In the eye of the storm
New York City workers condemn Wall Street bailout

By Sandy English
6 October 2008

The efforts of the Democrats and Republicans to rescue the financial
oligarchy on Wall Street with hundreds of billions of dollars of
public money have provoked a wave of revulsion and hostility from
workers across the United States.

Some of the strongest reactions have been seen in New York City, the
home of Wall Street. This is the most unequal city in the country,
where millions of working people live cheek-by-jowl with the handful
of billionaires and multimillionaires who have been the principal
beneficiaries of the fraud and parasitism that dominate the financial
industry.

There are 64 billionaires in New York City, who together boast a
combined net worth of $344 billion—more than four times the amount
held by billionaires a decade ago. In the same city, 1.5 million
people live below the federal poverty line, somehow eking out a living
on $16,600 or less a year—for a family of three.

Nearly 70 percent of New York City public school children are
classified as poor. Diabetes rates in the city have doubled in the
last 10 years.

The manic accumulation of personal wealth on Wall Street has fed a
housing bubble in New York that has driven the prices of apartments in
Manhattan into the stratosphere. A realtor advertises in the New York
Times for a building on Fifth Ave. boasting “a choice of gracious
living spaces, the finest finishes, sweeping views and unrivaled
amenities.” The price tag: “$10.5 million to over $47 million.”

Meanwhile, at least 34,000 people go to sleep each night in the city’s
homeless shelters. The ragged ranks of the city’s homeless families
have risen 15 percent over the past two years.

Moreover, gentrification has displaced hundreds of thousands of
working class residents from lower Manhattan, even pricing out many
middle class people, who have moved to northern Brooklyn, where the
higher rents they can afford are in turn forcing out poorer groups of
working people from these same neighborhoods.

Fat salaries and bonuses paid on Wall Street have helped to sustain
some of the finest and most expensive restaurants in the world.
Meanwhile, a recent survey indicates at least 1.3 million people—one
out of six city residents—lack sufficient food and are forced to go
hungry at least some time during the year.

Tens of thousands New Yorkers are employed in offices or perform
service jobs of various kinds in the Wall Street area. Some work in
the financial industry itself while others cater to the substantial
tourist trade in lower Manhattan. Building construction and repair is
continuous, bringing in many laborers and trades people during the day
to the neighborhood.

Impact of Wall Street layoffs
It is estimated that the financial industry has shed some 120,000 jobs
worldwide over the past year, with many of the layoffs taking place on
Wall Street. The trend has accelerated sharply with the collapse of
institutions like Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers.

These layoffs have staggering implications for the city as a whole. It
has been estimated that every one job in the financial industry in New
York supports three others in the service sector. Moreover, every
1,000 jobs lost in the financial sector spells the loss of $50 million
in tax revenues for the city, meaning deep and punishing budget cuts.

Democratic Governor David Paterson has already slashed the state
budget, cutting millions from public education aid to the city.
Because of the shortfall in tax revenue from Wall Street financial
institutions, millions of dollars more were eliminated from the city
budget in June of this year.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg, whose $20 billion fortune alone could support
much of the city’s infrastructure, has announced a further $1.5
billion in budget cuts over two years. In 2009, the education budget
will be slashed by $185 million, and in 2010 by $395 million. A letter
from the city’s Office of Management and Budget noted the reliance of
the city budget on the fortunes of Wall Street:

“The credit crunch which began over a year ago has worsened, and has
led to increasingly serious losses on Wall Street ... the
institutional and market changes in the finance sector are likely to
reduce employment and taxable revenue from this sector well into the
future. This will hurt New York City because of our reliance on tax
receipts from this sector of our local economy. The generally
worsening outlook for the national and international economies is also
likely to affect our revenue. ... The full extent of actions necessary
for the city to maintain its legally mandated balanced budgets may not
be clear for some time.”

Other forms of support for the working class and the poor in New York
City are to be hit hard by the crisis on Wall Street. The New York
Times reported that charities and various public institutions are
anticipating a steep shortfall in giving from Wall Street.

The Starr Foundation, which is historically associated with the AIG
insurance conglomerate (bailed out for $85 billion by the Federal
Reserve Bark in mid-September) and held millions of shares in its
stock, gives approximately $100 million to charities in New York City.

As the Times observed, “Randolph Peers, executive director at
Opportunities for a Better Tomorrow, which helps disadvantaged youths
and adults learn skills to get jobs, got $75,000 a year from the Starr
Foundation for five years but will not get money this year. ‘We were
told that the foundation was focusing on other priorities. It hurts to
lose $75,000.’”

Executives from Lehman Brothers, including its chairman and CEO,
Richard S. Fuld Jr., have been visible in the past in donating a tiny
fraction of their immense proceeds—Fuld made nearly $72 million last
year—to public institutions in New York.

The Times quoted Phyllis Fisher, a spokeswoman for the Hospital for
Special Surgery, as saying that her institution “received money from
both the Starr Foundation and the Lehman Brothers Foundation. ‘We got
a $1 million grant last year from Lehman Brothers when we honored
Richard Fuld,’ she said. ‘We got $400,000 so far. We don’t know what
will happen.’”

Bureaucrats back Obama as workers hit bailout
On Monday, September 29, just hours before the first version of the
bailout bill was defeated in Congress and as stocks began a steep
decline, a few hundred workers assembled at Wall and Broad Streets in
the financial district for a rally against the bailout. The
demonstration was called by Transport Workers Union Local 100, which
represents bus and subway workers, and Local 1199 of the Service
Employees International Union, the city’s hospital workers union. Its
small size made it apparent that neither union had sought to turn out
its rank and file.

AFL-CIO National President John Sweeney, other union leaders and the
Reverend Jessie Jackson delivered short, demagogic speeches designed
to channel their members’ considerable anger over the bailout into
support for Democratic Party presidential candidate Barack Obama.
Needless to say, none of them mentioned the fact that Obama was
himself voting for the bailout and playing a prominent role in
pressuring other congressional Democrats to do likewise.

Some of the bureaucrats barely tried to hide their support for relief
for the bankers. United Federation of Teachers President Randi
Weingarten called for “a responsible rescue” of the super-rich
financiers.

The World Socialist Web Site spoke to a number of workers at the
rally. Norm, a retired firefighter, said, “If you read the preamble to
the Constitution, it says ‘we the people,’ not ‘we the corporations,’
not ‘we the rich.’ When I looked over here and saw all these people
[indicating the well dressed people in the area], I knew that that’s
what that really meant.”

He said that in the speeches given at the rally there was “not one
word” about the class divide. “These people robbed America. You’re
going to set them up again for the next generation.

“I’m worried about my kids, my grandkids. I see this happening again.
It’ll happen again so long as these types of people are doing what
they’re doing and nobody’s stopping them.

“The first thing a government does is protect itself, not the people.
If things keep on going the way they are, pretty soon you’re going to
have a rich class, and I mean filthy-rich like we’re seeing today, and
an extremely poor class.

“I would like to see the common man say, ‘Hey, I’m fed up and I won’t
take any more. I won’t be robbed any more; I won’t have things taken
away from my family and my children just so somebody else has a few
extra bucks.’ We have to take away from the rich and give to the
common man.”

Roy Whitelock, a New York City transit worker, told the WSWS: “The
bailout is for those who control. The one who has the gold makes the
rules. The bottom line is that everything is creeping higher and
higher. We’re up to our neck, and if you can’t breathe, you lose.
Until this affects them, the rich, personally, they’re not going to
worry about us. The Democrats and Republicans have already been aware
of what’s been going on way before this happened. They’re not going to
do anything until the public gets unraveled enough to point fingers at
them.”

Several days earlier, on September 25, a few hundred people turned out
on Wall Street to demonstrate against the bailout, many of them
carrying homemade signs denouncing the giveaway to the banks and
asking why their student loans, mortgages, etc., weren’t being bailed
out as well.

Michel, a French worker living in New York, spoke to the WSWS. “We
don’t have the money for the bailout,” he said. “And nobody has given
the slightest reason for why it would work.”

He added, “[Treasury Secretary Henry] Paulson was one of the reasons
for the crisis because he was the head of Goldman Sachs, which was one
of the companies that had created all of these financial instruments.
So now he is in charge of the problem that he has created himself!
It’s absolutely unbelievable. If we are to bail out banks, the people
have to own them. It’s common sense.”

Kevin Harkin, a documentary filmmaker living in New York, came to the
demonstration and was filming the protest. The “top 1 percent” was
responsible for the crisis, he said. “They wanted less government
intervention, they wanted the free market, they wanted to let it run
its course, and it’s run its course! It’s a bad gambling debt.”

“I think it would be irrational to say that there’s a really simple
answer,” he continued. “Banking has been international for a long
time, so if we have a crisis here, it will be like a big wave. They
move money from one country to another, exploit the country, flatten
it.”

“Forgive the [homeowners’] mortgages,” he demanded. “That’s where the
money should go.”

What did he think about uniting the working class internationally on a
socialist program? “I think it has to be done,” he said. “I think it’s
the only way to stop these guys. They don’t care, they bilk people out
of their retirement, savings, and they pay nothing. They’ve gotten
huge golden parachutes. Anybody who’s in trouble at the top, seize all
their assets, lock them down. These guys ran up the debt; they did it
to us. If I ran up a huge debt on a credit card, they’d shut me down.”
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