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Hostile Takeover '08: Democrats Gone Wild
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Flipping on the television last night, I was struck by how utterly vapid the media's coverage of the presidential fundraising numbers is. I know I shouldn't be surprised, but there's something, well, surreal about watching Adam Nagourney and Charlie Rose sit there chin-scratching like Serious Thinkers while spending a full 15-20 minutes of airtime trying to bend FEC numbers into a Vegas-style handicapping system, without so much as a word about what industries are buying what from whom with those contributions. And mind you, this was public television, where the coverage is supposed to be "substantive."
I'm not going to spend much time speculating on why the coverage is the way it is because it's likely due not to some conspiracy or ideology, but to sheer, utter, unadulterated laziness - it just takes way fewer brain cells to discuss how, for instance, Hillary Clinton raising $26 million means she's a "frontrunner" than, say, trying to figure out what all that money actually BOUGHT from Hillary Clinton in terms of positions, promises, etc. As a reporter, you actually have to do a little bit of what's known as "real work" to get that information, and come on, people - that's too much to ask. As a citizen not paid full-time to report, you have to really dig through this mess of noise to get even the vaguest sense of the high-rolling auction taking place - but if you look in the right places, you can figure it out what's really going on.
Take a glance around the news-o-sphere today and you'll see the outlines of Hostile Takeover 2008: Democrats Gone Wild. Buried at the very bottom of a New York Times story marveling at Barack Obama's ability to shakedown wealthy Chicago scions for big cash, we find out that one of the Illinois senator's biggest donors is the family that owns one of the largest defense contractors in the world, General Dynamics. What a shock, then, that Obama hasn't discussed our bloated military budget even though polls show the public wants that budget reeled in. What a surprise to see Obama triangulating against potential plans to reduce funding for the Iraq War. But whether you believe the connection between defense industry contributions and politicians' rhetoric (or lack thereof) is real or not, what's perhaps even more shocking is the media's refusal to mention it as a possibility - even with the hard data staring reporters in the face.
Then there is this story in the Politico that adds to a previous story in Businessweek about how Wall Street CEOs are now being allowed to write the entire economic platform of prospective Democratic candidates. Here are a few excerpts:
"In a suite of offices three doors down Massachusetts Avenue from the Brookings Institution headquarters, Hillary Clinton's closest Wall Street allies are drawing up economic policy for the next Democratic administration. The offices belong to the Hamilton Project, a small think tank created by Robert E. Rubin, Bill Clinton's Treasury secretary and key economic adviser, and former Treasury deputy secretary Roger C. Altman, who would be a front-runner for the same job in a new Clinton administration...At the same time, Rubin is a key Wall Street ally of both Clintons, and a dominant player in Democratic Party economic policy. Altman served as a liaison between Sen. Clinton and Wall Street leaders...It's a bid for her attention placed by influential supporters and key fundraisers; along with Rubin and Altman, other key Clinton Wall Street allies, including New York bankers Steven Rattner and Blair Effron, serve on the Hamilton Project's Advisory Council. (The council also includes two Wall Street supporters of Sen. Barack Obama, Mark Gallogly and Eric Mindich.)"This kind of thing is bleeding over rather publicly into the congressional arena. The Washington Post has a new story about Wal-Mart buying off Democratic lawmakers and staff in the U.S. Senate. Sebastian Mallaby, meanwhile, cheers on House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charlie Rangel (D-NY) for his efforts to represent his Wall Street donors' wishes by publicly humiliating economists asking Congress to respect the 2006 election mandate and make trade policy better represent the needs of working people.
Tagged as: corruption, barack obama, hillary clinton, charlie rangel, bob rubin, roger altman, hamilton project, general dynamics
David Sirota is a veteran political strategist and author of Hostile Takeover, a New York Times bestseller about the corruption of both political parties.
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