creation, massive foreclosures and rapidly rising poverty.

Take Back Chicago!

Now Rahm Emanuel is Mayor of Chicago his team is working hard to balance budget deficits on the back of public workers. Rahm and his CEO of Chicago Public Schools (really, that's his title) want the teachers union to forgo a contractual raise and do 30 percent more time for the same salary.

Why create sweatshops abroad when you can do it at home?

On Monday, 10,000 Chicagoans marched in the streets to tell Emanuel and his friends on Wall Street that enough is enough. Under the rubric of "Take back Chicago," community, labor and faith groups rallied for jobs, homes and schools. Occupy Chicago voted to endorse the march and were smart to target the big money at a futures trading conference.

While a banner fluttered off the Michigan Bridge declaring "Wall Street: Steals from the 99% to Give to the Rich. Let's Take it Back!" a merry band of protesters from National People's Action dressed as Robin Hood kayaked up the Chicago River chanting "We are the 99%!" within earshot of the annual meeting Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA). The MBA represents the big banks that created the housing bubble, crashed the economy and are now working hard to speed every foreclosure.

"The Crimes Against the Working People Have Mounted Up"

While some media pundits have complained that the protests breaking out across the nation lack a unified theme, former U.S. Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI) hears the protesters loud and clear.

"The crimes against the working people of this country have mounted up... This is not a time for cautious politics. This is a time to fundamentally identify the crooked way this country is being run, the corruption of Wall Street, the ridiculous notion that very wealthy people are saying that they shouldn't have to help solve our problems. Its time to take it up a few notches," Feingold told Keith Olbermann.

Feingold and the 99ers know all these issues are interrelated. Wall Street crashed the economy, killing jobs, tanking state and local tax revenues. Congressional leaders, weighing huge cuts in Social Security, Medicare and other important programs, and mayor's like Emanuel should be taking it out of the hide of the 1% before asking the 99% to make more sacrifices.

Tax Wall Street & Start with the Chicago Merc

The folks in Chicago are kicking it up a notch. But they are not just complaining, they are also laying down some concrete plans on how to create jobs and rebuild our economy.

The Chicago Political Economy Group (CPEG) released a plan to create 40,000 jobs in the Chicago area. The jobs plan is funded by a tiny $.25 speculation fee, to be paid by every buyer and seller of derivatives contracts on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Chicago Board Options Exchange. The group estimates that the tiny tax will generate nearly $1.4 billion per year in direct funding for jobs.

Similarly, a growing list of groups is campaigning for the United States reinstate a financial transaction tax on Wall Street trading. A diverse array of groups including, the Rebuild the American Dream Movement, Americans for Financial Reform, AFL-CIO, SEIU, the National Nurses Union, and the New Bottom Line Coalition (over 1,000 faith and housing groups) are throwing their weight behind the idea of a federal financial transaction tax to force Wall Street to help pay for the damage it has done to the economy. Such a tax would raise an estimated $176 billion in revenue each year.

Internationally the issue is rapidly gaining traction, with the EU proposing a 10 cent per $100 dollars in stock trades and the G-20 set to take up the issue in November.

Click here to send a simple message to Congress that enough is enough. NO CUTS, TAX WALL STREET!

 
While the Occupy Wall Street movement is sweeping the country and peaceful arrests are mounting, Chicagoans took to the streets this week to hold the big banks accountable for crashing the economy and...
While the Occupy Wall Street movement is sweeping the country and peaceful arrests are mounting, Chicagoans took to the streets this week to hold the big banks accountable for crashing the economy and...
 
 
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11:26 AM on 10/19/2011
Half of the items listed in the Total Bailout link are actually Federal Reserve programs and not applicable to the American taxpayer.
Many of the so called BAILOUT items are actually programs FOR American citizens and not corporations. ( why is HAMP on the list?)

Why dont authors like this ever speak of American shopping and credit habits?
11:23 AM on 10/19/2011
WHAT 4.7 trillion dollar bailout?
Didnt TARP return a profit?
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Realist1965
12:13 AM on 10/13/2011
The big banks did not create the housing bubble. The libs in Congress did by mandating the banks lend to bad credits. Bush's regime tried to undo this - on tape if anyone wants to research - but Frank and Co. countered with all kinds of racist accusations. Banks did what govertnment made them do, real estate and mortgages collapsed, and now we blame the banks for what they were made to do? Something is seriously missing. Including the $77M Raines took from Fannie before bailing.
01:35 PM on 10/12/2011
Protesters can not be honest and admit they want socialism or communism as an end. Why not? If the protesters are so confident that they support the 99% as they say, why not be honest?
01:41 PM on 10/12/2011
Sure. I want Socialism for America. SOCIALISM FOR ALL AMERICANS AND NOT JUST FOR THE RICH.
01:33 PM on 10/12/2011
I would like to think if some of the uninformed voters in Chicago did research about Emanuel they would not have voted for him. Instead so many people depended on the Chicago media, who became Emanuel's own p.r. arm, to tell them who to vote for. Im not sure would have done a whole lot better with Chico, but he would have been the lesser of two evils!!
12:47 PM on 10/12/2011
yep, time to do a recall election.....

I am in ....we do not need Carol Baun, Chico....we need a regular person.

Time to get rid of all the dam altermen too......they are all politically joined at the hip