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2012 and the Big Banks

Posted: 12/05/11 01:40 PM ET

One of the things I love about politics is the outsized credit people who are involved with presidential campaigns take for what happens. Don't get me wrong: competent campaigns are important, and a campaign with big flaws can easily blow it. In 1988, 2000, and 2004, a better Democratic candidate/campaign could have won those races -- and a worse Republican campaign would have lost them. The more competitive the underlying dynamics of the race, the more important a campaign operation is. But in general, presidential elections are decided on very big things.

The 1980 election broke for Reagan at the very end, but no field organizer I knew was predicting a Carter victory because of a disinterested Democratic base and a bad economy -- Reagan basically had to reassure swing voters he wasn't a radical, and if he succeeded at that the election was his no matter what Carter's campaign did. Once the economy started improving in 1984, Reagan was not going to be defeated. All of us Clinton campaign staffers like to pat ourselves on the back for our brilliance, but the first George Bush in '92 had the same problems as Jimmy Carter in '80, and it would have taken a bad campaign to mess that one up. In '96, once Clinton won the big showdown with Newt and the economy started improving, there was no way Bob Dole was going to beat Clinton absent some major screw-up. And while my friends in Obamaland deserve credit for running a great campaign -- especially for beating a truly formidable Hillary Clinton in the primary -- there was no way we were going to lose the 2008 general election after the September financial meltdown.

What I said above applies a lot more to general election presidential campaigns than to primaries, of course. On the other hand, it applies with special abundance to incumbent presidents running for re-election. It is almost always the underlying big dynamics, rather than particular campaign tactics, that determine whether a president gets re-elected: how the economy is doing, the big decisions made and crises that are dealt with, the kind of image the other party's nominee has coming out of their primary fight, etc. Because most political reporters tend to overrate the importance of the short-term tactical stuff campaigns do, the importance in particular of the big policy decisions a president makes and how they shape a race's underlying political dynamics tends to be vastly under-rated. Jimmy Carter's political coalition was shredded by his spurning Teddy Kennedy on health care reform, pushing deregulation so hard, and not lifting a finger to help labor get labor law reform passed; George H. W. Bush destroyed his political coalition by violating the no new taxes pledge; Bill Clinton went from 10 points down to 10 points up against Bob Dole when he won the fight against Gingrich in the 1995 budget showdown.

These big decisions are absolutely central to the re-election chances of an incumbent. Here's the interesting thing to note, though: some of these big decisions by a president are high-profile fights, telegraphed well in advance, like the Clinton-Newt showdown, but some of them aren't. Carter dissing Kennedy on health care in private conversations, or him quietly starting to deregulate key industries, were barely commented on by political reporters at the time, but they fundamentally changed the arc of the Clinton Presidency.

None of the political reporters are paying much attention to this because they are too busy covering the circus that is the GOP nomination fight, but we will soon come to one of the biggest moments for the Obama Presidency. The dynamic is playing out like this: between the fact that any Republican nominee will be close to Wall Street, and the fact that more people blame Wall Street for the bad economy than they do either political party, the Obama political team has rightly concluded that their best chance to win in a tough economy is to run against Wall Street. When you hear David Plouffe and David Axelrod talk about Wall Street these days, they sound a lot like an old populist wild man like me. And I think they are absolutely right: this President's re-election path runs through taking on Wall Street head on. The 99% vs. 1% message scares the hell out of Republicans and Wall Street PR firms.

To pull off a populist challenge to Wall Street, though, an administration that has been seen as soft on Wall Street has to put its money where its mouth is. After embracing and vigorously defending TARP; after appointing Geithner, re-appointing Bernanke, and not appointing Elizabeth Warren; after the shocking profits and bonuses to the bailed-out bankers that so ticked off the American public; after the disappointments of the HAMP and HARP programs in helping homeowners; after the Suskind book; after so few top bankers went to jail or even lost their jobs -- fair or not, these events have made this administration seem pro-Wall St to many voters. The president needs something big to establish his cred as tough on Wall Street. But fortunately, the thing he needs is right in front of him: the settlement talks with the bankers.

The basic argument right now is that some policy people in the White House, along with certain state attorneys general like Tom Miller, believe that the settlement talks with the banks should have a very modest and narrow architecture. Such a deal would focus on a settlement around a narrow set of legal violations related mostly to robo-signing with a relatively small amount of money coming from the big banks (in the $20-25 billion range, which would cover less than 5 percent of the problem created by the bubble these banks created) to settle those legal liabilities. Administration officials in background conversations with me admit that this would be very modest, but argue it would be a "model" for future settlements on other issues where the banks have broken the law.

The other underlying argument for a small, narrow settlement is that the banks are in deep trouble again (never spoken in public because Tim Geithner's public line is that the big banks are in good shape). Between the continued black hole of their housing market assets, the legal troubles the big banks have created for themselves (which really are deep, and are hanging over them like the sword of Damocles), and the problems in Europe, the big banks are in trouble again. Geithner is continuing to push the line all over the administration that there can't be a bigger, broader, tougher settlement with the big banks because we can't do anything to endanger them.

New York AG Eric Schneiderman, Delaware AG Beau Biden, and a wide coalition of labor, community, consumer, and online groups are pushing a different kind of architecture for a deal: that investigations be done over the wider array of legal violations the big banks have likely consistently engaged, where the entire leverage of the federal government and AGs willing to investigate be brought to bear. This kind of a deal could mean real legal accountability for the banks, and could force them to do several hundred billion dollars in mortgage write downs, which would go a long way toward covering the underwater mortgage crisis in America and stabilizing the disastrous housing sector. This kind of settlement would be a major boost to the economy, boosting home prices/sales and putting real money in the form of lower house payments into millions of homeowners pockets. This coalition also argues that Fannie and Freddie need to be held accountable and forced to write down millions of underwater mortgages as well, which may have to be done through legal action -- i.e. suing them -- if the companies don't respond to administration pressure.

Politically, this kind of a broad-based settlement is a homerun. Standing up to Wall Street, using the power of the presidency to force Wall Street bankers into giving up ill-gotten gains and putting the money into middle-class families' pocketbooks? TARP and bonuses and Suskind could be yesterday's news with headlines like that.

Here's the critical question at this moment in time: would being tougher on the big banks be the wrong move when they are once again teetering? Here's the ultimate irony: showing these banks some tough love would help them overall instead of hurting them. A broad settlement that would resolve the widening array of lawsuits that investors and homeowners are bringing against these banks, and stabilize the housing market by reducing negative equity and the need for millions of foreclosures, would settle down the run-on-the-banks rumblings going through the markets right now about the two biggest holders of bad mortgages, Bank of America and Wells Fargo. Remember this key point as well: writing down mortgages is not like cutting a check; it has to do with the long -term money coming in, not short-term cash flow. Writing down mortgages would do nothing to endanger banks' ability to survive in the short run. The reasons those banks' executives don't want to do this has to do with short-term profit, bonuses, and ego: these banks have a far bigger "book value" given the way they are allowed to do their accounting. They can have their accountants value all those homes at their peak value during the height of the bubble, even though everyone knows those homes will not get back to that value anytime in the foreseeable future, and even though more foreclosures mean less money for the banks over the next 20 years along with housing values continuing to decline. If the settlement boosts the housing market, means fewer foreclosures, and resolves thousands of present and future lawsuits, it will help these banks survive over the long haul even if it means the book value, profits, and bonuses over the short-term are lower.

The other reason the big bank execs are resisting a bigger settlement is that they are used to getting whatever they want whenever they want it from government officials. They thought they could get a blanket immunity deal for a relatively tiny amount of money given the legal hot water they put themselves in, and now they are having to come to grips that AGs in several of the most important states, along with other key political players, aren't willing to go along for the ride. If they get a narrow settlement that doesn't include the AGs of the two states where all the securitization corporate papers were filed (California and Delaware), and those AGs go forward with investigations and lawsuits, their banks will be the ones who suffer.

That judge in New York, Jed Rakoff, who ruled against the SEC's sweetheart deal with Citigroup last week was speaking to what most people in this country think about the cozy relationship between Wall Street and D.C. He said about the settlement that "it was neither fair, nor reasonable, nor adequate, nor in the public interest." He was right about that deal, and the same words will be applied in spades if the administration cuts an SEC-Citi style of deal with the bankers. Getting $25 billion in write downs in exchange for wiping away a bunch of the fraud and perjury charges off the bankers' books, when the mortgage problem the bankers created with their pump and dump fraud is 20 times that big, will do nothing to help the economy and would send the opposite signal that the Obama team needs to send right now: that they are willing to stand up to Wall Street on behalf of the 99 percent. Getting a settlement at least 10 to 20 times that big, with the banks actually being investigated and held accountable for their wrongdoing would be a stunning achievement. It would be a dramatic boost for the economy, and allow the Obama campaign to take on Wall Street in the 2012 election with credibility, having delivered real benefits to the American public.

In a conversation a few weeks ago, one of the policy people inside the administration -- one of the people working on these bigger settlement talks -- actually pointed to the SEC-Citigroup deal as an example of the administration holding the big banks accountable. That very well-meaning policy person doesn't get the political stakes in all this, or how the reaction of people with the views of Judge Rakoff -- which is to say, most people -- would spread like wildfire with another sweetheart deal for the bankers. Fortunately, I think a lot of people at the White House and Justice Department are starting to understand that this is most definitely not the way most of us following the issue see things. Judge Rakoff's words apply painfully well: it wouldn't be fair, or reasonable, or adequate, or in the public interest. How the administration deals with this issue will be one of the biggest sleeper issues in how 2012 turns out. Let's hope, for their sake and the nation's economy, that they do the right thing.

 

Follow Mike Lux on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ProgressiveLux

One of the things I love about politics is the outsized credit people who are involved with presidential campaigns take for what happens. Don't get me wrong: competent campaigns are important, and a c...
One of the things I love about politics is the outsized credit people who are involved with presidential campaigns take for what happens. Don't get me wrong: competent campaigns are important, and a c...
 
 
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Realist2011
beware false profits....
05:59 PM on 12/06/2011
The big problem for Obama now is that I (and probably a few more) don't trust him. He needs to make a very tough decision. Is he going to fight primarily to get re-elected, or is he going to fight to get Wall Street and the banks taken down. Derivatives should be illegal. Make that a cornerstone of his actions and accept nothing less. If every time he's confronted with an obstinate GOP position, he caves as he has been doing, then it's not really a negotiation. It's called capitulation. The only difference I see right now between Obama being re-elected and a GOP president is bragging rights for the party.

"Man up" Mr. President. Start dictating what needs to pass to save America. If you get re-elected, great. If you don't at least you could point to the fact that you made an attempt to save America. If the GOP fights you, and they will, just know that their "Holy Grail" is the Bush tax cuts. That should be your current centerpiece, as in.....

"Sorry boys and girls, but there will be no extension of those tax cuts, and no more deductions or loopholes for the wealthy. Taxes are going up. I will veto every bill that comes across my desk until we get the work done. Have a nice day".

When it comes to Congress, remember............ABTI-2012 (Anyone But The Incumbent in 2012)
nothingchanges
too soon old, too late smart
12:01 PM on 12/06/2011
IMPO...........most politicians are too busy chasing contributions, to address the concerns of voters, and not without good reason.

In American politics, the candidate that spends the most...............wins. At least that is the historical evidence in over 9 out of 10 cases.

This was before "Citizens United",

In 2004 - 98% of PAC's disclosed their sources of contributions, in the 2010 election cycle that number was down to 32% (Where Republican PACS outspent Democrats 5 to 1)

http://stanfordreview.org/article/elections-in-the-wake-of-citizens-united/

When one side gets a five to one advantage, of the one resource that determines who wins?

Democracy was nice while it lasted, welcome to American Fascism, courtesy of a bought a paid for Supreme Court, and a group of "public servants" that wish to become our masters.
10:13 AM on 12/06/2011
The Street hangs around Obama's neck like an albatross. How do you run against Wall Street when your administration IS Wall Street?
09:53 AM on 12/06/2011
I can no longer hold my breath waiting for accountability and actions to fix the mess, but I will definetly not hold my tongue if they force that sweetheart deal on the 50 AGs.

Actively concealing and effectively pardoning the criminality they refuse to prosecute is worse than doing nothing.

In any case, a lot of the profit ended up with the hedge funds not the banks, so where are the settlement talks with them? Bank shareholders eating all these losses is also not fair.
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jcaunter
Profile: schizoid, INTJ, IQ145
03:22 AM on 12/06/2011
Standing up to Wall Street might be a good political decision for getting the people to approve of Obama, but it would also show his owners on Wall Street that he is not their 100% willing and eager tool. Therefore it's not going to happen. Period.

I expect a lot of vague noises and hints though about how Obama really, really means to get tough on the bankers and financiers, if only he's given another term to get it right this time though.

Ron Paul 2012
11:42 PM on 12/05/2011
Martha goes to jail.. and she did not effect my 401k (and frankly did nothing wrong). the economy collapses and we all lost 40% and more.. and the country is crippled. Economically. And no one goes to jail.
10:18 PM on 12/05/2011
btw when asked about why nobody went to jail Giethner also recently indicated using the word
"wait" as though it;s not as though nothing is in the works,
09:58 PM on 12/05/2011
"But in general, presidential elections are decided on very big things."

Oh Really?
== Isn't Reagan said to have won because he pointed out that he paid for the microphone?
== And isn't Gore said to have lost because he sighed in response to GWB mornonic statements?

As a policy wonk I detest the dishonest, destructive lie filled phony game of politics under the Repubublicans. And the shoddy PR people in the Democratic side who consistantly fail to counter
republican lies and miserably fail to educate the electorate about what has been going on how
The Republicans destroy OUR Government when in charge, how they wracked up 87% of the
debt, that their is nothing Conservative about these radical right wing totalitarians, and fail to
connect the dots about how almost every tragedy we endure today is the direct result of the
implementation of Republican ideologies. This not to mention all of the Democratic achievements
on behalf of WeThePeople!

A good campaign is an honest and educational one! Should include such things as that:
The So called Obama Care reduces Health Insurance Company (the middle men's) Profit
Margins on every healthcare dollar from 33% to 15%. And how about reminding the middle
Class among the electorate got an Obama Tax Cut or that most Republicans voted to
privatize Medicare!
10:35 PM on 12/05/2011
Addendum:

...and tried to privatize Social Security the last time they had the White House.

But we have gotted to a terrible place in which a majority of voters are incredibly dummed down.
No idea how our goverment or even business works, and therefore increasingly vulenerable to lunzien washing of brains.
07:56 PM on 12/05/2011
President Obama’s position on the legality of financial sector actions during the crisis has always been perfectly clear. In his appearance on Jay Leno's March 19, 2009 'Tonight Show', Leno asked about the about the financial crisis: “shouldn't somebody go to jail?â€. Obama replied: "Here's the dirty little secret, though. Most of the stuff that got us into trouble was perfectly legal." You can watch watch the video and read the full transcript here:
www.huffin­gtonpost.c­om/2009/03­/20/obama-­on-tonight­-show-wit_­n_177206.h­tml\

In his October 2011 Press Conference­, Obama restated his position:
“on the issue of prosecutio­ns on Wall Street, one of the biggest problems about the collapse of Lehmans and the subsequent financial crisis and the whole subprime lending fiasco is that a lot of that stuff wasn’t necessaril­y illegal, it was just immoral or inappropri­ate or reckless.†The transcript is available on the official White House web site here:
http://www­.whitehous­e.gov/the-­press-offi­ce/2011/10­/06/news-c­onference-­president
06:45 PM on 12/05/2011
Obama should kick off his press conference announcing this campaign against the big banks by announcing he's booting Geithner, whose conflict of interest as a Wall St. insider is obvious to even the most casual observer of the 2008 financial meltdown, on the grounds of simple ineptitude. Geithner serves at the President's pleasure so any justification for this isn't really required, but the signal sent would speak volumes.
07:59 PM on 12/05/2011
This is what Obama actually said in his October 2011 Press Conference­:
“on the issue of prosecutio­ns on Wall Street, one of the biggest problems about the collapse of Lehmans and the subsequent financial crisis and the whole subprime lending fiasco is that a lot of that stuff wasn’t necessaril­y illegal, it was just immoral or inappropri­ate or reckless.â€
The transcript is available on the official White House web site here:
http://www­.whitehous­e.gov/the-­press-offi­ce/2011/10­/06/news-c­onference-­president
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Footwarrior
Progressive Apparatchik
09:48 AM on 12/06/2011
Some of the stuff was in fact illegal. For example the false material statements made to stockholders by Lehman Brothers executives. The Constitution doesn't prohibit criminal prosecution of corporate executives, but our legal system seems to act as if it did.
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EHenry
Author of the new book - How We Got Swindled by Wa
05:57 PM on 12/05/2011
The bank CEOs must be held accountable, along with their team of executives. They well knew that all the complex financial instruments that they totally misrepresented to investors were based on the Big Lie "Collateralized": with CDSs (virtual value) or trenches (tranches) of worse than sub-prime debt to "guarantee" mortgages fraudulently entered into by banks with no regard for underwriting standards? Bankers did this for huge fees and bonuses at the expense of our economy and safety of our financial system. REMEMBER Wall Street is now Bank Holding Company Land, investment banks are now called banks. But they don't lend - just continue to contrive financial innovation for fees on a platform of grotesque billions of free Fed funds. Banks don't tank if their execs do. Banks don't go to jail. Washington needs to pull its collective head out of Grover's ass. If the White house doesn't get this yet - with appointments like the conflicted and surreptitious Geithner, Mary Schapiro and all the vanished economic advisors, the 99% does.. Listen to the OWS conversation. Note it makes bad guys nervous! The 99%, own the truth - which may be better than money from lobbyist Jack - now singing about redemption. Obama must ACT IN GOOD FAITH - jail the culprits AND HEAR THE 99%. He needs to hear the roar of the people, and realize the Fed has been outed - SEVEN TRILLION EXTRA FROM OUR TREASURY WITHOUT ANY OVERSIGHT! To know more about how this happened: www.howwegotswindled.com
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John Ridgway
Chicago Novelist, Blogger, radio/tv
07:47 PM on 12/23/2011
I enjoy your work, and saw you on CLTV in Chicago today, but this comment throws me... what do you mean by 'BETTER THAN MONEY FROM LOBBYIST JACK -- NOW SINGING ABOUT REDEMPTION? If possible, thank you for the answer.
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Dnlmsstch
too much for so few words
05:56 PM on 12/05/2011
The best solution for this problem is to while the talks are going on appoint a federal special prosecutor (retired federal judge or someone that has experience in dealing with financial crimes), give them an unlimited budget, a team of FBI financial investigators, the right to subpoena both government documents (Treasury and FED) and financial institutions that received bail out money, and the authority to independently bring cases against the banks. Instruct the prosecutor to go after not just the institutions but the people that worked at the institutions criminally. At the same time you negotiate a civil settlement.
03:12 PM on 12/05/2011
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2011/12/james-stewart-provides-pr-on-behalf-of-of-judge-rakoff-bombshell-on-citisec-285-million-mortgage-settlement.html

Khuzami Against Judge Rakoff on Proposed $285 Million Citi CDO Settlement

Tom Adams, an attorney and former monoline executive, provided considerable input into this post.

There is nothing more useful to people in authority than when a writer with an established brand name does their propagandizing for them.

Harvard Law graduate and Pulitzer Prize winning author James B. Stewart penned a remarkable little piece in the New York Times over the weekend. Titled “Few Avenues for Justice in the Case Against Citi,†it contends that Judge Jed Rakoff’s ruling against a proposed $285 million SEC settlement with Citigroup over a $1 billion CDO (Class V Funding III) that delivered $700 million in losses to investors and $160 million in profits to Citi is misguided. Stewart argues, based on “some reporting,†that the SEC is unlikely to do better in the trial that Rakoff has forced on the agency by nixing the settlement.

We will look at the caliber of Stewart’s “reporting†in due course, since his article reads like dictation from the SEC’s head of enforcement Robert Khuzami (the SEC’s interests are aligned with Citi’s in wanting the settlement to go through). Stewart either did not read or chose to ignore critical information in the underlying complaints, which the Rakoff ruling cites, and he also overlooked relevant cases.
03:06 PM on 12/05/2011
Please read abut a man behind MA AG's decision to go after "too big to fail" -
http://boston67.blog.com/peoples-hero/

and here he's on the 60min:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032619/#45526910