podesta-emails
[big campaign] New Huff Post from Creamer- Follow the Money
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If You’re Deciding Who to Support –or Whether to Vote: Follow the Money
In the movie version of the story of Watergate -- “All the President’s Men”
– the Nixon administration source who met Bob Woodward in the
underground garage to provide him clues -- “Deep Throat” -- famously tells Woodward
to “follow the money.” Apparently those lines were never uttered in real
life, but it’s good advice in politics nonetheless.
The other day, California’s Arnold Schwarzenegger – with whom I rarely
agree – said something that should be repeated over and over between now and
the mid-term elections. Schwarzenegger was referring to oil company
financial support for California’s Proposition 23 that would shelve the state’
s four-year-old climate legislation until the state’s unemployment rate
hits 5.5% when he said:
“Does anyone really believe that these companies, out of the goodness of
their black oil hearts, are spending millions and millions of dollars to
protect jobs?” He continued. “This is like Eva Braun writing a kosher
cookbook. It’s not about jobs at all, ladies and gentlemen. It’s about their
ability to pollute and thus protect their profits.”
Huge new Republican “issue advocacy” groups are using secret corporate
donations throughout the country to savage Democratic candidates. They are
joined by the Chamber of Commerce – which is apparently using money from
foreign corporations with interests in outsourcing American jobs to run ads
that attack Democrats as “job killers.”
By their own admission, eighty-five percent of funds directed to
candidates from Wall Street’s major trade group is going to Republicans.
It doesn’t take a great political analysis to understand that these huge
corporations aren’t investing millions to attack some candidates and elect
others out of some disinterested concern for the public welfare – or out of a
concern for the “future of the American economy.” Wall Street has never
been concerned with the “overall economy” and certainly not with middle
class jobs. It has only one concern: its own ability to make huge amounts of
money. It does it by siphoning off what novelist Tom Wolfe called the “
golden crumbs.” Wall Street finds scores of innovative ways to shave off
slivers of more and more financial transactions. As a result, the financial
sector has grown so enormous that has it has fattened like a giant tumor
on the American political-economy.
The denizens of Wall Street couldn’t have cared less that by concentrating
a bigger and bigger share of the nation’s wealth in fewer and fewer hands
they were undermining the foundation of true long-term growth: the economic
demand provided by middle class consumers who could afford to buy the
economy’s goods and services.
Wall Street – and all of the outsourcers and buy-out artists – have waged
relentless war on the American middle class without any concern at all for
over all “job creation.” They would just as soon fire you or outsource
you as look at you. They had only one thought: stuffing their own pockets.
Now they have the audacity to attack Democrats as “job killers?” If you
believe that, I have some very nice swamp land in Florida to sell you.
By electing President Obama and the Democratic Congress, everyday people
fought back against this merciless assault on the American middle class. As a
result of Democratic victories in 2008, President Obama and the Democrats
passed an unprecedented array of legislation to rein in the power of the
insurance companies, big Wall Street banks, and oil companies. It is not
surprising that they did not willingly accept that kind of attack lying down.
They have fought back ferociously – trying in vain to stop health care
reform, Wall Street reform, the regulation of oil drilling , investments in
clean energy that threatened the oil company’s energy monopoly – and the
list goes on. Of course, they actually succeeded at stopping major clean
energy legislation – and they want to keep it that way.
Now they have orchestrated a major counter-offensive in an attempt to
overthrow Democratic control of the House and Senate and stop the President from
continuing the assault on their ability to place their own interests above
the interest of ordinary middle class Americans.
The real question before the American people in next week’s mid-terms is
whether Wall Street, the Chamber of Commerce, the foreign corporations, the
insurance companies and oil industry will be able to put one over on middle
class Americans.
Through massive amounts of unregulated advertising once again allowed by
the Supreme Court’s Citizens United case they have tried to convince
everyday voters that up is down and black is white. They have argued that
government restraints on their recklessness and greed actually costs ordinary
people their jobs and livelihood, when it is patently obvious to anyone who
looks even casually at the economic history of the last two decades that just
the opposite is true.
Their main tool in this mendacious attempt to convince people that what is
bad for them is good for them has been simple repetition. If you repeat
often enough that health care reform has “death panels” or that preventing
Wall Street from running wild will “kill jobs,” some percentage of the
population will believe it.
If everyday people pay attention only to the misinformation embedded in
their thirty-second spots, they will succeed. They will not succeed if
enough everyday Americans are convinced to follow the money.
Most Americans instinctively understand one thing very well. There may be
some people who actually donate huge sums of money to political candidates
for altruistic or purely ideological reasons. But they are the
exception. Most big PACs and donors to these new “issue groups” hope to get
something very concrete in return.
Of course you might say, what about labor unions, don’t they want
something in return too?
Yes they do. Labor unions hope to get outcomes that tend to benefit most
Americans – a higher minimum wage, labor law reform that makes it easier
for middle class people to organize in the work place, better safety on the
job, and health care for everyone. They want those things because they are
responsive to the millions of everyday Americans that are their members.
But the interests of Wall Street banks, insurance companies and Big Oil do
not flow to such a widespread constituency. In fact, their interests are
very particular and often lie in direct opposition to the public welfare. It
made a lot of sense for those Wall Street speculators to want to be free
to make reckless investment bets, take home millions and lay off the down
side to the rest of us. But that wasn’t so good for us.
It makes sense for big oil companies to stop investment in alternative
energy sources, since the price we pay them for their oil will go higher and
higher the more we are dependent on their scarcer and scarcer fossil fuels.
It makes sense for insurance companies to oppose the new health insurance
reform law that requires them to pay 80% to 85% of the premium dollars they
receive in medical care, since that will restrict the amounts they can pay
to have armies of bureaucrats to reject claims, or CEO salaries or profits
to their owners on Wall Street. But from our standpoint, it obviously
makes no sense at all that health insurance premiums have have been allowed to
increase three times faster than wages or that we pay out 50% more per
person on health care costs than any other country on earth, and get results
that rank 37th internationally.
To find out whether a candidate is for you or against you, all you have to
do is follow the money. If candidates are backed by big Wall Street
banks, insurance companies and Big Oil they’re not on your side.
If the corporate interests are successful, one of the hardest things to
take will be the idea of a bunch of smug CEO’s, Wall Street traders and
advertising men, chuckling over their martini’s at their club on the Upper East
Side in Manhattan, about what chumps middle class Americans must be – and
how easy it was to sell them a bill of goods.
Don’t let a bunch of Wall Street sharpies and corporate CEO’s play you
for a chump.
They want to convince you that, since the economy hasn’t yet emerged from
the ditch they put it in, you should throw out the incumbents and hand them
back control over the American economy.
Better yet, they figure, why not make you so sick of politics that you
just stay home so they can make off with everything they want – out of the
pockets of middle class Americans – while you sleep through the election and
never know what hit you.
Don’t let them.
Go walk precincts for your local Democratic candidates, make phone calls,
reach into your jeans and make another donation – and for your own sake,
VOTE.
Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist, and
author of the recent book: “Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win,”
available on _amazon.com_
(http://www.amazon.com/Listen-Your-Mother-Straight-Progressives/dp/0979585295/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1206567141&sr=8-1
) .
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