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Obama Gets Wobbly On Fat Cats

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Published: February 3, 2009

The president's disgust at Wall Street looters was good. But we need more. We need disgorgement.
Disgorgement is when courts force wrongdoers to repay ill-gotten gains. And I'm ill at the gains gotten by scummy executives acting all Gordon Gekko while they're getting bailed out by us.

With the equally laconic Tim Geithner beside him, Obama called it "shameful" and "the height of irresponsibility" for Wall Street bankers to give themselves $18.4 billion worth of bonuses for last year.

They should know better, he coolly chided. But big shots - even Obama's - seem impervious to knowing better. (Following fast on Geithner's tax lacunae, Tom Daschle's nomination hit a pothole when he had to pay $140,000 in back taxes he owed, partly for three years' use of a car and a driver provided by a private equity firm.)

At least the old robber barons made great products. When you make money out of money, unmoored from morality and regulators, it must unhinge you. How else to explain corporate welfare queens partridge hunting in England, buying French jets and shopping for Lamborghinis?

Obama was less bracing than during the campaign, when AIG executives were caught going to posh retreats after taking an $85 billion bailout. He called for them to be fired and to reimburse the federal Treasury. Now that he has the power to act, Obama spoke, as his spokesman Robert Gibbs put it, "like that disappointed parent that doesn't embarrass you in the mall, but you feel like you've let somebody down."

That's not enough, not with the president and Geithner continuing to dole out what may end up being a trillion dollars to these "malefactors of great wealth," as Teddy Roosevelt put it.
USA Today wrote about "the AIG effect:" executives finding ways to spend more discreetly, choosing lesser-known luxury hotels and $110 pinot noir instead of the $175 variety.

More than a disappointed parent, they need a special prosecutor or three. Spare the rod, spoil the jackal. Anyone who gave bonuses after accepting federal aid should be fired, and that money should be disgorged to the Treasury.

Claire McCaskill popped out a bill to limit the pay of anyone at firms taking federal money to no more than the president makes - $400,000.

"These people are idiots," she said on the Senate floor. "You can't use taxpayer money to pay out $18 billion in bonuses. ... "

One Obama official said her idea is catchy, but it won't work "because no one would come to Treasury to participate, and that means our economy would continue to stumble downward."

Sen. Chuck Grassley urged the administration to snatch back the bonuses. "They ought to give 'em back or we should go get 'em," the Republican told me. "If this were Japan and a corporate executive did what is being done on Wall Street, they'd either go out and commit suicide or go before the board of directors and the country and take a very deep bow and apologize."

He was shocked to learn that the Office of Management and Budget, insistent on following the Paperwork Reduction Act, was dragging down a special inspector general's investigation of what banks are doing with taxpayer money. (After complaints, the OMB yielded on Friday.)

"Once in a while, some CEO comes and talks to me, and I wonder if they're laughing under their breath at having to talk to someone who makes 1 percent of what they make," he said.

Rudy Giuliani resurfaced Friday to defend corporate bonuses, telling CNN that cutting them would mean less spending in restaurants and stores.

Stupid. Even without bonuses, these gazillionaires can still eat out. It's like Rudy's trickle-up Make Work Program: Make Leisure.

Yet some Obama policymakers still buy into the notion that if they're too strict, these economic royalists, to use FDR's epithet, might balk at the bailout, preferring perks over the prospect of their banks going belly-up.

Maureen Dowd is a columnist for the New York Times.

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