Obama’s embrace of bailout wins favor on Wall Street
By Patrick Martin
25 September 2008

Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama has seized upon the
financial crisis to increase his support within the US financial elite
by giving all-out backing to a federal bailout of Wall Street and
providing assurances that an Obama administration will be a reliable
and ruthless defender of corporate interests.

While past Democratic presidential candidates have employed populist
demagogy, like Al Gore’s rhetoric in 2000 about defending “the people”
against “the powerful,” Obama has carefully avoided such language in
his response to the economic crisis. Instead, he has called for
bipartisan unity to insure passage of bailout legislation along the
lines proposed by the Bush administration.

“The clock is ticking on this crisis,” he told a campaign gathering in
Florida Wednesday. “We have to act swiftly but we also have to get it
right. And that means everyone—Republicans and Democrats, and the
White House and Congress—must work together to come up with a
solution...”

He added that it was wrong to expect Congress to “hand this
administration or any administration a $700 billion check with no
conditions and no oversight when a lack of oversight in Washington and
on Wall Street is exactly what got us into this mess.” In other words,
with the addition a few cosmetic changes to the Bush administration
proposal, the $700 billion check for Wall Street should be delivered.

Obama has repeatedly called for bipartisan unity to work out bailout
legislation, while declaring that he would scale back or postpone any
plans for increased domestic spending because the necessary resources
would have to be made available for Wall Street.

A key supporter of Obama, billionaire investor Warren Buffett, in an
interview Wednesday with CNBC gave unqualified support to the Bush
bailout plan and urged that the next administration retain Henry
Paulson as treasury secretary.

The Republican candidate John McCain, facing sagging poll numbers, has
sought to strike a more populist pose while disassociating himself
with the Bush administration. At one point he called for limiting CEO
pay to $400,000.

In an interview with the CBS News program “60 Minutes” broadcast
Sunday, he described the mushrooming of mortgage-backed securities and
derivates as a “Ponzi scheme” and declared that “the Bush
administration has failed” in its responsibility to regulate the
financial system.

McCain campaign officials even denied Tuesday that he was committed to
supporting the bailout, suggesting that his support depended on the
final shape of the deal between the Bush administration and the
Democratic-controlled Congress.

McCain’s populist demagogy, combined with Obama’s assurances to Wall
Street, has elicited a series of critical commentaries in the press
directed against the Republican candidate. A Wall Street Journal
editorial declared that McCain “doesn’t understand what’s happening on
Wall Street any better than Barack Obama does.”

Conservative columnist George Will, in a column titled “McCain Loses
His Head,” wrote: “Under the pressure of the financial crisis, one
presidential candidate is behaving like a flustered rookie playing in
a league too high. It is not Barack Obama.”

The Washington Post published an editorial Wednesday declaring, “Mr.
McCain has come off so far as more impulsive than Mr. Obama and more
given to showy gestures than serious policymaking.” The editorial
described Obama as “appropriately prudent” and “more statesmanlike,”
and praised his declaration that he would hold back spending plans to
pay for the bailout.

There has also been growing commentary in the media concerning ties
between key McCain advisers and the two failed mortgage giants, Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac, which were taken over by the government earlier
this month. Articles have appeared in the New York Times, the
Washington Post, Bloomberg News and Newsweek magazine documenting
hundreds of thousands of dollars in retainers and fees paid by the two
mortgage firms to the lobbying firm in which McCain’s campaign
manager, Rick Davis, is a partner, and to William Timmons, the
longtime lobbyist who is planning the transition arrangements for a
McCain administration.

These exposés have undermined McCain’s efforts to portray himself as a
scourge of lobbyists and “special interests,” and blunted his attacks
on Obama for similar connections to Fannie Mae executives. The McCain
campaign has been visibly shaken by these reports, initially
denouncing the Times account, then falling silent when the press
interest in the issue became widespread.

A series of opinion polls published Tuesday night and early Wednesday
showed that Obama has taken a significant lead both nationally and in
key states needed for victory in the Electoral College.

A Washington Post/ABC News poll found that Obama had opened up a nine
point lead, 52 percent to 43 percent, the largest for either candidate
since the primary season concluded. A similar poll conducted for Fox
Television found a six point Obama lead, 45 percent to 39 percent.
This was the largest Democratic margin in polling for that network,
which is the principal media voice of the Republican right.

When Obama approached the Republican campaign Wednesday morning with a
proposal to issue a joint statement in support of some form of bailout
legislation—pursuing his campaign for a bipartisan agreement—McCain
responded by trying to shift course abruptly and recover his standing
with the financial elite by presenting himself as even more committed
to the bailout than his Democratic opponent.

He announced Wednesday afternoon that he was suspending his campaign
to focus on the financial emergency, and called on Obama to do
likewise. McCain shut down his media advertising, called off campaign
events scheduled this week, and said that the first presidential
debate, set for Friday at the University of Mississippi, should be
postponed.

Obama rejected the suggestion that Friday’s debate be pushed back. But
he accepted the offer by President Bush, announced in a nationally
televised speech Wednesday night, to attend a meeting at the White
House with McCain and congressional leaders of both parties.

Obama and McCain also issued a joint statement urging a bipartisan
approach to the crisis, suggesting unspecified changes in the Bush
plan, but concluding that “the effort to protect the American economy
must not fail.” The statement characterized the handout of hundreds of
billions of taxpayer dollars to the richest people in the country as a
boon to the American people, declaring, “This is a time to rise above
politics for the good of the country.”

The maneuvering between the candidates takes place in the context of
an overall agreement between McCain and Obama that safeguarding the
financial interests of Wall Street takes precedence over all other
considerations. The actual policy differences between the Republican
and Democratic candidates are miniscule. Neither advocates that those
who caused the crisis—the billionaire speculators and bankers—should
pay for it.


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