Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Mary Jo & Rahm's Dirty Money


Congresswoman Mary Jo Kilroy’s ultra-negative 2008 campaign centered around the same tired refrain that Lt. Colonel Steve Stivers, then also a state senator, had, in the past, worked for a bank. The implication was that Stivers had personally wrought the global financial crisis—and from Columbus, Ohio no less. Former banking lobbyist Steve Stivers was one evil dude, Ms. Kilroy would have us believe. We were to pay no heed to his solid legislative record in the Ohio Senate and his military service overseas. With an awkward smile, Mary Jo Kilroy assured us he was a very bad man—and that she was a very nice lady, by the way.

Now, Governor Ted Strickland’s re-election campaign is centered on similar assertions that John Kasich, as a former Columbus-based employee of Lehman Brothers, is also single-handedly responsible for the global financial crisis. It seems if you’re a Republican and at some point in your life you worked at a bank you personally brought on the global financial crisis—at least by Democrat logic. But keep in mind these people believe spending hundreds of billions of dollars we don’t have will lower the deficit.

With the Democrats’ deeply earnest desire to root out the parties responsible for the global financial crisis I am shocked—SHOCKED!—that they have yet to draw attention to White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, former managing director of the investment bank Wasserstein Perella and the House of Representatives’s No.1 recipient of campaign contributions from hedge funds.

Beyond being a former investment banker and a recipient of massive amounts of campaign contributions from his friends in the business Mr. Emanuel was the chosen Congressional errand boy of Alec Litowitz, CEO of Magnetar Capital. You’ve probably never heard of Magnetar Capital so let me introduce you: according to financial author Yves Smith, Magnetar Capital is “the single market player most responsible for the severity of the 2008 financial crisis.” (For an overview of how Magnetar contributed to the financial crisis please view: The Magnetar Trade: How One Hedge Fund Helped Keep the Bubble Going.)

Basically, Magnetar made billions of dollars shorting the market. As his company was contributing to the financial crisis, Mr. Litowitz and his wife, who had never before made significant political contributions, contributed massive amounts of money to Rahm Emanuel (“Friends of Rahm Emanuel”), Rahm Emanuel’s political action committee (Our Shared Values Pac), and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (chaired by Rahm Emanuel). And during that time period Mr. Litowitz and his wife contributed only to Rahm Emanuel and Rahm Emanuel-connected political organizations. Curious.

So a portion of the money made by the misbehavers in the global financial crisis ended up in Rahm Emanuel’s campaign coffers. He’s a Chicago Democrat so that’s hardly shocking. Where’d the money go from there? Surely not to the incorruptible anti-banking crusader Mary Jo Kilroy!

Yep, that’s where it went.




So the money flow chart looks something like this:

People screwed in the financial crisis --> Magnetar/Alec Litowitz --> Rahm Emanuel --> Mary Jo Kilroy

It seems that Congresswoman Kilroy’s moral high ground on all things banking never existed. Don’t worry; I’m sure that won’t stop her from churning out more of those “former banking lobbyist Steve Stivers” campaign ads that kept us all entertained during the 2008 election. And when you’re watching them remember where she got the money to pay for them: out of the pockets of the people who got screwed in the financial crisis.