supreme-court

David Isenberg: When Just Following Orders is Good Enough

July 27, 2010

In my last post, while discussing a law journal article on how to prosecute a PMC should one commit an act of torture, I touched on the Nuremberg defense, i.e., I was just following orders. I said it would be the subject of another post but I did not expect to discuss it so soon. But thanks to the magic of online searching I came across another current law journal article on just that subject. Really, honest, cross my heart and hope to die. Specifically it is an article in the Western New England Law Review ( 32 W. New Eng. L. Rev. 373) titled “I’m Just Following Orders: A Fair Standard of Immunity for Military Service Contractors,” by Thomas Gray Gray’s take is different, though not necessarily opposite, the view I detailed in my last post. Gray asks whether private military service contractors should be afforded any level of immunity because of their contractual relationship with the United States military and the United States government. He concludes that contractors are entitled to some immunity. The critical question is just how much immunity should be granted, the situations in which such immunity would apply, and the basis for such immunity in relation to existing legal concepts and policy considerations. As the saying goes, the devil is in the details. As everyone should know by now contractors are steadily replacing enlisted, uniformed soldiers in many aspects of the military’s various missions. Despite the decreased use of its own personnel, the military still has an active hand in dictating flight patterns, passenger lists, maintenance schedules, security protocols, and the job specifications for hosts of contractor jobs. This division of labor raises an important legal issue: a soldier cannot sue the United States for injuries he suffers incident to his service, but the soldier can sue a private contractor for such injuries. For example, during the Vietnam War, a soldier transported in a military plane flown by military pilots had no cause of action against the United States if his plane crashed. Today, however, a soldier in Iraq who suffers injury in the crash of a civilian military contractor plane has a cause of action against the airline. According to Gray, while a plane crash might be a rare event it is an unfortunate fact of war that things often go wrong and many people are hurt. Even outside of direct combat, any endeavor as large and complicated as the civilian contractor operation in Iraq is bound to produce tragedy. In some of these cases, the genesis of the incident is not in the negligent execution of a task by a civilian contractor. Perhaps not that rate, actually. I should note that, it was a Presidential Airways (former Blackwater subsidiary) plane that crashed on November 27, 2004 in Afghanistan. All aboard, three soldiers and three civilian crew members, were killed. A 60 Minutes investigation reported that the crash was caused by pilot error but that the company tried to avoid responsibility. Anyway, Gray argues that military service contractors should be entitled to immunity in much the same way that contractors are afforded immunity in the products liability context. This Note proposes that a version of the Boyle v. United Technology Corp. test, logically modified to suit the services industry, would fairly determine the applicability of this immunity. This test would shield contractors from liability when (1) the injury in question resulted from an order, plan, or directive from the United States military, (2) the plan or order was executed without negligence by the contractor, and (3) the contractor had disclosed to the United States any concerns or potential risks. In his view this test presents a workable solution that honors the rationales that have supported military immunity and military products-liability immunity for more than fifty years while at the same time fairly leaving liability to the contractors when their negligent execution of a contractual duty has caused an injury. Not being a lawyer let me try to summarize some of his main points. Forgive me for going long but it is necessary to do justice to his argument. Gray notes the doctrine of sovereign immunity far predates the founding of the United States. It is based on the notion that the King, as the “font of the law,” is not bound by the law; and that the King, as the “font of justice,” cannot be sued in his own courts. To me that sounds like an earlier version of Dick Cheney’s unitary executive theory. Who knew Dick was such an Anglophile! In practical and modern terms, sovereign immunity shields the United States from civil suit and criminal prosecution. In the United States, the federal government was immune from tort actions for more than a century before Congress passed legislation that waived the immunity for certain torts and established jurisdiction in the federal courts over certain types of claims made against the government. This legislation came in the form of the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), which authorized suit against the government for torts which would have been in violation of the local law had they been committed by an individual. Four years after the passage of the FTCA, the United States Supreme Court decided Feres v. United States. In Feres, the Court held that the United States military was not liable for soldiers’ injuries suffered incident to service. The original Feres complaint alleged that the military’s negligence in housing Feres in barracks with a defective heating plant and failure to maintain adequate fire-prevention measures resulted in his death. In barring Feres’s claim, the Court gave broad immunity to the military for injuries arising in the course of a soldier’s duties, whether those duties were performed in peacetime or wartime and whether the duties were pedestrian or high risk. The Supreme Court added a third factor four years later in United States v. Brown. There, the Court expressed concern about the dangers posed to military discipline by the litigation of claims brought by servicemen and servicewomen. In Brown, a discharged soldier alleged medical negligence at a Veterans’ Administration Hospital during his surgery to correct an injury incurred during military service. The Court read into the Feres decision a recognition of both the special nature of military discipline and the potential untoward results of litigating allegedly negligent command decisions or orders. The Court found that the Feres Court had read the FTCA to exclude claims that involved the “peculiar and special relationship of the soldier to his superior.” The Brown Court ultimately decided that Feres did not control in that case and thus provided little analysis of what eventually became the predominant Feres factor: military discipline. Outside of the military realm, there is an extensive history of derivative sovereign immunity for those acting at the will of the government. In Yearsley v. W.A. Ross Construction Co., the Supreme Court held that an agent of the government was not amenable to suit when carrying out the will of Congress. In such cases, the Court held, the only way for the agent to be liable would be if he acted outside the bounds of his authority or if there was no legitimate power to give that authority. The Supreme Court would take up the issue of military-contractor immunity in Boyle v. United Technologies Corp. where it recognized and established the test for military-contractor immunity for products liability. Boyle centered on the death of a United States Marine helicopter pilot and the subsequent suit the pilot’s father filed against the helicopter manufacturer. A primary focus of the Court’s decision was the tension between the wholly federal role of military contractors and the fundamental concepts of state tort law. Boyle held that federal law can supersede state tort law, even without statutory authorization, in cases that represent a “uniquely federal interest[].”Two uniquely federal interests were presented in Boyle: “obligations to and rights of the United States under its contracts” and “the civil liability of federal officials for actions taken in the course of their duty.” Despite the fact that the suit was nominally against the contractor, it was sufficiently related to a contract involving the United States to be considered within the first interest. As well, the policy ] goals of the second interest are maintained whether a federal official is involved directly or not. Though the Court acknowledged that suits between private parties unrelated to the United States are left to state tort law, it distinguished Boyle, pointing out that because “the imposition of liability on Government contractors will directly affect the terms of Government contracts … the interests of the United States will be directly affected.” A test ultimately emerged from Boyle that allows for immunity from suit for contractors in situations in which (1) the United States approved design specifications, (2) the materials produced by a civilian contractor met those specifications, and (3) the contractor warned the United States about any dangers in the use of the materials of which it was aware but the United States was not. The third element of the test, the Court stated, was necessary to create disincentives for contractors to withhold information from the military about potential dangers. The various issues of contractor immunity discussed above converged in McMahon v. Presidential Airways, Inc., in which the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals heard a claim for derivative Feres immunity in a case involving a service contract. As noted above Presidential Airways had contracted with the United States to fly military officers and personnel to and from various locations in the Middle East. One of its trips unfortunately ended in a crash that proved fatal to three United States servicemen. The survivors brought suit against Presidential Airways on behalf of the deceased soldiers in Florida state court, alleging that it had caused the wrongful death of the soldiers. Presidential Airways argued that it should be immune under the Feres doctrine, but the Eleventh Circuit disagreed. The court did not base its decision on the notion that Feres could not apply to suits against nongovernment entities. Instead, the Eleventh Circuit engaged the concept of derivative Feres immunity presented by Presidential Airways. First the court analyzed Presidential Airways’s claim that, as a common law agent, it was entitled to the government’s sovereign immunity. The court never decided whether Presidential Airways was a common law agent, but it did disagree with Presidential Airways’s position that, if it was, it would be entitled to derivative sovereign immunity. The court then considered the Feres doctrine and found that it was simultaneously too broad and too narrow to be applied in the claim against Presidential Airways. The doctrine was too broad, the court held, because it allowed immunity for any injury “incident to service,” which would protect contractors from things well outside the policy aims supported by Feres., the doctrine was held to be too narrow in that it only provided immunity from suits by soldiers, not by civilians. This paradoxical set of weaknesses of the Feres doctrine as applied to the McMahon facts would produce absurd results – such as having the claims on behalf of the soldiers completely barred regardless of merit – yet would allow for claims against Presidential Airways by any nonmilitary personnel on board the crashed flight. Because of these faults in the Feres argument, the court rejected its application. The court did recognize the fact that the third Feres factor, a fear of interference and evaluation of sensitive military decisions, was applicable to the McMahon facts. Despite finding the other two factors inapplicable and ultimately rejecting Presidential Airways’s derivative Feres claims, the court found that the value of the all-important third factor could merit some level of immunity for Presidential Airways. The court went on to suggest that this standard for immunity would be somewhere between “incident to service” and the political-question doctrine. It would need to be less than “incident to service” for the same reason that the “incident to service” standard of Feres made that doctrine too broad, namely that it would protect contractors from liability in virtually all of their actions, regardless of negligence. The questions then posed by the court were whether the political-question doctrine was too narrow and whether there were instances in which Presidential Airways could merit immunity while at the same time not requiring the court to directly consider a political question. Ultimately, the court did not answer these questions and instead left them merely as suggestions. Gray argues that the Boyle test should be applied to service contractors. Civilian companies who contract to provide services to the United States military should receive immunity from civil liability in cases where they have acted in compliance with specific directions of the United States military. This immunity is necessary for two reasons. First, it is necessary to protect the discretion of the United States in its military contracts, discretion that would be threatened by contract liability for actions performed by a contractor under the direction of the United States. Second, a service-contractor immunity is necessary to maintain the internal discipline of the United States military, which could be threatened if regular tort analysis was applied to the orders and directions given to military contractors. The test used in Boyle provides the most effective and fair standard to use for military contractors. It shields contractors from liability in cases where the principle cause of the injury is not any individualized negligence but instead springs from some larger decision made by the United States military. A modification of this three-part test represents the best route to an immunity standard for service contractors. The first prong of the test is that the contractor had a reasonably specific outline of its contractual duties. This flows from the first prong of Boyle’s test, which requires that “the United States approve[] reasonably precise specifications.” This factor guarantees that the military has actually been involved in the decision-making process by giving the contractor a reasonably precise set of requirements and parameters for its contractual duties. Within each individual type of service, the nature of these specifications would be different. For contracted airlines, it could be military control over flight plans, passenger lists, and other things that lead to very specific parameters within which to conduct each flight. For a maintenance contractor, it could be the protocols the military had established for the frequency and thoroughness of inspection and repair. For a private security contractor, it could be protocols covering the use of force or a host of other details. While the requirement might not be satisfied in exactly the same way for any two contractors, this standard is flexible enough to only provide immunity for contractors whose duties were discretionally decided by the United States military. The key in any type of service contract would be that the guidelines provided by the government “constituted a comprehensive regime that [the contractor] was not expected to supplement through any procedures other than those specifically set forth.” Each attempt to establish this immunity would thus require contractors to show that the course of their actions was determined by a “comprehensive regime.” Contractors who were not given specific parameters for their actions and who were given broader discretion in determining how their duties would be carried out would not be protected in this immunity standard. Without the existence of specified protocols mandated by the military, there are no pertinent discretionary decisions made by the government which the court must protect. An example of this came in the application of Boyle in Chapman, where the court did not find evidence of any precise specifications and thus found the Boyle test inapplicable. The second prong of the test requires that the contractor completed its duties according to the standard required by the specific governmental regime or protocol. This prong comes from the Boyle test’s requirement that the final product met government specifications. This requirement is necessary to definitively connect the injury at issue to a discretionary decision made by the military and would preclude immunity in situations in which the contractor either did not complete its duties or did so negligently. Contractors who negligently perform their obligations should not be protected from liability simply because they have a contract with the government. Furthermore, because the military’s discretionary decision would be too far removed from claims involving contractor negligence, such claims would not be covered by the policy rationales underlying the discretionary-function exemption. In attempting to establish the immunity, the contractor would have to show that its performance complied with its government instructions. The third prong of the test requires that the contractor disclose to the United States any knowledge of risks or dangers that it knew of within the government’s plans. This flows directly from the final part of the Boyle test, which requires that “the supplier warned the United States about the dangers in the use of the equipment that were known to the supplier but not the United States.” The third factor, as in Boyle, is necessary to prevent contractors from protecting themselves merely by not disclosing their own awareness of risks.

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Barney Frank: Elizabeth Warren Should Head CFPB, By Recess Appointment If Necessary

July 23, 2010

If President Obama fears Elizabeth Warren won’t be confirmed by the Senate to head the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, he should just appoint her while the Senate is on one of its many vacations, House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank said Friday. Referring to her as “far and away the best candidate,” Frank said Warren, a noted consumer advocate and bailout watchdog who conceived the agency in a 2007 article, not only cares about protecting consumers but also has the political chops to get things done for them in Washington. “If [Warren] can’t be confirmed she should be a recess [appointment],” Frank, who helped shepherd the recently-enacted financial reform bill into law, told the Huffington Post on Friday. “Given the way [the Senate has] misused the filibuster… given it’s anti-Democratic, I think the President did exactly the right thing with Donald Berwick,” the 15-term Massachusetts Congressman added, referring to an earlier Obama recess appointment to head the Centers for Medicare & Medicare Services. Warren, a popular pick to lead the new consumer agency she envisioned, has seen her chances threatened by other candidates for the job. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner prefers Michael Barr, his assistant secretary for financial institutions and a veteran of the Clinton-era Treasury, according to people familiar with Geithner’s views. White House officials say the shortlist also includes Eugene Kimmelman, a former top official at consumer advocacy groups Consumers Union, the Consumer Federation of America and Public Citizen who now works in the Justice Department’s antitrust division. Warren’s critics cite as black marks her perceived lack of management experience, her distaste for Washington politics and, curiously, her vigorous advocacy on behalf of consumers. But Frank pushed back against those arguments, particularly on the question of Warren’s political savvy. “I think, frankly — and I’ve said this to [administration officials] — she’s the ‘advocate’, supposedly, and Michael Barr is the ‘inside guy’. But, frankly, Michael Barr’s initial proposal for the consumer agency had some problems in it politically that Elizabeth understood and helped us work around,” Frank said. “So I think she’s better even on the political side of it. She’s the better choice.” Warren is a noted defender of the middle class, widely respected for her research on debt-strapped Americans, bankruptcy and the working poor. White House senior adviser David Axelrod lauded her efforts last week during a conference call with reporters — though he stopped short of endorsing her for the CFPB, noting “there are other candidates.” “Elizabeth Warren is a great, great champion for consumers and middle-class families across the country,” Axelrod said. “She has helped inform this effort greatly and what has been done here in many ways reflects something she’s been advocating for years and years and years.” Earlier this week, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd expressed reservations about Warren’s odds of being confirmed by the Senate. White House officials quickly shot back, assuring reporters that Warren is “confirmable.” Frank said he doesn’t really care. “There is some concern that she would be hard to confirm,” he allowed. “My answer is, in the first place, I’m not sure I’d want anybody who’s easy to confirm given the way the Senate is.” Frank resisted efforts to water down the financial reform bill’s consumer protection provisions. In fact, when asked what he thought of placing the consumer agency inside the Federal Reserve — a place it will soon occupy thanks to a series of compromises — Frank reportedly asked if it was a “joke.” “Secondly, I don’t think you give in to the threat of a filibuster,” Frank continued. “I think you make them do it. There would be such strong support for her that she would get confirmed. “I think she has a strong populist appeal,” he added. The New Republic reported Friday that Charles Fried , a former solicitor general under Ronald Reagan who supported the Supreme Court nominations of John Roberts and Samuel Alito, supported Warren for the consumer position. “I support capitalism, and I don’t like thieves. And the people who got us into this mess are thieves, or there are a lot of thieves among them,” Fried, one of Warren’s colleagues at Harvard Law School, told TNR. “She’s far and away the best candidate,” Frank said. “And… though there’s some concern, I guess, over whether she could be confirmed, that’s no reason not to go ahead and make the fight.” ************************* Shahien Nasiripour is the business reporter for the Huffington Post. You can send him an e-mail ; bookmark his page ; subscribe to his RSS feed ; follow him on Twitter ; friend him on Facebook ; become a fan ; and/or get e-mail alerts when he reports the latest news. He can be reached at 646-274-2455.

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Barnes & Noble Lawsuit Continues: Judge Weighs Arguments

July 23, 2010

WILMINGTON, Del. — A poison pill plan adopted by Barnes & Noble could have far-reaching consequences affecting the rights of shareholders in public companies, an attorney for billionaire Ron Burkle suggested Thursday. But a Delaware judge presiding over a lawsuit in which Burkle is challenging the poison pill said that the New York-based bookseller may have responded in a reasonable manner last year after Burkle more than doubled his stake in the company. After hearing final arguments following a four-day trial earlier this month, Vice Chancellor Leo Strine Jr. said he would try to issue a ruling quickly. He gave no indication of how soon he might rule but acknowledged that his decision may be appealed to the Delaware Supreme Court. Barnes & Noble’s annual meeting is scheduled to be held by Sept. 30. Burkle has indicated that he wants to wage a proxy contest to elect three new directors and would like time to buy more voting shares before an Aug. 16 deadline if the judge rules in his favor. “I’m going to try my best to get you an answer, and you can go to the Supreme Court if you don’t like my answer on either side,” Strine told attorneys. Under the poison pill, also known as a shareholder rights plan, an investor can’t buy more than 20 percent of the company’s shares without board approval. Doing so would allow other shareholders to buy stock at a steep discount, thus diluting the voting power of the acquiring investor. Burkle, who increased his ownership stake in Barnes & Noble last year to about 18 percent, said the rights plan creates an unfair playing field that favors the controlling Riggio family, which owns more than 30 percent of the company’s common stock. Burkle’s attorneys also argue that the poison pill goes beyond defending against a hostile takeover by limiting the ability of shareholders to wage a proxy contest, or even to agree to vote against the pill when it comes up for ratification later this year. “At a time when the Delaware legislature, Congress and the SEC are acting to facilitate the ability of shareholders to exercise their franchise, defendants ask this court to allow directors the unilateral power to block stockholders from forming groups to elect directors or vote down a rights plan,” Burkle attorney David McBride wrote in a post-trial brief. “… Indeed, such a purpose for a rights plan has never been sanctioned.” Strine pointed to two previous decisions in which the Delaware Supreme Court upheld poison pills that affected shareholders’ ability to wage proxy contests, but McBride argued that the circumstances of those cases were different. He noted that Barnes & Noble founder and chairman Leonard Riggio, who is up for re-election to the board this year, controls, along with other family members and insiders, more than 35 percent of the company’s shares. “This rights plan has a substantial impact, and a self-interested impact, on an imminent proxy contest,” McBride said, adding that the pill puts the Riggios “in position to have a substantial margin with respect to voting power.” Attorneys for Barnes & Noble have argued that the poison pill does not preclude a proxy contest, only concerted action among shareholders holding large voting blocs of shares. Barnes & Noble officials are particularly concerned about an alliance between Burkle and Aletheia Research & Management Inc., an investment fund that holds about 16 percent of Barnes & Noble’s outstanding shares. Burkle has said he is not interested in a takeover but wants to see changes in the company’s corporate governance. But Sandra Goldstein, an attorney for Barnes & Noble, suggested that Burkle may not be satisfied with three directors of his choosing and might try to appoint three more next year. McBride countered that Barnes & Noble has failed to identify any specific threat posed by Burkle that would justify the poison pill. He said the board needed more than a vague fear that three new directors nominated by Burkle might cause harm to the company or lead to a change in control. If Barnes & Noble believes stockholder activism is a problem, McBride added, “it’s like saying the stockholder franchise is the problem.”

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Conrad Black Granted Bail: Ex-Media Mogul Getting Out Of Jail

July 19, 2010

CHICAGO — Jailed former newspaper magnate Conrad Black was granted bail on Monday by a federal appeals court, weeks after the U.S. Supreme Court kicked his 2007 fraud conviction back to a lower court. The British baron and three other former executives from the media empire Hollinger International were convicted of swindling the company’s shareholders out of $6.1 million. It was not immediately clear when Black would be released from the federal prison in Florida. The conditions of his release would be determined by U.S. District Court judge in Chicago, according to an order from the three-judge panel. Last month, the Supreme Court weakened the “honest services” law that was central to Black’s fraud conviction. The justices left it up to a lower court to decide whether the conviction should be overturned. Black, who has served more than two years of a 6 1/2-year sentence at a low-security federal prison in Coleman, Fla., was also convicted of obstruction of justice after jurors saw a video of him carrying boxes of documents out of his offices, loading them into his car and driving off with them. The documents were sought by government investigators. A call to Black’s attorney, Miguel Estrada, was not immediately returned. A federal Bureau of Prisons spokeswoman said Black, 65, remained in prison on Monday and it was unclear when he might be released. Before the Supreme Court ruling, prosecutors had said Black should remain in prison because the high court’s decision wouldn’t affect the obstruction of justice count. A spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Chicago said officials would have no comment. Hollinger International once owned the Chicago Sun-Times, The Daily Telegraph of London, The Jerusalem Post and hundreds of community papers in the U.S. and Canada. The “honest services” law has been criticized by defense lawyers as the last resort of prosecutors in corruption cases that lack the evidence to prove that money is changing hands. It also has been called vague, subjecting people to prosecution for mistakes and minor transgressions in the business and political worlds. But watchdogs consider it key to fighting white-collar and public fraud. The Justice Department said at the time of the Supreme Court ruling that prosecutors would continue to urge that honest services convictions for Black and others be upheld. The court’s decision made headlines all over the world, in large part because of the names of those sitting in prison as a result of the law, including Black, former Enron boss Jeffrey Skilling, disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff and California Congressman Randy “Duke” Cunningham.

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Obama Admin Praises Elizabeth Warren But States ‘There Are Other Candidates As Well’ To Lead CFPB

July 16, 2010

Top Obama administration officials rushed to praise leading consumer advocate and bailout watchdog Elizabeth Warren on Friday as being “exceptionally well-qualified” to lead a new consumer protection office. But a senior adviser to Obama left open the possibility that she would not be chosen while administration officials did not deny a report that Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner opposes her nomination. The Huffington Post reported Thursday that Geithner opposes Warren getting the nod to lead the new agency. Designed to protect borrowers from abusive lenders, the creation of the agency has typically been listed by the administration as the top accomplishment of the recently-passed financial reform bill, ahead of other more systemic issues like reforming the derivatives market, ending the perception that some firms are Too Big To Fail, and ensuring that banks keep adequate capital to protect against destabilizing losses. Since March, Obama has highlighted the agency in four of his weekly Saturday addresses to the nation. In explaining on Thursday the kind of reforms the recently-passed legislation will lead to, the first thing Obama mentioned was how the bill “will protect consumers when they take out a mortgage or sign up for a credit card.” Key to that effort is picking the head of this new entity, which experts say will set the tone for the agency’s approach to protecting consumers for at least the next several years. A weak chief will render it ineffective; a strong leader will ensure that lenders can no longer abuse consumers with impunity. Now that the bill only awaits Obama’s signature, the next fight will be over who will be nominated to lead this agency, which banks despise and fought viciously to kill as the bill made its way through Congress. “Elizabeth Warren is a great, great champion for consumers and middle-class families across the country,” White House senior adviser David Axelrod told reporters on a Friday conference call. “She has helped inform this effort greatly and what has been done here in many ways reflects something she’s been advocating for years and years and years, so she’s obviously a candidate to lead this effort.” “There are other candidates as well,” Axelrod cautioned, “but Elizabeth is certainly a candidate to lead it and one thing I know for certain is however we move forward she’s going to be a strong voice in helping shape this and make it the most effective voice for consumers that it possibly can be.” A consumer advocate intimately involved in the legislative efforts said Axelrod’s comments could serve to lower expectations among Democrats that Warren would be the obvious choice, given that she conceived the agency in a 2007 journal article and has arguably served as the public face of the effort to get it enacted. The advocate added that Axelrod also opened the door to keeping Warren involved in consumer protection efforts even though she ultimately may not be picked. “I think Elizabeth is absolutely terrific,” Michael Barr, the Treasury Department’s assistant secretary for financial institutions, told reporters Friday during a conference call. “She’s been working closely with me and with Secretary [Timothy] Geithner now for a year and a half to get this financial reform passed, to push for a strong consumer financial protection agency. “She’s a leading figure in the field,” Barr continued, “and Secretary Geithner believes and I believe she’s extremely well-qualified to run the agency.” Given the opportunity to refute the HuffPost report that Geithner opposes her nomination, Barr reiterated that both he and Geithner believe she’s “exceptionally well-qualified.” He didn’t deny the rift. Barr is considered to be a top choice to head the new agency. He’s close with Geithner and was among a small group of administration officials leading the charge to get a strong reform bill through Congress. Consumer advocates and liberal groups say Barr was instrumental in ensuring the proposed agency wasn’t too watered down by Congress. But, as one consumer advocate put it, Warren is a “rock star.” House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank supports her nomination, as does virtually every consumer group and liberal organization across the country. On Friday, Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) circulated a letter to colleagues, in order to get signatures of support, urging Obama to nominate Warren. The letter says Warren is the “best person” to lead the new bureau, adding that she’s “simply the perfect choice.” (Scroll down for the letter.) Banks, however, oppose her. She very well could be their worst nightmare, some have speculated, due to her vociferous advocacy on behalf of consumers and middle-class families. The top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, Alabaman Richard Shelby, told HuffPost he opposes her nomination. Senator Bob Corker, a Republican from Tennessee, declined to comment when asked. Among some in the administration, there are concerns that her nomination could stoke the kind of fight that could delay her appointment for months. The administration wants someone to head the agency as soon as possible. The head of a bank lobby told Bloomberg News that the nomination is “akin to a Supreme Court nominee for financial services.” “They’re going to have a fight no matter what. It’s going to be dragged out regardless,” noted another consumer advocate. “But they could force the issue,” he added. “That’s the lesson from CFPA (the consumer financial protection agency).” The bill had been languishing in the Senate Banking Committee for months until Democrats, led by committee chairman Christopher Dodd of Connecticut, decided to hold a vote to send the bill to the floor, rather than allowing the bill to be amended in committee deliberations. It was a party-line vote. Republicans like Shelby and Corker voiced deep disappointment. If the administration is worried that Warren’s nomination would be problematic because it could stall, it could simply force the issue as it ended up doing with the legislation. “Make them vote against this hard-as-nails woman from Oklahoma who grew up poor who’s tough on big banks,” the advocate noted. “Force the vote.” Warren has relationships with various Republicans in the Senate, which could help her nomination. But that may not be the issue, the advocate noted. “If it’s not about the votes,” he warned. “It’s about whether they want this [agency] to be front-and-center and visible, or if they want to give the banks more power.” READ the letter from Rep. Maloney: Congressional Letter of Support for Elizabeth Warren Ryan Grim contributed reporting to this story.

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Obama Admin Praises Elizabeth Warren But States ‘There Are Other Candidates As Well’ To Lead CFPB

July 16, 2010

Top Obama administration officials rushed to praise leading consumer advocate and bailout watchdog Elizabeth Warren on Friday as being “exceptionally well-qualified” to lead a new consumer protection office. But a senior adviser to Obama left open the possibility that she would not be chosen while administration officials did not deny a report that Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner opposes her nomination. The Huffington Post reported Thursday that Geithner opposes Warren getting the nod to lead the new agency. Designed to protect borrowers from abusive lenders, the creation of the agency has typically been listed by the administration as the top accomplishment of the recently-passed financial reform bill, ahead of other more systemic issues like reforming the derivatives market, ending the perception that some firms are Too Big To Fail, and ensuring that banks keep adequate capital to protect against destabilizing losses. Since March, Obama has highlighted the agency in four of his weekly Saturday addresses to the nation. In explaining on Thursday the kind of reforms the recently-passed legislation will lead to, the first thing Obama mentioned was how the bill “will protect consumers when they take out a mortgage or sign up for a credit card.” Key to that effort is picking the head of this new entity, which experts say will set the tone for the agency’s approach to protecting consumers for at least the next several years. A weak chief will render it ineffective; a strong leader will ensure that lenders can no longer abuse consumers with impunity. Now that the bill only awaits Obama’s signature, the next fight will be over who will be nominated to lead this agency, which banks despise and fought viciously to kill as the bill made its way through Congress. “Elizabeth Warren is a great, great champion for consumers and middle-class families across the country,” White House senior adviser David Axelrod told reporters on a Friday conference call. “She has helped inform this effort greatly and what has been done here in many ways reflects something she’s been advocating for years and years and years, so she’s obviously a candidate to lead this effort.” “There are other candidates as well,” Axelrod cautioned, “but Elizabeth is certainly a candidate to lead it and one thing I know for certain is however we move forward she’s going to be a strong voice in helping shape this and make it the most effective voice for consumers that it possibly can be.” A consumer advocate intimately involved in the legislative efforts said Axelrod’s comments could serve to lower expectations among Democrats that Warren would be the obvious choice, given that she conceived the agency in a 2007 journal article and has arguably served as the public face of the effort to get it enacted. The advocate added that Axelrod also opened the door to keeping Warren involved in consumer protection efforts even though she ultimately may not be picked. “I think Elizabeth is absolutely terrific,” Michael Barr, the Treasury Department’s assistant secretary for financial institutions, told reporters Friday during a conference call. “She’s been working closely with me and with Secretary [Timothy] Geithner now for a year and a half to get this financial reform passed, to push for a strong consumer financial protection agency. “She’s a leading figure in the field,” Barr continued, “and Secretary Geithner believes and I believe she’s extremely well-qualified to run the agency.” Given the opportunity to refute the HuffPost report that Geithner opposes her nomination, Barr reiterated that both he and Geithner believe she’s “exceptionally well-qualified.” He didn’t deny the rift. Barr is considered to be a top choice to head the new agency. He’s close with Geithner and was among a small group of administration officials leading the charge to get a strong reform bill through Congress. Consumer advocates and liberal groups say Barr was instrumental in ensuring the proposed agency wasn’t too watered down by Congress. But, as one consumer advocate put it, Warren is a “rock star.” House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank supports her nomination, as does virtually every consumer group and liberal organization across the country. On Friday, Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) circulated a letter to colleagues, in order to get signatures of support, urging Obama to nominate Warren. The letter says Warren is the “best person” to lead the new bureau, adding that she’s “simply the perfect choice.” (Scroll down for the letter.) Banks, however, oppose her. She very well could be their worst nightmare, some have speculated, due to her vociferous advocacy on behalf of consumers and middle-class families. The top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, Alabaman Richard Shelby, told HuffPost he opposes her nomination. Senator Bob Corker, a Republican from Tennessee, declined to comment when asked. Among some in the administration, there are concerns that her nomination could stoke the kind of fight that could delay her appointment for months. The administration wants someone to head the agency as soon as possible. The head of a bank lobby told Bloomberg News that the nomination is “akin to a Supreme Court nominee for financial services.” “They’re going to have a fight no matter what. It’s going to be dragged out regardless,” noted another consumer advocate. “But they could force the issue,” he added. “That’s the lesson from CFPA (the consumer financial protection agency).” The bill had been languishing in the Senate Banking Committee for months until Democrats, led by committee chairman Christopher Dodd of Connecticut, decided to hold a vote to send the bill to the floor, rather than allowing the bill to be amended in committee deliberations. It was a party-line vote. Republicans like Shelby and Corker voiced deep disappointment. If the administration is worried that Warren’s nomination would be problematic because it could stall, it could simply force the issue as it ended up doing with the legislation. “Make them vote against this hard-as-nails woman from Oklahoma who grew up poor who’s tough on big banks,” the advocate noted. “Force the vote.” Warren has relationships with various Republicans in the Senate, which could help her nomination. But that may not be the issue, the advocate noted. “If it’s not about the votes,” he warned. “It’s about whether they want this [agency] to be front-and-center and visible, or if they want to give the banks more power.” READ the letter from Rep. Maloney: Congressional Letter of Support for Elizabeth Warren Ryan Grim contributed reporting to this story.

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David Isenberg: Who Are You Calling Objectionable?

July 14, 2010

Almost since the moment the first private security contractor (PSC) emerged , many commentators have been going to great efforts to try and stick them with the “M” word, i.e., mercenary. While there have been, and sometimes still are, connections and linkages between mercenaries and private security contractors, depending on how you define the term, the contemporary PSC is clearly not a mercenary. PSCs themselves have long resented the term and, rightfully, regard its use as a way to smear them. Bear in mind that almost all people’s thinking on mercenaries is influenced by old, and increasingly outdated, descriptions of mercenaries from the decolonization era after WWII , or mercenaries from the Middle Ages, or even worse, popular culture, where the bad guy nowadays always seems to be some thinly veiled ‘corporate mercenary a la a Blackwater- like company. All of this begs the question; were and are mercenaries a bad thing? A just published article in a British journal considers that very question and finds that under certain conditions, drawn from the Just War tradition, “there is nothing inherently objectionable about mercenarism.” If fact, the article argues that there are times when hiring a mercenary is the moral thing to do. While there are lots of arguments to be made for hiring mercenaries one does not often see the moral card being played. Of course, given Great Britain’s own tradition of the use of mercenaries (East India Company anyone?) it makes sense that this sort of argument would appear in a British journal. Cécile Fabre , a political and moral philosopher at the University of Edinburgh, has an article in the British Journal of Political Science titled ” In Defence of Mercenarism .” Note that Fabre does not say that all justifications for mercenarism are good. For example he does not agree with the justification from freedom of occupational choice, i.e., the state should not interfere with the private sector filling a need, which will doubtlessly not endear him to diehard free market advocates. But he does support enabling “just defensive killings.” In other words, the end justifies the means. There are also some definitional caveats to his analysis. First, he restricts his argument to the use of private armies by states rather than multinational corporations, and as a means for the former to defend their interests abroad, rather than as a tool for domestic policies. That, for example, would have excluded the Sandline affair , when it hired by the nation of Papua New Guinea to resolve the conflict on the island of Bouganville back in 1997 Second, there is the important question of how do you define a mercenary. Fabre means “an individual who offers his military expertise to a belligerent against payment, outside the state’s military recruitment and training procedures, either directly to a party in a conflict, or through an employment contract with a private military corporation. ” Third, in justifying the (limited) marketization of war, he believes that: individual private soldiers, private military corporations and states sometimes have the moral right, in the threefold sense of a liberty, a claim or a power, to contract with one another for the purpose of waging a war. Rights, on my account, protect their holders’ interests, so that for X to have a right to do ϕ means that X’s interest in doing ϕ is important enough to be protected in certain ways. More specifically, to say that X is at liberty to do ϕ is to say that he is morally permitted to do φ. To say that he has a claim to do ϕ is to say that third parties are under some duty to him in respect of his doing φ. To say that he has the power to do ϕ is to say that, by doing φ, he changes his moral relationship to others by transferring to them some of his claims, liberties, powers and immunities, and/or acquiring new ones. Thus, I shall argue that private soldiers, PMCs and states sometimes are morally permitted to contract with one another for the purpose of fighting a war; that their liberty is sometimes protected by a claim against third parties that they not interfere with such contracts by, for example, making them illegal; and that it is sometimes protected by a power so to transact such that the new distribution of claims, privileges, liabilities and powers which the contract establishes is recognized by third parties as binding. For terminological convenience, and unless otherwise specified, when I say that they have the right to enter into a mercenary contract, I shall say that they have a liberty, a claim and a power to do so. Finally, and probably disappointingly for PSC supporters he writes: Nothing I say in this article is meant to support the use to which nations such as the United States put private soldiers and private military corporations (PMCs) in conflicts such as the Iraq War. Nor is my argument for mercenarism in any way meant to support the well-documented exactions that have been perpetrated by private soldiers in various conflicts. To put it emphatically, my claim is that, under strict conditions (which current practices do not meet), the marketization of war is not morally wrong. Those conditions, in a nutshell, are drawn from the Just War tradition. I shall assume that a war is just if it is fought for a just cause by a belligerent which ensures, as far as possible, that the harms done by the war do not exceed the good it brings about. In addition, individual soldiers who fight in the war must also respect the principles of proportionality, necessity and non-combatant immunity when deciding when and how to mount their attacks, as well as whom to target. If, and only if, those conditions are met, there is no reason to reject marketized soldiering as morally unjustifiable. That is a lot of ifs to meet, and given everything we have learned about Iraq since the U.S. invasion of 2003 it is unlikely that anyone short of a circus contortionist can use his argument to justify the use of PSCs in other wars such as Afghanistan and other conflicts. In fact, he recognizes the perils of this line of thinking when he writes later on: In the meantime, it is worth emphasizing what this article is not claiming – that one can choose to make a living however one wishes. An argument for unbridled freedom of occupational choice would lead to the absurd conclusion that Luca Brazzi, Don Corleone’s top henchman, has the moral right to offer his killing services to the latter against shopkeepers who refuse to pay protection money, or that the Mafia has the right to procure killing services for corrupt politicians who wish to eliminate their political opponents. That conclusion would be absurd simply because, in those two examples, the acts of killing are straightforwardly impermissible. That said his arguments merit consideration. First, though, is his analysis of why mercenarism is not justified. An individual, or a group, enjoys the contractual freedom to earn a living if they are able to exchange services, money or both with some other party with a view to benefiting financially from the transaction. This supposes, at the very least, that there should be no legal ban on the provision of those specific services or financial resources. Compare now the following scenarios: (a) Blue decides to enlist into the standing professional army of his home state. He knows that he might be deployed anywhere in the world as thought fit by his superiors, and that he will kill some other human being(s). (b) White finds a job with a PMC that has successfully won a number of government contracts. He knows that he might be deployed anywhere in the world as thought fit by his employers, and that he will kill some other human being(s). (c) Red sets up a business as a freelance mercenary. He hires himself out to different kinds of belligerents for different tasks, from participating in active combat to training professional soldiers for specialized roles on the front line. Unlike White, he has considerable control over where he is deployed and for what purposes. In all three cases, the soldier knows that he will either kill or be complicitous in acts of killing, and will be paid for doing precisely that. The only difference between Blue, on the one hand, and White and Red, on the other hand, is that Blue is formally part of the state’s apparatus, whereas the latter two are not. At first glance, that difference seems irrelevant. For if one believes that freedom of occupational choice is important – a point which I take as fixed – and if one believes that it is (sometimes) permissible to exercise it by killing others, then it is hard to see why one is morally permitted to exercise it in the formal service of a state, but neither as an employee of a private corporation nor as a freelance soldier. By the same token, if Blue’s interest in joining the army is important enough to be protected by a claim, then the same applies to White’s and Red’s interests.7 Similar considerations apply to private military corporations. A PMC, as we saw, acts as an intermediary between belligerents on the one hand, and individuals willing to offer their lethal services on the other. It advertises for openings, recruits employees, trains them, offers them logistical support, oversees their career, monitors their performance, etc. These tasks are carried out by lawyers, human resources personnel, advertising personnel, administrative assistants and accountants, in just the same way as the tasks that enable individuals to join, and effectively perform in, a regular army are carried out by lawyers, human resources personnel, etc. At the bar of freedom of occupational choice, then, if someone’s interest in earning a living by, for example, working as a recruiter for the army ought to be protected by a claim and a liberty, then so should her interest in working as a human resources adviser for a PMC. And so on. As should be clear, however, a state, qua state, is not properly to be regarded as engaging in activities that would enable it to make a living. Consequently, the foregoing argument cannot support the conferral on states of a right to enter a mercenary contract, from which it follows that freedom of occupational choice cannot, on its own, support mercenary contracts. For on the account of rights which I espouse, X has a right in respect of an interest of his if that interest warrants protection. In so far as freedom of occupational choice is not an interest of a state, a state cannot have a right – and therefore cannot have a power – to enter into a mercenary contract at the bar of that particular value. Thus, freedom of occupational choice, may well support mercenaries’ and PMCs’ liberty and claim to do so; but in so far as it cannot support states’ similar power, it cannot support mercenaries’ and PMCs’ power to enter into a contract with the state. Indeed, it is a necessary condition, for A to have the power to make a transaction with B, that B also has that power – and vice versa. Suppose that A and B agree that A will sell B his car for £5,000. Assume that A’s interest in being able to divest himself of his property is important enough to confer on him a power to change his, and others’ relationship to it, by selling it. However, A cannot have the power to transfer his car to B in exchange for B’s £5,000 if B does not herself have the power to transfer £5,000 to A in exchange for his car. Accordingly, any argument to the effect that the transaction ought to be regarded as valid must show that both A and B have the power to enter into that kind of contract – and, by implication, that some interest of both A and B is important enough to be protected by the relevant power.8 As we have just seen, freedom of occupational choice is not an interest of states. In order, then, to defend the view that mercenary contracts as between a state and mercenaries (or PMCs) are legitimate, we shall have to identify some interest(s) of states that can be protected by the relevant powers. If just earning a living is not a sufficiently good reason then what is? Fabre writes: The foregoing considerations should not be taken to imply that freedom of occupational choice has no role to play in justifying states’ right to enter mercenary contracts. Indeed, it might well be in the interest of a state – call it S1 – that individuals’ freedom of occupational choice, which they exercise by hiring themselves out as mercenaries or by working in a PMC, be respected. In such a case, though, the interest which justifies S1′s right is, ultimately, that which is fulfilled by respecting individuals’ freedom of occupational choice. To illustrate: suppose that White’s employer wins a government bid to send a number of (private) soldiers to help fight a justified humanitarian war against a genocidal tyrant. White, in that war, might be assigned to combat duties; or he might be assigned to a security detail for the protection of some high-ranking official, with licence to kill if necessary. Or suppose his employer wins a bid to help a foreign government fight a war of national self-defence against an unjust act of aggression. In all those cases, White kills in defence of others: in defence of those whose lives are threatened by their own genocidal government; in defence of the high-ranking official; and in defence of the national interest of the state whose government hired his company. Now, I take it for granted that one is permitted, and has a claim, at least prima facie, to exercise one’s freedom of occupational choice by offering goods and services (against pay) in justified defence of other people’s lives, and of other states’ economic or national interests. Thus, a group of food producers surely can sell food to whatever organization will then distribute it to the starving. A doctor surely can offer his medical services, against pay, and via the state and/or medical insurance companies, to those who need them as a matter of life and death. Likewise, an aspiring diplomat surely can offer his services, again against payment, in the service of his country’s defence of its national interests, particularly in times of war. An information technician surely can offer her services to a company that is particularly vulnerable to hackers. And so on. If that is correct, as it surely is, then White too can become a private soldier in defence of third parties’ fundamental interests. To be sure, unlike White, those agents contribute to saving the lives or protecting the interests of others without thereby contributing to killing someone else. It is hard to see, however, why that should make a difference to the issue at hand. Take the case of weapons manufacturers, who sell guns to those who need them so as to defend their life or protect the national interest. If they can do so even though the assistance that they provide involves a contribution to an act of killing, then private soldiers and PMCs can (respectively) offer and procure killing services.9 I have argued that individuals can hire themselves out for killing services, as well as procure such services, in so far as, by doing so, they provide some other party with the resources it needs to rightfully defend itself against an unjust threat. The latter point – pertaining to just defensive killings – also provides a justification for conferring on states the right to hire mercenaries. Consider: states need armies and weapons, not only for the purpose of collective self-defence (to point out the obvious), but also for the purpose of defending distant strangers (when called upon to wage a war of intervention), as well as for the purpose of enforcing universally valid norms (when called upon to take part in multilateral peace-keeping forces.) Put bluntly, states need the wherewithal to have acts of killing carried out in their name and with their authorization, in self-defence as well as in defence of others. Now, if a state is at liberty to buy guns from private manufacturers for the aforementioned purposes – as it surely is – then it is also at liberty to buy soldiering services from those willing to provide them. Moreover, if a state has a right to pay for a standing army – as it surely does – then it also has a right to pay for a private army. Finally, recall my earlier point, to the effect that an individual’s interest in working as a private soldier ought to be protected by rights that neither PMCs nor states be themselves interfered with when hiring him, and that third parties recognize his employment contract with them as legally binding. Likewise, states’ interest in hiring a private army ought to be protected by similar rights as pertain to private soldiers and PMCs. In sum, whereas the argument for freedom of occupational choice failed to provide a justification for states’ power to enter into mercenary contracts (and thereby for mercenaries’ and PMCs’ similar power), the argument from just defensive killings can do so. Some of the problems I have with this analysis that it gives states far too much the benefit of a doubt. It may well be, as international relations specialists argue, that the state is the irreducible unit of sovereignty in international politics. But that is far from agreeing that everything a states does is done out of pure motives. A state can label something a just cause but that hardly makes it so. If all anyone has to do to justify being a mercenary is to say they have the state seal of approval one is simultaneous widening and diluting the definition of mercenary to the point of absurdity. One very interesting part of Fabre’s argument has to do with command responsibility, also known as the ” Yamashita standard ” that is based upon the precedent set by the United States Supreme Court in the case of Japanese General Tomoyuki Yamashita. He was prosecuted in 1945, in a still controversial trial, for atrocities committed by troops under his command in the Philippines. Yamashita was charged with “unlawfully disregarding and failing to discharge his duty as a commander to control the acts of members of his command by permitting them to commit war crimes” even though he was not there in country when the crimes were occurring. Fabre writes: So far, I have focused on individual mercenaries. Yet, the status of PMCs themselves is also at issue. If their employees are liable to being killed, are their executives similarly liable, and are their company headquarters legitimate targets for destructive bombings? If their mercenary employees are liable to being punished, are their executives similarly liable? It seems that they are. If, in times of war, the military staff of a belligerent are liable to being either killed or punished for war crimes, so should PMCs’ executives – which is to say that they ought not to be granted the protection standardly afforded to civilians. Admittedly, there is a difference between the two kinds of institution: PMC executives do not (let us assume) take the decision to go to war in the first instance; nor, once the war has started, do they make the strategic and tactical decisions that will result in enemy deaths. Yet, the fact that they, unlike high-ranking officers, do not make those decisions is irrelevant to their liability to being killed or put on trial for participating in an unjust war. For consider the case of weapons factories. As a number of Just War theorists have argued, targeting those installations and the civilians who work in them is permissible, precisely in so far as they provide direct military support to combatants, even though they might be located far away from the lines, and even though their contribution to the war effort is that of accomplices, rather than principals, in the war. But if providing support such as weapons can turn manufacturers into legitimate targets and make them liable to being tried for war crimes, then, by the same token, providing support in the form not merely of equipment but also of combatants themselves can turn PMC executives into legitimate targets and possible defendants in war crime trials. Much more needs to be said on that issue. Treated in full, it would require an account of corporate responsibility for acts committed by individual employees, as well as an account of senior officers’ liability for the acts committed by rank-and-file soldiers. My point, however, is that if one endorses the deliberate targeting of the enemy’s military headquarters (both the building and those who work in it), then one is committed to the view that the deliberate targeting of the headquarters of PMCs who supply the enemy with crucial military support is also permissible. Likewise, if one takes the view that superior officers can and ought to be held legally liable for the acts committed by their subordinates, one must accept that PMC executives can and ought to be held legally liable for the acts committed by their employees. One wonders if Eric Prince, founder of Blackwater, ever thought about this.

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Jonathan Lipson: The Great Repression: The Crisis of Richard Posner

July 13, 2010

Panics cause strange behavior. This is as true of financial markets as it is of the public intellectuals who write about them. Take the case of Richard Posner. Since the crash of 2008, Judge Posner, who sits on the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago and teaches at the University of Chicago Law School, has written scores of articles and blogs — and two books — on the financial crisis, including this spring’s The Crisis of Capitalist Democracy . Throughout, Judge Posner surprised many by insisting that we are in a depression caused by bad government policies that were, in turn, based on bad economics. Only heavy government spending can get us out. Because Posner is a prominent public intellectual, what he says about the financial crisis gets attention. Views have been mixed. Some did not like that he broke with his conservative past, embracing large stimulus packages. Others viewed this as a refreshing change of heart. Either way, critics tend to ignore a basic flaw in Posner’s work here, which is that he fails to mention his role — and that of legal academics generally — in creating and popularizing the policies he now criticizes. Posner has, in short, produced a “culpa” without a “mea.” To understand his role in the financial crisis, it is necessary to understand something about Law and Economics, an academic movement of which Posner has (correctly) claimed himself to be a founder. Law and Economics is essentially free-market economics brought to law school. Posner’s leading textbook on the subject, Economic Analysis of Law , was predictably skeptical of financial regulation. Writing before the financial crisis, he argued that “banking regulations go far beyond what a private creditor would insist upon in the interest of safety and seem . . . dubious.” Securities laws were equally ill conceived because the market would do a better job than Uncle Sam. “Capital markets are,” he claimed, “competitive, and competitive markets generate information about the products sold.” It is difficult to overstate the influence of this movement, which began at the University of Chicago in the late 1950s, and blossomed during Posner’s tenure there. According to a 1993 study (by Posner), by the late 1980s, “the influence of [Law and E]conomics . . . exceeded that of any other interdisciplinary or untraditional approach to law.” Funded by the conservative Olin Foundation, Law and Economics research centers sprouted at law schools around the nation, influencing scores of law professors who shaped the views of thousands of lawyers, many of whom went on to become policy makers and regulators. Its adherents or sympathizers include former attorneys general (Edward Levi), solicitors general (Robert Bork), and U.S. Supreme Court Justices (Antonin Scalia). Law and Economics was thus an important link in the intellectual chain that led to the deregulatory fervor of the past 30 years. Yet, Posner omits this vital piece of the story — and his starring role in it — from his major accounts of the financial crisis. Except for a footnote which acknowledges that “some of” his work “succumbed to [the] fallacy” that markets are axiomatically superior to regulation, it as though neither he nor the Law and Economics movement ever existed. The financial crisis is, according to Posner, the fault of virtually everyone except Law and Economics. With re-regulation on the horizon, Posner may recognize that the next real fight is about intellectual liability for the crisis. Because Law and Economics played a role in building a system he now views as flawed, he needs to tell a story that insulates (and thus exonerates) his movement. His version — which we can call the Great Repression — would set the rhetorical parameters of the discussion going forward. That discussion blames the government and the economists, but not the lawyers and legal academics — who were often both ardent advocates for, and implementers of, deregulation. There is nothing wrong with changing your mind, and perhaps Judge Posner should be lauded for doing so publicly. But breaking with the past is one thing. Burying it is another. “I have been moved to criticize a number of economists,” he explains in The Crisis (his newest work), “because there has been so little self-criticism by economists — a bad sign.” “Instead,” he notes without a trace of irony, “we have seen defensiveness.” No defensiveness from Judge Posner, however. Which may make sense: Why defend a crime that was, in his account, never committed? Panic or no, Posner knows that the best defense is a good offense.

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Brian Kahin: The Expanding Twilight Zone of Abstract Uncertainty

July 6, 2010

Monday June 28 was the day the U.S. Supreme Court was to decide the patent case of the century, Bilski v. Kappos, and bring clarity to the debacle of the 1998 State Street Bank decision. In State Street, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (which hears all patent appeals) had upended centuries of tradition that assumed that patents were for technology and a hundred years of judge-made law that explicitly excluded “methods of doing business.” That decision also appeared to abolish all limits on software patents, fueling a land rush in patenting that helped create the backlog of 1,200,000 applications the Patent and Trademark Office faces today. State Street created an instant constituency for business method patents that wasn’t there before. Before State Street, everybody knew that business methods were not patentable. It was understood and accepted. It was rarely litigated. Under State Street, Bilski would have gotten his patent for a risk-hedging scheme for energy costs — no questions asked. But it has become clear that business method patents — which might have seemed like a great idea in those go-go years — are deeply problematic. They are hard to evaluate for novelty and inventiveness, often sweepingly broad in scope, difficult to interpret, and very controversial. (Would we really want just one airline offering frequent flyer miles?) By abolishing the well-established and uncontroversial business method exclusion, State Street radically extended jurisdiction of the patent system to cover not only business practices such one-click ordering and tax avoidance strategies, but an apparently limitless range of human activities, such as athletic moves and playing with cats. Perhaps the largest professional land grab in modern history. Ten years after State Street, the Patent and Trademark Office wisely denied Bilski’s application — not by attacking State Street head-on but by pointing to another test that the Supreme Court had used in earlier cases: The principle that a patent for a process must be tied to a particular machine or involve a transformation of matter. Without directly touching State Street, the Federal Circuit agreed, atoning for its reputation as an inveterate booster of patents. Then, to the surprise of many, the Supreme Court took the case — and now has muddied the waters further. Justice Kennedy’s decision rejected “the machine or transformation” test as determinative while nonetheless praising its probative value, but declined to reinstate the business method exclusion because some processes that could be described as “business methods” may be patentable. Joined by four justices, Kennedy embraced a more amorphous test, the exclusion of “abstract ideas,” citing language on algorithms in Benson, Flook, and Diehr, the Supreme Court’s last and only word on computer programs, dating back to the 1970s. Kennedy’s affirmation of Benson and Flook suggests that software patents remain problematic, but he adds nothing to the old language that he cites, leaving it to further litigation to determine what an “abstract idea” is in different contexts. Maybe it’s like obscenity: you know it when you see it. Only worse: How do you make concrete something characterized by its lack of concreteness? In Bilski, all the justices rejected the patent — five on the basis that it was an abstract idea; four would have done so on the basis that it was a business method. Justice Stevens’s long and eloquent concurrence shows that patents have historically been limited to technology, as eventually articulated in the business method exclusion. Stevens and three other justices would have reinstated the exclusion, explicitly overruling State Street. Congress to the Rescue There is irony to how this came about. State Street’s abolition of the business method exclusion was so sudden, unexpected, and retroactive, that it looked like financial firms could see their private inner workings patented out from under them. Congress was already embroiled in a drawn-out battle over patent reform (yes, another one; it seems to happen every decade). To fix this apparent inequity, Congress enacted “prior user rights” for “methods” with “method” limited to “a method of doing or conducting business.” But this referred to the traditional exclusion that State Street had just said did not exist. Members of Congress scrambled to read their own definitions into the Congressional Record, some of which included manufacturing processes. The beauty of the business method exclusion was that it was understood, accepted, and rarely litigated. Nobody was petitioning Congress for patents on business methods. But by suddenly handing out a new competitive weapon, State Street created a stampede. Fatigued by years of contentious and emotional debate over reform, Congress passed a greatly diminished reform package in 1999, but it included a stopgap for the upended expectations that State Street created, naturally without taking on the big question of where to draw the limits of patentability. This stopgap measure simply opened the door to complete confusion over what business methods were and whether Congress, by mentioning them in this fix, had intended to validate them, whatever they were. In this way, Congress’s stopgap measure, designed to remedy one particular risk created by State Street, seems to have breathed eternal life into the underlying problem. Deferring to Congress, Justice Kennedy declined to conclude that all business methods were unpatentable. What we end up with in Bilski is: All “business methods” are not necessarily unpatentable, the machine-or-transformation test is useful but not fully determinative, and no new guidance on abstract ideas. Instead, Kennedy’s opinion pulls back from the disciplined guidance that the Federal Circuit was trying to reinstate, regurgitates language from the 1970s, and says, in effect, “try again.” The Law of Abstraction In January of 2009, CCIA, Duke Law School, and the Brookings Institution co-sponsored a conference on “abstract patents.” Our notice began: “Abstract ideas are not patentable, but what are abstract ideas – and how can judges draw a line around them?” The question reverberates anew after this (non)decision in Bilski. The Supreme Court — offering “clues” but no guidance — has just handed this conundrum back to the Federal Circuit, inviting it to develop a concrete law of abstraction that the Supreme Court can then take another shot at. In their book, Patent Failure, law and economics experts Mike Meurer and Jim Bessen point to the problem of fuzzy boundaries and the attendant failure of disclosure function. Drawing from empirical research by themselves and others, they show that while patents work reasonably well for pharmaceuticals, chemicals, and possibly other very tangible inventions, they work poorly for abstract subject matter such as software and business methods. They attribute this to the nature of the patent claims, which are well-defined for molecules but subject to considerable interpretation else. This makes it risky and costly to define boundaries, whether in litigation or more generally in identifying, evaluating, and navigating patents. (In comparison, consider how easy and inexpensive it is to survey and get title insurance for real estate.) At the same time, software and business method patents do not require the large investment in research and validation that new drugs do. Justice Kennedy adopts a rhetorical framework that distinguishes the Industrial Age from the Information Age. Of course, it is not possible to separate one age from another. We still have an industrial sector and will continue to have one. Yes, the information sector has been radically expanded. So shouldn’t we perhaps investigate whether information sector needs or wants a system designed for industrial use? (And could we perhaps ask those who actually make the technology work, not just the patent lawyers?) The big problem is that the patent system remains one-size-fits all. We are stuck treating software the same as pharmaceuticals. Once business methods (or computer programs or diagnostic information) are inside the patent system, there is no escape. Middle managers are forced to live with high-priced patent lawyers at their side. Justice Kennedy zeros in on a core issue of patenting in the Information Age: “This Age puts the possibility of innovation in the hands of more people and raises new difficulties for the patent law. With ever more people trying to innovate and thus seeking patent protections for their inventions, the patent law faces a great challenge in striking the balance between protecting inventors and not granting monopolies over procedures that others would discover by independent, creative application of general principles.” He concludes the paragraph with the ultimate disclaimer: “Nothing in this opinion should be read to take a position on where that balance ought to be struck.” At least he acknowledges a balance. State Street did not. Its answer was not to describe a balance or draw a line, but to let it all in. So the Supreme Court has now charged the Federal Circuit with developing a law of abstraction, a body of law that divides the world between abstract ideas and non-abstract (and so patentable) ideas – based on Bilski and three examples from 1972, 1978, and 1981. Here is the fuzzy boundary challenge on a grand scale: A vast twilight zone of possibly patentable business methods, software, and diagnostic information. You would be crazy (or at least irresponsible to your shareholders) not to go for as many as you can get. A questionable patent, while not always as good as a solid patent, is a valuable weapon that can be used to threaten and bludgeon competitors, as well as anyone else willing to pay a licensing fee “reasonable” enough to avert the astronomical costs of litigation. The odds of the patent being contested on subject grounds are infinitesimal. Today we have a huge backlog of patent applications, because the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office devotes scarce resources to managing patents in areas where standards are difficult and costly to apply — and where patents are controversial and used frequently for ambush and ransom. The USPTO’s limited resources — and the resources of U.S. industry — should be focused on areas where patents are needed for innovation and the system works by consensus. They should not be used for regulating business practices — let alone tax avoidance, athletics, and the enjoyment of pets. Brian Kahin is Senior Fellow at the Computer & Communications Industry Association.

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Donna Flagg: Progress in Corporate Ethics: Not So Much

June 30, 2010

It was a busy week last week on the corporate ethics front. First, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of Jeffrey Skilling, former CEO of Enron and Conrad Black, former Chief at Hollinger International, saying that certain convictions of theirs could be thrown out due to faulty instructions that were given to jurors. It’s not as though they will walk away as free men now because of it, but it is said that parole may be more within reach as a result. Second, we had the Dodd-Frank Bill take one step closer to President Obama’s signature which, in turn, brings Wall Street one step closer to having regulators sit on them in much the same way that babysitters watch irresponsible children who cannot be left unsupervised for fear of the damage they could do to themselves and others. Doesn’t that sound familiar? Sometimes I wonder if it wouldn’t be better to simply place Nanny Cams in their offices. But even back when Enron fell and the other ethics debacles followed, there were do-the- right -thing training courses, new governance departments, oversight committees and Chief Ethics Officers sprouting up everywhere. So what happened? In the end, did any of it really work? Is there, or can there really be, such a thing as changing the moral fibers of individuals via the rule of law, policy and procedure? It doesn’t appear to be so. That’s because integrity can’t be “written in” to organizational behavior, especially for companies who have unprincipled people working there to begin with. But still, we are mired in regulations because each new set of rules becomes necessary due to the people who found a way to get around the old set of rules that came before. Meanwhile, it goes on and on — a perpetual cycle of making rules for people to break, so we need to create more rules that they’ll eventually figure out how to break again. It’s crazy. Think of the resources that go into this nonsense. Well we don’t have to think, we can see. We are feeling it now. Now, I know (and believe) that controls are necessary, but bogging the rest of the world down with legislative hoops to protect it from the “loop-holers,” seems unjust (and stupid). If you’ve ever been audited, you know what I’m talking about. I’d like to think there is a better way, meaning that as a strategy, law enforcement is not the most constructive or productive way to manage ethics in the workforce. Let’s remember, penalties may or may not deter bad behavior, but they most certainly will affect the spirit of the company and perhaps more importantly, the sense of security among the conscientious majority. The only deterrent you really need is, “You’re fired.” Not cutting the cord when necessary is where I constantly see companies get themselves into trouble. They’re afraid — of what exactly, I don’t know. But as a result, businesses tiptoe around terminations when they shouldn’t. Dishonesty manifests inside a company and brings debilitating cost along with it, not only because of the potential legal ramifications, but because it adversely affects all of those people who want things to be done “right.” It is possible. Business behavior can be shaped around a set of principles that reflect organizational values. The best way is to identify, communicate, enforce and reward/sanction behavior on a regular and consistent basis to create a strong, sound and safe company from the ground up and inside-out. That is, before the ethics police come after you.

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John R. Talbott: The Failure of Financial Reform, Itemized

June 30, 2010

It is really quite incredible that of all the things that went wrong to cause the latest economic crisis, the new financial reform bill does almost nothing with regards to the following key issues. Here are the original problems and the actions being taken. 1. Bank leverage: Very little done in new bill, still can do things off balance sheet (what is the business purpose of doing things off balance sheet except to deceive?), still using risk measurements based on historical volatility of assets, VAR, which can easily be gamed by managements rather than strict capital requirements based on actual ratios to real equity book capital. Needs to get from 35 to one before crisis to proposed 20 to one under this legislation, but really should be below 8 to one. Larry Kotlikoff of Boston University suggests one to one is the right ratio and calls the concept Limited Purpose Banking (LPB). Without bank leverage, it is hard to imagine how a small regional economic downturn in say, Houston oil markets or Silicon Valley’s semiconductor industry could ever spread contagiously nationally or internationally, thus stopping most recessions and depressions before they start. 2- Interest rates too low: Even lower today. 3- Lobbying and money in politics: Even worse today having been blessed by Supreme Court that corporations can fund campaign advertising directly and financial firms have stepped up with big donations and lobbying effort to stymie the reform bill itself. 4- Too much debt everywhere: Now, more, especially on local and federal governments including Europe and Japan and global banks. Banks slow to deleverage and consumers are not spending substantially less and saving more, they are just defaulting on their debts to lessen their debt loads. 5- Depositor insurance: Disguised as a benefit to depositors, it is actually a windfall to lower funding costs of banks and encourages stupid behavior by them because of the moral hazard with regard to riskiness of assets held, businesses entered and leverage undertaken. Increased permanently from $100K to $250K per account since crisis. 6- Bank consumer fees: Much higher now. Consumers and taxpayers are basically paying for a problem they had nothing to do with in creating. This was solely a banking and government problem. To blame homebuyers for accepting a no money down, 100% home loan at 2% per year to buy a home they never in their wildest dreams thought they could afford ignores the mistakes the banks made in offering these terms. Once you offer someone 100% financing, it is no longer his problem, it is yours. Individual home owners did not buy these properties, they were actually owned by the banks and their investors who put up all the money. 7- Predatory lending: Still active. Listen to the pitch for reverse mortgages to our seniors on television and try to explain how they actually work or try to calculate how much profit spread the banks have built into those transactions for themselves, then imagine having a touch of Alzheimer’s and doing it correctly. 8- Global investor diversification: No change, investors encouraged to hold thousands of assets around the world through mutual funds, index funds or well diversified institutional funds making supervision of managements impossible and encouraging the hiring of too many financial intermediaries and consultants as supposed experts. 9- Credit Default Swap (CDS) market: Was the prime reason everyone was too interconnected to fail as one domino sent them all crashing. Nothing new to report as they either need to be shut down or regulated like insurance companies because that is what they are. Should be shut down because they create too much systemic counterparty risk that can crash the entire system, but at a minimum, you should not be able to buy CDS’s naked, only as a hedge against a similar asset. It makes no sense to buy a company or its debt, buy CDS default insurance equal in value to a hundred times what you paid for the company, and then drive the company into bankruptcy, regardless of its financial health. This is the equivalent of buying fire insurance on your neighbor’s home and then lighting the arson yourself. 10- Criminal behavior: Banksters, realtors, appraisers, mortgage brokers, investment bankers all broke the law with their fraudulent and criminal and conspiratorial acts and many private and public funds failed to perform their fiduciary duties or required investment due diligence. The scale of the criminal enterprise is vast crossing many industries and country borders and the damages incalculable as globally we have lost over 50 million jobs, 20 million have lost their homes, $20 trillion of savings has been permanently lost to investors and more than 100 million people have been thrown back into the destitution and poverty of earning less than$2 a day. No arrests, no yellow crime scene tape around Goldman’s new office building, no seizing of computers and emails and phone records of the suspected banksters and their lawyers and accountants. Certainly, many congressmen should be imprisoned for taking bribes disguised as campaign donations that encouraged them to remove or ignore important financial oversight regulations, but since they write the laws I doubt this will ever happen. 11- Board control: Still dominated by CEO and company insiders and their friends as opposed to being controlled by shareholders directly. Get the CEO and other corporate executives completely out of the boardroom which should be run exclusively by genuine shareholder representatives. 12- Securitization: Little changed, talk of issuer having to hold 5% of securities issued, but this is still subject to how final regulation is written. Securitization market is dead until they straighten out the rigged ratings game and re-instill investors trust in banks and investment banks who purposely packaged the worst trash they had on their books, gift wrapped it as a CDO and laid it off on many of their biggest and best clients. 13- Ratings agencies: Reform ignored fundamental problem with issuers paying for ratings rather than investors. 14- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: So far, no change, their restructuring was not included in this bill, they are still making loans of which many are going to turn out bad as they are one of only a few institutions lending into areas that are experiencing steep price declines currently and the best predictor of future default is home price declines in a region. 15- Too many financial middlemen: Because of overemphasis on diversification, investors, both individual and institutional, hold such far flung and complex investments that they become overly dependent on a long list of financial advisors and consultants and managers. At best these advisors have different motivations than the primary investor, don’t care as much about protecting against losses since it isn’t their money, and increases the risk of fraudulent and criminal behavior somewhere in the long and complex investment food chain. 16- Who regulates?: Very little change, same guys in congress and at the Fed, Treasury and the FDIC who got us into this mess. 17- To big to fail (TBTF): Has gotten worse as the size and power of the biggest banks has increased dramatically. 18- Bank market concentration and monopoly power: Has become more concentrated. 19- Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARM’s): Probably the biggest single cause of increased defaults as mortgage payments could jump as much as 50%, little to no change from bill. 20- Teaser rates: Still legal. Still a joke. 21- Low down payments required: Ads on radio still promoting the idea. 22- Personal bankruptcy law: Nothing done, judge needs authority to be able to adjust mortgage balance. 23- Regulating long maturity asset industries: Bank and insurance companies are long maturity asset and liability games with no short term implications to managements or their compensation from losses occurring long into the future. Needs special regulation of these markets but little has been done to address the problem. 24- Regulatory capture: The same, revolving door, industry groups and big money in politics writing our legislation and regulations, or in some cases, erasing them. 25- Managing risk: Need to separate principal investing, trading, investment banking and other risky activities within deposit taking commercial banks. No return to Glass Steagall or prohibition on these activities in the bill with the exception that foreign exchange, gold and silver trading will have to be done in a separate subsidiary or could be banned completely by banks. 26- Bankruptcy proceedings for banks and corporations: Plan addressed for FDIC banks to liquidate quickly if overseas subsidiaries do not create a problem, which they will, but still have to create an accelerated process for all corporations so debtors as well as stockholders can take a hit to their poorly invested debt capital rather than bailing all creditors out at par. 27- Hedge funds: Still no investigation of their role as counter-party and enabler to a lot of bank and derivative nonsense, still no bill to tax their managers at ordinary rates rather than capital gain rates. 28- Management incentives: Still not complete, no one has asked why if bank executives were given long vesting stock options before, why weren’t the managers thinking long term and thus be better aligned with shareholder perspective. Not just a question of when executive receives bonus, must also have skin in the game. All stock and options can’t be free or executives have no downside to worry about and act like pure upside option holders. 29- Complexity of mortgage and investment banking products: Banks introduced complexity to products on purpose to confuse investors, to reduce competition and increase profit spreads. This ends up reducing liquidity. Very little of the real problem has been addressed. 30- Bad bank loans: Most still on banks’ books and losses have not been realized. TARP was supposed to be used for this, but then Paulson decided not to. Fed trying desperate measures to hide bank problems on its balance sheet and eventually transfer the bad loans to Fannie and Freddie where they will never be seen again but taxpayer will pay for losses. 31- Government stimulus: Saved or created zero new or imaginary jobs, just an excuse to keep public employees fully employed. If state, local and federal governments hire and promote their workers during good times, but won’t lay them off during bad times, how do we ever make government smaller and more efficient. Simple math tells you that under this formulation, eventually, everyone will be working for the government, I don’t know how we will be able to pay our tax bill however. 32- Severity of new bank regulations: The stocks of the big banks went up on news that this financial reform package was going to pass. What does that tell you? 33- Bank executive compensation: The same, if not worse as the bonuses are just as big, but now there are losses at the banks rather than profits and much of this bonus pool money is coming directly from US taxpayer. 34- Undervalued Chinese currency: Extremely slow progress. 35- Globalization: Created vast inequality as American workers were forced to compete with workers from $1 an hour wage countries. Raghuram Rajan argues that inequality contributed to the financial crisis by encouraging our government (through Fannie and Freddie) to promote home ownership aggressively to make up for lost wages and benefits of the American worker. Globalization allowed US companies to avoid taxation and regulation (environmental, banking, disclosure, workplace rules, union rules, product safety, etc.) and geographic horizons of institutional and individual investors were stretched so far as to make investment analysis and supervision of management teams completely unmanageable. 36- Bank transparency: Probably worse given their derivative positions, their off-balance sheet shenanigans continue, and the fact that all the new regulation and bank mergers means lots of restatements and footnotes and asterisks and fine print in the financial reports. 37- Externality costs and collective action problems: Very little progress, still don’t know how you manage your risks and maintain market share when you as a banker are offering conventional 30 year fixed rate mortgages with a required 20% down payment to your customers and a new bank competitor opens across the street from you offering interest only, pay only if you feel like it, never repay the principal, zero down, zero closing costs, no income, no job, no problem, 2% teaser rate for five years, no prepayment penalty, no closing costs, feel free to take as much money out to buy that new car you always wanted, adjustable rate mortgages. Until long maturity industries like banking and insurance figure out this collective action problem and how to control it, they are doomed to these same crises in the future, The free market alone cannot address this unique type of problem where the dumbest makes the most and gains the most customers with losses postponed for decades. 38- Federal Reserve independence: We get a one-time partial audit and presidents of local boards no longer appointed by banks, but entire Fed continues to be dominated and controlled by banks and does their bidding rather than the people’s. 39- Response times to crises: Our understanding of how to respond quickly and effectively to systemic financial crises hasn’t improved. Not much learned, but we will get another chance real soon. Just look at the length of problems in this list and ask how many we really understand or believe we have solved for the future. 40- Underwater mortgage holders: No real help. Very few mortgage modifications. No mark downs of mortgage amounts. 25% of mortgages now underwater nationally where the mortgage balance is greater than the current home value and possibly as much as 50% of mortgages in California are already underwater. 41- Social Security (SS) and Medicare Impacts: Debt investor concerns on looming SS and Medicare blowup and potential insolvencies affects viability of entire financial system and the dollar. Not addressed by congress although it could be a $50 trillion problem that is a big enough number to cause the US to default on some obligations in the not too distant future. 42- The media: Corporate owned media dependent on corporate sponsored ads heavily biased on bullish buy side of market, always – Nothing’s changed. CNBC never saw a stock they didn’t like. 43- Insider trading and market manipulation: Policing and enforcement, especially at hedge funds, nothing to report. 44- Public reporting and transparency of publicly traded corporations: Derivative positions of $600 trillion notional amount make reading and analyzing an annual report almost meaningless as it is impossible to know the company’s exposure to risky events and assets. 45- Overnight repo market: Nothing done to prevent funding of banks and investment banks with many long term obligations with overnight borrowings. Could mean the start of another possible run on the banks from their overnight lenders similar to what happened in this crisis. 46- Corruption in government: Two party system encourages collusion when investigating ethical and legal oversights, money in politics distorts all votes, and gerrymandering election districts assures us that the Democrats and Republicans that survive their primaries will be so far to the right or left as to make cooperation and governance in Washington nearly impossible. Much of this crisis could have been avoided with more effective government supervision as market economies are poorly prepared to manage systemic risk, collective action problems, externalities and ethical questions a bank corporate charter has no opinion on. Corporations were created to make profits, governments were created to solve problems that markets have difficulty understanding. We are quickly becoming a banana republic where government and the media act as paid employees of oligarchs and big banks and corporations. We invented government and the corporate form, they are virtual entities, they exist only in documents in DC and in lawyer offices’ filing cabinets, and yet now we find ourselves controlled by them, a true Frankenstein horror. 47- Global banking system: In worse shape now given that Europe has sovereign debt crisis to deal with. Just like the AAA layers of Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDO’s) that European banks bought during the mortgage crisis and now are experiencing default rates of 93%, now we have trillions more of what were supposed to be AAA sovereign credits being held by the same European banks but represent countries with 14% government budget deficits (Greece), 20% unemployment (Spain), countries with banks that are eight times bigger than their entire GDP (Ireland) and whose populations are aging and retiring so rapidly they will not see big real GDP growth for generations. These countries, and many others in Europe, will certainly be downgraded significantly in the near future and outright government defaults are not out of the question. The problem is exasperated by the fact that Value at Risk (VAR) accounting allowed these European banks to hold AAA assets like CDO’s and sovereign debt with almost infinite leverage so they have very little equity standing behind these loans which means once again that the taxpayers throughout all the countries of Europe, and the US, will be picking up the tab when these countries do default or restructure their debt. John R. Talbott is the bestselling author of eight books on economics and politics that have accurately detailed and predicted the causes and devastating effects of this entire financial crisis including, in 2003, The Coming Crash in the Housing Market . He is currently working on a new book that will be published in September 2010 entitled, The $200 Trillion Crisis . It will be published electronically and will be available for pre-order on Kindle and iPad starting in August 2010.

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Francine McKenna: Will Auditors Ever Answer to Investors for Aiding and Abetting?

June 30, 2010

The House-Senate Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act Conference finished their work and as my friends at Compliance Week predicted a version of the Specter Bill — to repeal the Supreme Court’s Stoneridge decision — was not included in the final bill. Bruce Carton in Compliance Week : As this process gets underway, auditors, lawyers, bankers and other advisers to public companies are quietly breathing a sigh of relief that one of the items no longer on the table is an amendment proposed by Sen. Arlen Specter that would have overturned the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2008 ruling in  Stoneridge Investment Partners, LLC v. Scientific-Atlanta, Inc. , thereby permitting “aiding and abetting” liability for a company’s auditors and others. The final version of the financial reform bill that passed the Senate did not include the Specter amendment. However, a coalition of state regulators, public pension funds, professors, consumers and investors and the attorneys who advise them, was working until the end to put something back in the bill as an amendment to restore the right of investors to defend themselves and hold white collar criminals accountable. Their email to me states: The amendment brought by Senators Arlen Specter (D-PA), Jack Reed (D-RI), Dick Durbin (D-IL) and many other senior Democrats would have enacted one simple change in current anti-investor law — law that was “legislated” by a conservative Supreme Court rather than the U.S. Congress. The reform would have restored the right of pension funds and other investors to hold accountable in courts those who knowingly aid and abet securities fraud. This legal right of investors, which for fifty years helped white collar crime victims recover their losses while also deterring future fraud enablers, was stripped from shareholders and bondholders by the radical  Stoneridge Supreme Court decision of 2008, which expanded upon an earlier misguided Court decision in order to throw out thousands of remaining meritorious fraud claims brought by retirement funds and individual investors against investment banks and others who helped design the Enron fraud — the largest financial crime in U.S. history. Earlier this Spring, a Federal appeals court cited the “Supremes” and threw out the legitimate claims of ripped-off shareholders and bondholders in the billion dollar Refco, Inc. derivatives fraud.  In Refco, a now criminally convicted corporate lawyer had worked with Refco’s senior execs to execute fake transactions as a paper trail leading to falsified financial statements that were issued to investors and the public. Both Congressman Barney Frank and Senator Ted Kaufman responded to questions about the Specter amendment during my visit to Washington DC for Compliance Week ‘s Annual Conference.   House Financial Services Committee Chairman Frank said at the conference that he was in favor of bringing the amendment back in the bill.  Senator Kaufman, although a co-sponsor of the original amendment , is in favor but does not think it’s likely . I’ve written quite a bit about the impact of third party liability on the auditors in fraud claims and the Stoneridge decision . In February of 2008, I wrote about Treasury’s attempt to address the nagging issues of viability and sustainability of the accounting profession. They punted: I have consistently disagreed with the Big 4′s claim that  auditor liability caps are necessary  to avoid losing one of the remaining firms to catastrophic litigation. I have lamented the fact that the auditors don’t get sued often enough for my tastes and, when they do, they often settle. I’ve also said that they don’t deserve our pity, as they are less than transparent regarding their true financial capacity to address ongoing litigation… “The Treasury Department established the Advisory Committee on the Auditing Profession to examine the sustainability of a strong and vibrant auditing profession.” John P. Coffey , the Co-Managing Partner of Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann LLP… agrees with what I have been saying on this blog all last year. It is with this perspective that I address one of the questions the Committee is considering, namely, whether there ought to be a cap on auditor liability. I respectfully submit that the case for such a cap has not been made… …the fact that, in today’s environment, auditors are rarely named as defendants in these actions. In a three-year period immediately before the PSLRA was enacted – April 1992 through April 1995 – auditors were named as defendants in 81 of 446 private securities class actions filed, for an average of 27 suits per year, or 18% of all private securities class actions. As the reforms of the PSLRA and the concomitant jurisprudence took hold, that number dropped precipitously. Auditors were named as defendants in only five suits in 2005, and only two cases in each of 2006 and 2007. The number for 2007 is especially telling because approximately one out of every eleven companies with U.S.-listed securities – almost 1200 companies in all – filed financial restatements in 2007 to correct material accounting errors. Further, an analysis of securities actions filed in 2006 and 2007 demonstrates a significant decline in the number of cases alleging GAAP violations, appearing to suggest “a movement away from the focus in recent years on the validity of financial results and accounting treatment.” Well, that’s changed post-financial crisis.  In addition to the big frauds like Satyam, Glitnir , the Madoff feeder funds and garden variety accounting malpractice claims , the auditors are named in high profile subprime cases where fraud is alleged such as New Century and Lehman . It’s still not a deluge, since the PSLRA makes it damn difficult to draw the auditors in without a smoking gun or, actually, a rogue mechanical pencil. Even with a top notch bankruptcy examiner’s report — I’m talking Refco here — it’s not easy. July 11, 2007, Bloomberg Refco Inc. ‘s tax accountant, Ernst & Young, and a company law firm may have helped the defunct futures trader defraud investors, according to an examiner’s report unsealed today. Ernst & Young, the second-biggest U.S. accounting firm, and Mayer Brown Rowe & Maw, a Chicago-based law firm, might face claims by Refco for aiding and abetting the fraud, examiner  Joshua Hochberg said in a report filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York. Grant Thornton, the sixth biggest U.S. accounting firm, might face claims of professional negligence for work it did before Refco’s bankruptcy, Hochberg said. Contrast that seemingly slam-dunk assessment with this report on August 22, 2009: Two accounting firms and a law firm won dismissal of a lawsuit on behalf of former Refco Inc currency trading customers who lost more than $500 million when the defunct futures and commodities broker went bankrupt. U.S. District Judge Gerard Lynch on Tuesday said Marc Kirschner, a trustee representing the customers, failed to show that Ernst & Young LLP [ERNY.UL], Grant Thornton LLP and the law firm Mayer Brown LLP knew of or substantially assisted in the fraudulent diversion of assets that led to Refco’s demise. The Manhattan federal judge, however, gave permission for Kirschner to file a new complaint. Citing the trustee’s access to a “substantial trove” of Refco documents, Lynch said: “It is far from clear that repleading would be futile.” In his 35-page opinion, Lynch said Grant Thornton’s work gave it “a complete picture of how Refco and the Refco fraud, functioned.” He also said Mayer Brown “actively participated in carrying out Refco’s fraudulent misstatement of its financial position,” while Ernst performed to work for Refco “despite apprehending the scope of the fraud.” Judges, even while granting motions to dismiss, have more than once bemoaned the fact that the law does not allow them to act differently. In case after case, the judges are forced to let culpable third-party actors in these frauds off the hook. Unfortunately, Jonathan Weil tells us of the insidious impact that Stoneridge has had on bringing bringing real justice in two cases involving law firm Mayer Brown and their partner Joseph Collins (Refco): Last week, the Securities and Exchange Commission settled its own civil complaint against Collins. His deal included no monetary penalties. His only punishment was a court order barring him from violating the securities laws’ anti-fraud provisions in the future. He also was allowed to settle the suit without admitting or denying the SEC’s allegations, an absurd formality considering he’s already been found guilty of a crime. Investors aren’t slated to recover any money as part of his conviction, either. His sentence included a mere $500 fine. The judge who presided over his trial denied prosecutors’ request for a forfeiture order, under which Collins’s assets could have been used to compensate victims of Refco’s fraud. Before that, Collins and Mayer Brown got off scot free in an investor lawsuit led by Pacific Investment Management Co., the world’s largest bond-fund manager. The federal district judge overseeing that case, Gerard Lynch of New York, threw out the plaintiffs’ claims against Collins and his former firm last year. “It is perhaps dismaying that participants in a fraudulent scheme who may even have committed criminal acts are not answerable in damages to the victims of the fraud,” Lynch wrote in an opinion upheld two months ago by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. “The fact that the plaintiff-investors have no claim is the result of a policy choice by Congress.” He added that “this choice may be ripe for legislative re- examination.” It’s been especially frustrating in the Madoff feeder fund cases. In the case of CRT Investments, Ltd, et al v. J. Ezra Merkin, Gabriel Capital, BDO Seidman, LLP, and BDO Tortugas: …the court dismissed aiding and abetting fraud claims because the plaintiffs could not allege the required intent. Mere recklessness was not sufficient in the absence of ‘specific red flags that the accountant disregarded that would place a reasonable accountant on notice that the audited firm was engaged in wrongdoing which is detrimental to the investors.’  The court expressed its frustration that the law prohibited further exploration of the alleged wrongdoing. Finally, the court notes that these types of allegations of center against auditors of investment funds in these situations appear to be recurring, yet they cannot go beyond the motion to dismiss stage and into discovery under the present state of the law.  The inability to explore the alleged wrongdoing any further and potentially hold these parties accountable is frustrating to the court. What’s confusing to me is that the Private Securities Litigation and Reform Act (PSLRA) restored the SEC’s ability to use “aiding and abetting” as a tool for enforcement of the securities laws but private plaintiff’s still can not.  It’s as if Congress at the time, pre-Enron, believed plaintiffs and their lawyers too irresponsible to bring reasonable causes of actions.   As if litigation against guilty parties is ever a bad idea… This perversion of the “free-market” philosophy, wherein bad companies are deemed good for the economy so we allow their bad actions with impunity and encourage others to help them, is particularly pernicious . Tom Gorman at Porter Wright tells us: The dividing line between primary and secondary liability in securities fraud actions has been a key subject of debate since 1994 when the Supreme Court handed down its decision in ”Central Bank of Denver, N.A. v. First Interstate Bank of Denver, N.A.,” 511 U.S. 164 (1994). There, the high court held that Exchange Act Section 10(b), the antifraud weapon of choice for the SEC as well as private litigants, did not reach aiding and abetting. In the wake of that decision, the circuits have split on the question of primary and secondary liability. Some have adopted the “bright line” test, initially fashioned by the Tenth Circuit and later developed and amplified by the Second Circuit. The Ninth Circuit, in contrast, used the “substantial participation test. Both tests are  discussed here . Congress partially addressed the issue by restoring the SEC’s aiding and abetting authority in the PSLRA. Nevertheless, the issue continues to be of importance in its enforcement actions. Congress has declined to extend aiding and abetting authority to private securities fraud plaintiffs. And Gorman again here: In 1995, when the PSLRA restored aiding and abetting liability in SEC enforcement actions in the wake of  Central Bank , the SEC urged Congress to extend liability on this basis to private actions. At that time, Congress was more focused on limiting liability in private damage actions. Now however, Congress is considering a host of provisions which would greatly expand liability under the federal securities laws. While those proposals focus on enhancing the power of the SEC, there is little doubt that the Commission will support Senator Specter’s bill which would greatly expand the reach of private damage actions based on Exchange Act Section 10(b). This would be consistent with the SEC’s frequently stated view that private damage actions are a necessary adjunct to its enforcement program. The SEC can use the terms “aiding and abetting” all it wants and does so quite often.  They succeed with serious charges when the courts sometimes fail to hold the same perpetrators accountable.  When it comes to the auditors, the SEC can hold them accountable , and does occasionally, but often very late and the courts dismiss. By issuing these false and misleading audit opinions, E&Y was a cause of and aided and abetted Bally’s violations of Sections 17(a)(2) and (3) of the Securities Act and Sections 13(a) and (b)(2)(A) of the Exchange Act and Exchange Act Rules 12b-20, 13a-1, 13a-11, and 13a-13. E&Y also violated Section 10A of the Exchange Act by not bringing to the attention of Bally’s Audit Committee Bally’s false and misleading disclosures of the $55 million special charge. Tom Gorman lays out the opposing views of the Supreme Court on the original Stoneridge decision in a way that highlights the pro-business versus pro-investor bias inherent in the decision.  In light of everything wicked that has come our way since Enron, is this really the plan we want to stick to? Justice Kennedy concludes with three points. First, he cites policy: “Were the implied cause of action to be extended to the practices described here, however, there would be a risk that the federal power would be used to invite litigation beyond the immediate sphere of securities litigation and in areas already governed by functioning and effective state-law guarantees.” Second, adoption of petitioner’s theory is contrary to  Central Bank and the PSLRA. Finally, the day is long past when the Court will expand an implied cause of action such as the one involved here in view of separation of powers concerns… …according to Justice Stevens, the sham transaction alleged in the complaint had the same effect on Charter’s profits as a false entry and is more than sufficient. And, permitting an action to proceed based on this kind of sham transaction will not inhibit business because it is an isolated departure from ordinary transactions… Justice Stevens concludes his dissent with what might be viewed as an ode to the implied cause of action. While it is clear that Justice Stevens views himself neither as a liberal or an activist judge, the closing paragraphs of his opinion chide the majority for their swipes at implied causes of action. These causes of action are based on “A basic principle animating our jurisprudence … [that was] enshrined in state constitution provisions guaranteeing, in substance, that ‘every wrong shall have a remedy.’ Fashioning appropriate remedies for the violation of rules of law designed to protect a class of citizens was the routine business of judges …” … Thus, while the Court’s decision is pro-business, it is also pro-enforcement, but through SEC actions, not class actions. Finally, Justice Stevens is no doubt correct in his lament: “the days when the federal courts could be viewed as the protectors of all those whose rights have been violated have passed.” If you believe the federal courts should be viewed as the ultimate protectors of all those whose rights have been violated, I urge you to call or write the members of the Senate Banking Committee . Shine some strong sunlight on these cases. Urge your Senators and Congressmen to support a repeal of Stoneridge and a restoration of the private right of action for aiding and abetting of fraud, in particular by third parties such as auditors.

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Adanac Announces CCAA Protection Extension to October 29, 2010

June 30, 2010

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA–(Marketwire – June 30, 2010) – Adanac Molybdenum Corporation (“Adanac” or the “Company”) (TSX:AUA)(PINK SHEETS:AUAYF)(FRANKFURT:A9N) announced today that its application of June 30, 2010 to the Supreme Court of British Columbia (the “Court”) for an Order under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (“CCAA”) to extend its creditor protection has been successful, allowing the Company to continue to restructure and continue to stay all claims and actions against the Company and its assets. The June 30, 2010 Order extends the stay period under CCAA until October 29, 2010, at which time the matter will be reviewed by the Court. Further information can be found on the website of KPMG Inc., the court-appointed Monitor, at www.kpmg.ca/adanac . 

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Stuart Whatley: Orrin Opens the Hatch

June 29, 2010

Day two of the Elena Kagan Supreme Court confirmation hearing saw an act of political soap-boxing by Utah Senator Orrin Hatch, who dedicated the brunt of his time to the left’s griping over January’s Citizens United decision. Some of his frustration is likely deserved — a few responses to the ruling may have gone above and beyond the call of shrillness (further elucidation on that here ). But nor was the content of Hatch’s tirade without its flaws. His claim that the decision is widely supported does not reflect polls taken in its aftermath . And as Constitutional Accountability Center founder Doug Kendall notes , the Utah Republican conveniently avoided a central argument of the case: whether corporations should enjoy the same equal rights as individuals to vote, run for office, and participate in electioneering. Just as revealing as these outstanding blemishes though is what Hatch had to say about Utah small businesses and S Chapter corporations (small chartered, incorporated entities that can have as few as one shareholder), which by his conjecture would lose free speech rights if corporate political speech were to be managed. On some issues it is expected that the business community will unite homogeneously around a common cause, such as on taxation. But bundling in small businesses and S Chapters with multinational corporations that comprise forceful “special interests*” largely ignores the way influence peddling works in American politics. When one looks to the most destructive and inane policies operative today, or to lobbying and electioneering efforts that effectively “drown out” the voice of the people, rarely is it disparate laundromat owners or lawn services that raise eyebrows. Though Wall Street and health insurers have stolen the show this year, these are merely the latest installments in a long saga whereby the general public ultimately suffers from a concentrated industry’s bloated gains. More often than not, the story is eventually told of how that industry made its own bed through policy-oriented efforts to avoid oversight and costly regulations, or to garner the largess of contracts and extravagant subsidies. For the past decade a famously egregious but hardly exceptional example of waste stemming from special interest influence is the U.S. sugar program, which pointlessly subsidizes the largest sugar producers at an estimated cost of $2 billion annually to American households . Equally concerning is the massive waste of taxpayer dollars due to an unseemly favoritism for wildly expensive defense contractors and foreign aid distributors prosecuting American adventures abroad. In fact, another salient example could be some public labor unions , which Hatch conveniently groups in with corporations as fellow influence peddlers (the implication being that equal opportunity institutional corruption is unproblematic). Single-cause special interests in politics more resemble business cartels like OPEC than innocuous collections of freethinking but like-minded individuals. The distortive power of such highly concentrated funds on specific legislative causes cannot be overstated, and it is influence individual citizens and small business owners cannot match. In 1998, the year the sugar program began, it’s estimated that the industry enjoyed a net gain of over $1 billion at a campaigning cost of only $2.8 million because its vast reserves of potential electioneering funds were leveraged into powerful campaign threats. Donating to a pliable candidate with the threat of funding his next opponent tenfold is common practice, and it turns $2,000 spent into $12,000 worth of influence gained. What’s more, the ruling in Citizens United furnishes special interests with far more threat credibility than they previously had at their disposal. This influence equally pervades all parties and campaigns, and it has a knack for building up those who are most susceptible. Very rarely do the policy victories attained partly or wholly through such means benefit anyone else. The sugar program has done nothing but reward a few large producers at the expense of billions of dollars to consumers. The regulatory breakdown in the financial sector and that sector’s subsequent growth over the past two decades has resulted in a crash that leaves millions of homes underwater or in foreclosure and middle class incomes stagnant, to say nothing of the national debt to GDP ratio leaping up 30 percent. The influence of nationwide health insurers first ushered in significantly higher costs for care over time, and has now resulted in a reform bill that profoundly expands those very insurers’ customer bases without challenging their status as legal monopolies. Scenarios of this nature that benefit genuine small businesses and striving midsized S Corporations are simply nowhere to be found. Nor does the situation arise abruptly. Each is the foreseeable product of years of influence that is eternally trickling into the system widely unbeknown to the rest of us — American workers and business owners who are busy holding a job, raising a family, pursuing an education, or just trying to stay out of the red (or wondering why sugar is always costing more and more). When politicians from both sides of the spectrum — including Senator Hatch — condemn waste, fraud and abuse in government, these are the types of surreally counterproductive policy scenarios of which they speak. So, it doesn’t take much to see the irony in a politician simultaneously condemning waste in government while championing measures that further enable special interest participation in policy making. * The definition I am using for “special interests” in this post is that used by the IMF’s Marcos Chamon and Stockholm University’s Ethan Kaplan . It states that: “Special interest groups care only about a particular policy, and do not care inherently about which candidate wins the election as long as their special interest policy is supported by the winner.” Related Readings: Financial Reform Won’t Alter Capitalism’s Icarus Trajectory The Capitalist Hagiography Has Little Room for Saints Citizens United , the Roberts Court, and the Future of American Electioneering Obama’s State of the Union Falls Short on Correcting Citizens United American Plutocracy: Corruption Is In the Eyes of the Beholder

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Cynthia M. Fornelli: The Supreme Court’s PCAOB Decision: A Win for Investors

June 28, 2010

We all know the old saying, “Don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater.” It’s common sense, and it usually makes for sound legal decisions, too. Nobody really wants to think about the consequences of doing otherwise. And yet, as many waited for the U.S. Supreme Court to hand down one of its final decisions for the year in Free Enterprise Fund v. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) , there was a palpable concern that that exact thing might happen. The bathwater in question was the constitutionality of board member appointments to the PCAOB (the centerpiece of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, it is responsible for setting auditing standards and oversight of the public company auditing profession). The baby, in this instance, was the audit quality and investor confidence that have improved since the reforms of SOX were put into place. Some feared that a broad challenge to the validity of the PCAOB would result in the Court ruling that all of SOX was unconstitutional. The Court, to its credit, refused to do so. Rather, in a 5-4 decision the justices decided that PCAOB board members could be removed from their roles by the SEC “at will.” In doing so, the Court clearly reaffirmed all other provisions of the law, including the ongoing role of the PCAOB itself. Setting aside the fanciful interpretation of plaintiff’s counsel, thoughtful observers realize this is a win for investors. There is little question that since its enactment, SOX has played a significant role in helping to restore the confidence of the investing public that was badly shaken by corporate scandals. In fact, a CAQ survey of investors found that a majority thought the law was a good idea. And as we observed in our friend of the court brief submitted last October, “Although only a few years have passed since the passage of SOX, the evidence demonstrates that regulation by the PCAOB has led to substantial progress in meeting Congress’s goals of improving audit quality and increasing investor confidence.” I’m pleased that the Supreme Court’s decision will allow the continued operation of the PCAOB without the need for operational changes or legislative action. The narrow ruling handed down by the justices clearly severs the PCAOB board member removal process from the rest of SOX and reaffirms all provisions of the law except for the power to remove the board members. Importantly, the Court’s decision will prevent any disruption to the key activities of the PCAOB including setting auditing standards and the public company audit oversight process, critical factors in the continued strength and stability of our capital markets. “The Sarbanes-Oxley Act remains ‘fully operative as a law’ with these tenure restrictions excised,” wrote Chief Justice John Roberts in the majority opinion. Investors can breathe a sigh of relief. The baby is safe. And, in the words of SOX authors former Senator Paul Sarbanes and former Representative Mike Oxley, “the Board’s essential protections of American investors will continue.” Cindy Fornelli serves as executive director of the Center for Audit Quality, a Washington, D.C.-based public policy organization serving investors, public company auditors and the markets.

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Beachfront-Property Rights Limited by U.S. Supreme Court in Erosion Case

June 17, 2010

By Greg Stohr June 17 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. Supreme Court upheld a Florida program that fights erosion by adding sand along the shoreline and creating strips of public beach. The justices unanimously ruled against a group of landowners who contended that the program unconstitutionally takes away their private beaches. The ruling centered on the constitutional protection against the taking of private property without compensation. Justice John Paul Stevens , who owns oceanfront property in Florida, didn’t take part in the ruling. The case is Stop the Beach Renourishment v. Florida Department of Environmental Protection, 08-1151. To contact the reporter on this story: Greg Stohr in Washington at gstohr@bloomberg.net .

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DISCLOSE Act: Citizens United Response To Be Very Limited, Will More Meaningful Reforms Follow? (Update)

June 15, 2010

Update 6/15/2010: Political hay is being made this week over the decision of Congressional Democrats to bend to the wishes of the National Rifle Association and provide that organization with an exemption on some of the disclosure provisions in the bill. The push for an exemption was led by a North Carolina Democrat in the House, Heath Shuler. For what it’s worth, Shuler’s 3rd largest political donor during his career is the Blue Dog PAC , which does receive funding from the NRA. The claim that campaign funds overtime have compelled Shuler to campaign for the NRA against the DISCLOSE Act is one that is worth exploring, but it ultimately elides the larger issue of external perception and public trust. As Lawrence Lessig stresses , it is the appearance of improper influence that so plagues the U.S. Congress and sullies any trust it could have with the people who elect it. The problem is not outright graft, but institutional corruption whereby the incentives for elected officials are perversely aligned, leading them to spend too much time making promises to special interest dollars and not enough time governing (to say nothing of their susceptibility under the current system to entirely undisclosed threats from heavy corporate hitters). As discussed below, the DISCLOSE Act was already going to fall far short of sparing the 2010 campaign field from the effects of Citizens United , but it could have at least served as a symbolic gesture for transparency and as a first, sturdy stem towards further-reaching reforms down the road. The fact that Democrats must now resort to exemptions in order to pass it — whether or not it indicates undue influence — will defeat any symbolic purpose it may have had, while further eroding the trust of the institution. **** When the United States Supreme Court handed down its Citizens United v. FEC ruling in January, it did more to sound the alarm on special interest money in politics than any campaign finance reformer could have dreamed. The first instinct among legislators in responding is to not make the perfect the enemy of the good. But the question still circulating is: how far will that response go? There is some worry that a quick political gesture could very well supplant meaningful, further-reaching policies to address the role money plays in American elections. The legislative response to Citizens United will be limited, yet it could lay the groundwork for ushering in a novel approach to campaign finance going forward: one that bypasses the Roberts Court’s favoritism for the wealthy few by activating the lower- and middle-income many. Of course, this will all depend on the Democratic leadership’s endurance on the issue. Immediately following the Court’s ruling in January, the White House and Democrats in Congress vowed to soften the blow from the decision through whatever means possible. In his weekly radio address, after criticizing the decision during his State of the Union, Barack Obama promised a ” forceful response ” from his administration. And in a conference call to reporters , Senator Charles Schumer dismally warned that, “if we don’t act quickly, this decision will have an immediate and devastating impact on the 2010 elections.” Now, just three months later, Schumer and Congressman Chris Van Hollen intend to follow through on the promises with the formal introduction of a Citizens United fix bill in the coming days. Back in February, the two high-ranking Democrats (Schumer is a former DSCC Chairman and the third ranking Democrat in the Senate; and Van Hollen is the current DCCC Chairman) put forward a preliminary itemized plan to address the effects of Citizens United that would withstand judicial reversal by operating within the legal framework established by the Court in its decision. According to Van Hollen spokeswoman Bridgett Frey, the bill was released early on so as to allow ample time “to incorporate feedback and craft strong legislation that responds to the court’s decision.” The February proposal, which Van Hollen described as a ” right-to-know bill ” — had six major provisions, which included: banning election expenditures from foreign interests and pay-to-play entities, namely government contractors and TARP recipients; enhancing disclaimers to identify the sponsors of ads; enhancing transparency and the public disclosure of political spending; setting clear and affordable rates for political advertising for candidates, especially TV airtime; and prohibiting corporations from coordinating electioneering activities with a candidate or party. The final bill is said to be pretty close to that original framework, minus a provision that would require that corporations increase disclosure of political spending to their shareholders (this is to be included in a separate Financial Services bill instead). Congressional spokespeople tell me that the salient concern is having it withstand further Supreme Court challenges. And while it has yet to garner support from across the aisle, polling suggests that it could be a prime candidate for the long lost art of bipartisanship. The question of whether each element of the bill is susceptible to judicial reversal is a prudent one — and the answer is very much up in the air for some provisions. According to Richard Briffault , Columbia Law School’s Joseph P. Chamberlain Professor of Legislation and a noted authority on the Court’s history of campaign finance rulings, “the bill seems to go to the limit of what Citizens United left open — foreign corps, pay-to-play, disclaimers and disclosure, coordinated expenditures — without crossing the line…[But] the extension of pay-to-play to independent expenditures probably pushes hardest.” Briffault has concerns that certain elements could be difficult to hash out in practice, such as determining whether a firm qualifies as “foreign” enough (the bill sets this at 20% foreign owned, but the controlling interest in a public company isn’t always static), or whether it is legal to impose a new TARP restriction on bailout recipients after they’ve already accepted funds under the original conditions. Moreover, extending the pay-to-play ban on contractors and TARP recipients to independent expenditures could prove problematic, since it is precisely this distinction that Citizens United did away with in the first place. Beyond these possible trip-ups, Briffault sees the Schumer-Van Hollen proposal as instituting only very mild extensions of already existing laws. Other Court followers are even less confident in the proposed bill’s judicial resiliency. For his part, Harvard Law professor Lawrence Lessig , a leading progressive voice in campaign finance matters, sees almost every provision in the proposed legislation as either ineffective window dressing, or as a prime target for the Court to strike down. He tells me, “I think one could not be too strong about this: It is absurd to suggest this is a ‘fix’ to Citizens United. The bans are plain targets for new lawsuits… All and all — [this bill is] a complete zero. And a strong signal of the failure of the Democrats to deliver on the reform promise of this administration.” Lessig is a staunch proponent of the Durbin-Larson Fair Elections Now Act , and for amending the Constitution to give Congress sole power over campaign finance laws. The Fair Elections Act is essentially the “public option” for electoral fundraising. It was introduced in March 2009 by Democratic Party Whip Richard Durbin and then-Republican Senator Arlen Specter and would provide voluntary public campaign financing to candidates who reach a certain dollar amount through small contributions of $100 or less. Once one opts in, he or she receives funding both for the primary and general elections, as well as a few other perks, such as broadcast advertising subsidies. In an essay shortly following the Citizens United ruling, Lessig praised the Fair Elections proposal as a means for providing “an immediate balance to the deluge of corporate funding that this next election will now see. More importantly, it will give candidates a way to fight that deluge without themselves becoming even more dependent upon private, special interest funding. No other reform — including reforms that try effectively to reverse Citizens United — could be as important just now. No other reform should distract us from pushing strongly to get Congress to pass this statute now.” Those crafting the Schumer-Van Hollen bill will tell you that the Fair Elections Act has no chance of making it to the president’s desk at this juncture. Nevertheless, Congressman John Larson , its House-side sponsor and Chairman of the House Democratic caucus, may propose it as an amendment. With 141 co-sponsors in the House, it’s hardly a pipe dream. The problem is in the Senate, where it has but 10 co-sponsors (a list that is noteably lacking Schumer’s name ). It’s not politically unreasonable that the Democratic leadership is proceeding cautiously and in narrow terms. No system is overhauled in a single stroke, and they’re legislating within the parameters of what is admittedly a difficult political environment. The result is that the Schumer-Van Hollen bill will likely be exceedingly limited in its effect on political spending; and most with whom I spoke regard it more as an obligatory political gesture than anything else. Aside from the necessary need to do something , the Democrats’ bill cannot be expected to make a “radical difference in the mix of resources and politics,” Michael Malbin tells me. Malbin, the Executive Director of the nonpartisan Campaign Finance Institute in Washington, DC, sees the Schumer-Van Hollen bill as good in spirit and worth pushing through to the president’s desk, but, ultimately, as a political necessity with only a few very mild, superficial policy benefits. At best, the new regulations may theoretically lend slightly more transparency to the paper trail of campaign monies through more disclosure and the Stand By Your Ad provision for CEOs. But even this is seen as wishful thinking by some. In response to stricter disclosure rules, Lessig points to Marcos Chaman and Ethan Kaplan’s Iceberg Theory of Campaign Contributions [ pdf ], which demonstrates that special interests don’t actually need to run election ads when the mere threat of doing so will suffice. As Lessig notes, “those threats are not disclosed.” This is also an area where Briffault agrees, telling me, “I suppose that some people think that the disclosure and disclaimer requirements … will reduce corporate spending. I doubt that it will. I think the law does as much as the Supreme Court will allow, but for those who think that corporate spending is the problem, this bill won’t and can’t stop that.” Most other provisions in the bill are said to fall similarly short. According to Lessig, the campaign-corporation coordination ban looks good on paper, but is more or less meaningless in the Internet age. The same can be said for the ban on foreign influence. As Loyola Law School professor and author of the Election Law Blog Rick Hasen tells me, there is a trade off between having the bill withstand judicial challenge, on the one hand, and having it provide truly effective regulation on the other. According to Hasen, “if ‘foreign’ corporation is defined broadly, it will be unconstitutional; if defined narrowly, it won’t do much.” For many observers, the worst case scenario is that our political leaders will convince themselves that they have adequately addressed what the Court’s ruling in FEC v. Massachusetts Citizens for Life, Inc. (1986) described as the “corrosive and distorting effects of immense aggregations of wealth that are accumulated with the help of the corporate form and that have little or no correlation to the public’s support for the corporation’s political ideas.” The current political stalemate is quite familiar in the history of the campaign finance debate. The Roberts Court has made it abundantly clear that free speech trumps all else in its rulings. As Briffault wrote in a 2008 Brookings Institution essay , describing the Court’s 2007 ruling in Wisconsin Right to Life v. FEC : ” WRTL also abandoned [the] view that in campaign finance cases the Court should reconcile and balance free speech values with other concerns like political integrity, the promotion of democracy, and respect for Congress’s efforts to balance these goals. Instead, Roberts’s opinion framed the case entirely from a First Amendment perspective. It was not about the rules governing the corporate role in financing elections but simply ‘about political speech.’” **** The foremost misconception — or at least exaggeration — plaguing the Citizens United ruling is that, in the words of President Barack Obama , it “reversed a century of law that I believe will open the floodgates for special interests … to spend without limit in our elections.” This gives the decision too much credit. In reality, the floodgates were already open. During the 2008 Minnesota Senate race between Democratic contender Al Franken and Republican incumbent Norm Coleman , the corporate-funded U.S. Chamber of Commerce ran a television advertisement depicting Franken with duct tape over his mouth. A narrator’s voice came in to say: “High taxes hurt. But it seems like every time Al Franken opens his mouth he talks about raising taxes. This from a guy who was caught not paying his own taxes in 17 states … Maybe he shouldn’t open his mouth … Tell Al Franken that high taxes aren’t very funny.” This ad ran before Citizens United , and it was on the up-and-up in accordance with the Robert Court’s 2007 WRTL decision because it qualified as ” issue advocacy ,” rather than ” express advocacy ” for a specific candidate. Or in other words, the ad was permitted because it did not directly call for a vote for or against Franken. As Lessig has noted, this is the status quo that reversing Citizens United would return us to. Non-party election communications like the Chamber’s Al Franken ad were generally exempt from regulation for decades, from 2002 back to 1976, when the court created the distinction between “issue” and “express” advocacy in its Buckley v. Valeo decision. During that era, whether or not electioneering communications qualified as “express advocacy” — which was subject to regulation — depended on whether they contained the “magic words,” such as vote for/against or elect/reject . In 2002, the McCain-Feingold Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act sought to rein in the special interest spending binge of the 1980s and 1990s with a ban on soft money to the parties, and a ban on corporate electioneering communications within 60 days of a general election (both of which are provisions that the Court actually upheld in its 2003 McConnell v. FEC ruling). However, following John Roberts’ appointment in 2005 , and, more importantly, Samuel Alito’s in 2006 , the Court transitioned back to narrowing the grounds for regulation and opening the door for independent political spending. In its 2006 Randall v. Sorrell decision the Court struck down Vermont’s attempt to regulate campaign contribution limits. And in WRTL v. FEC the Court did away with McCain-Feingold’s corporate and union electioneering communication provision — thus re-allowing corporations and unions to run “issue advocacy” ads, as long as their only reasonable interpretation wasn’t as an “appeal to vote for or against a candidate.” When people like the president say that Citizens United opened the “floodgates,” what they mean is that corporations (and unions) no longer have to worry about the “issue advocacy” vs. “express advocacy” distinction. The Chamber of Commerce can now run an ad that says, “Vote for Candidate A,” instead of “Tell Candidate A that high taxes aren’t very funny.” Whether or not there actually will be a flood of corporate expenditures in the upcoming November election is yet to be seen. For his part, Malbin doesn’t think this will be the case, telling me, “I don’t think most for-profit corporations are likely to increase their public affairs budget because of Citizens United . They will probably just move money around within that already existing budget.” This suggests that some corporations may indeed indulge in the lesser restrictions, but that they won’t break the bank doing so. With the dual standoff between a deregulatory Court on the one hand (Justice Stevens’ retirement will not alter the liberal-conservative composition of the Court), and a demonstrably obstructionist and anti-regulation Congressional opposition on the other, any promising path forward for the Democratic leadership would seem elusive. Nevertheless, there is a novel approach among serious thinkers across the ideological and political spectrum that is increasingly gaining traction among Members of Congress and the administration. Rather than battling the inexorable stream of political money from the wealthy few, the answer, according to some, may lie in addressing the other side of the equation: the middle- and lower-income “many.” Malbin is one of the experts pushing for this new approach to campaign finance. He looks at the history of Supreme Court rulings on the matter, the failure of restrictive legislative measures to truly stymie the flow of special interest money into elections and politics (there are always ways around restrictive laws, he points out), and the burden on non-wealthy or knowledgeable participants to navigate the sea of complex regulations and concludes that past campaign finance reform efforts have approached the situation from the wrong side. Along with Anthony Corrado of Colby College, Thomas Mann of the Brookings Institution , and Norman Ornstein of the American Enterprise Institute-Brookings Election Reform Project , Malbin is the co-author of a paradigm-shifting report published this year — ” Reform in an Age of Networked Campaigns ” — that advocates “activating the many” instead of “focusing on attempts to further restrict the wealthy few.” The authors put faith in the notion that “if enough people come into the system at the low end there may be less reason to worry about the top.” A central proposal of the report’s reform recommendations is a public financing option very similar to the Durbin-Larson Fair Elections Act. But there are also other policy measures for incentivizing small-scale donor participation that could garner wider support in the aftermath of Schumer-Van Hollen. One is to make broadband access affordable to all. Having demonstrated the profound effect of the Internet and social networking on electioneering during the 2008 presidential campaign, this is something the Obama administration is already working on this with its National Broadband Plan . Alongside broadband access is a policy goal nebulously known as ” network neutrality ,” which advocates the regulation of Internet providers whose service would possibly discriminate against certain political or issue speech that threatens the company’s interests. These efforts suffered a blow recently with a D.C. Circuit Appeals Court ruling that will now limit the FCC’s authority to regulate Web traffic . However, if policy changes are made to reclassify Internet access as a “telecommunications service” instead of an “information service” then the FCC could regain some of its lost authority. Malbin and his colleagues also call for a central government website to host, “all electorally relevant material about political spending that is required to be disclosed under current law,” and for States and the federal government to provide free software to facilitate electronic disclosure filings that would be made immediately available to the public. Despite hefty corporate and special interest resistance, ideas like these are trudging steadily forward in campaign finance policy discussions. The Schumer-Val Hollen bill does seek to enhance corporate disclosure, but the efficacy of these measures would increase dramatically if this information were to be made more readily accessible to the general public through a central online clearinghouse. But even if stricter disclosure regulations are accepted to be an effective deterrent, they still don’t do anything “to radically change things one way or the other,” Malbin says. According to Malbin, the only ultimately effective counterbalance to corporate and special interest spending in elections is an expansion of the playing field to include “the many.” For example, Malbin tells me that in most states it would only take 4 or 5 percent of the electorate giving $50 each to introduce meaningful balance to elections for Governor and the State legislature. He has the numbers to prove it. Policy measures as simple as rebates or tax refunds for low-income donors, individual contributions limits to give small-scale donors more weight against the wealthiest, and publicly funded contribution matching that applies only to small donations have all demonstrated promise for successful implementation. A new interactive tool on the Campaign Finance Institute website puts some to the test. Using data from the 2006 election cycle, with the state of New York as an example, if the government matches small donations ($100 or less) at a rate of 3-to-1, it more than doubles the distribution of contributions from this donor group from 4 percent to 10 percent. When public contribution matching only for small donations increases to 5-to-1 the percentage of $100 or less funders more than triples, from 4 percent to 14 percent. And when a 5-to-1 public matching only for small donations is complemented by a $2,000 individual contribution limit, the percentage of $100 or less funders more than quadruples, from 4 percent to 17 percent. Malbin tells me that these ideas to activate and engage “the many” are beginning to take hold alongside the traditional instinct to just construct more temporary walls. Most campaign finance proposals in the past year and a half — including the Durbin-Larson Fair Elections Act — are looking more towards implementing this approach. However, the Schumer-Van Hollen response to Citizens United does not. It’s far more politically tailored to the immediate outrage since January and intentionally forgoes pushing larger, more reformative measures. For his part, Malbin sees this as an understandable approach, telling me, “I don’t think anybody would look at the Senate right now and think they could get 60 votes to pass [something like] the Fair Elections Act this year.” Nevertheless, he sees Schumer-Van Hollen — and the likely floor vote on Larson’s Fair Elections amendment especially — as at least a symbolic political gesture. If the Democratic leadership continues forward with corollary efforts — such as for affordable broadband access, network neutrality, and a streamlined electronic disclosure process; and if Members in Congress continue to hone policy proposals and political rhetoric towards incentivizing small donors instead of continuing the endless corporate/special interest regulatory chase, then the future could be brighter than what many cynics would have one believe. The Internet — and social networking especially — has broken down traditional barriers to accessing information and propounding ideas more thoroughly than any other factor in modern history. The new media elements operative in Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential victory will only matter increasingly more going forward, regardless of whether the Supreme Court continues to open more doors for corporate electioneering. And even in today’s intractable political climate, measures that supplant what is seen as plutocracy with democracy can be sold to both sides of the aisle (as the presence of moderate figures like Specter and retiring centrist Senator Evan Bayh on the Fair Elections sponsor list suggests). The slowly growing consensus among those who are actually in a position to return balance to American elections bodes well for the voice of the “many,” at least in the long run. But they will likely need political diligence and constant reminders to see it through.

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Netanyahu Announces `Independent’ Public Inquiry Into Gaza Flotilla Raid

June 13, 2010

By Calev Ben-David June 14 (Bloomberg) — Israel announced it is setting up an “independent” public probe into its raid on a Gaza-bound flotilla in which nine Turkish activists were killed. The probe will include two foreign observers. The commission will examine “the security circumstances surrounding the imposition of the naval blockade on the Gaza Strip and the conformity of the naval blockade with the rules of international law,” the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in an e-mailed statement . It will also look into “the conformity of the actions taken by Israel to enforce the naval blockade in the incident of 31 May 2010 with the rules of international law.” The panel will be headed by former Israeli supreme court judge Jacob Turkel. The two foreign observers are Nobel Peace Prize winner and Northern Ireland politician David Trimble , and Ken Watkin, former Judge Advocate General of Canada’s armed forces. Demands for an international probe began after Israel’s May 31 raid in international waters on six ships that were attempting to breach its three-year blockade on Hamas-controlled Gaza. Israel last year refused to participate in a United Nations investigation of the 2008 Gaza war, an inquiry its leaders rejected as one-sided, and Netanyahu turned down a proposal for a UN-led probe into the ship incident. Independent Commission The inquiry will be conducted by “an independent public commission” that will examine Israel’s May 31 actions “to prevent vessels from reaching the coast of the Gaza Strip,” the statement said. The prime minister will bring his proposal to the Cabinet for a vote today. The Obama administration welcomed the announcement as “an important step forward.” In a statement, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs reiterated the administration’s support for “a prompt, impartial, credible and transparent investigation.” The statement said Israel “has a military justice system that meets international standards,” that the administration “will not prejudge the process or its outcome” and that it expects the findings to be “presented to the international community.” Radical Terror Groups The commission’s members also include retired Israeli general Amos Horev and international law expert Shabtai Rosenne. It will also investigate “the actions taken by the organizers of the flotilla and its participants, as well as their identity.” Israel has alleged that some members of the flotilla had links to radical Islamic terror groups. The panel will have the authority to request information from any Israeli government official, including Netanyahu and “including through testimony before the Commission,” the statement said. It will present its findings to the prime minister upon completion of its investigation. The Israel Defense Forces said June 8 that it had appointed Major-General Giora Eiland to lead a separate military investigation of the raid. The UN inquiry into the Gaza war, led by former UN prosecutor and South African judge Richard Goldstone , accused Israel and Hamas of war crimes and called on them to investigate the charges. Numerous Warnings Israel said it issued numerous warnings to the Gaza-bound flotilla to change course for the port of Ashdod and unload there. It says that soldiers were attacked with knives and clubs and seven were wounded, including by gunfire, after people aboard one of the ships managed to grab Israeli firearms. Activists have said they threw the firearms into the sea and that the Israelis instigated the violence. Israel has imposed restrictions on Gaza since the Islamic Hamas movement, which won Palestinian parliamentary elections in 2006, ousted forces loyal to President Mahmoud Abbas ’s Fatah group and seized full control of the territory in 2007. Hamas is considered a terrorist organization by the U.S., the European Union and Israel. The blockade of Gaza is legal, according to Israel, because it is in “a state of armed conflict” with Hamas. Criticism within Israel of the operation has focused largely on the execution of the raid and not the blockade, which polls show most Israelis support. Some countries, such as Turkey, dispute the legality of the blockade. Humanitarian Crisis Palestinians, backed by the UN and human-rights groups, say the restrictions on food imports and construction materials have created a humanitarian crisis. Israel denies that such a crisis exists, saying it restricts imports of building materials to Gaza because they can be used to build rockets, bunkers or bombs. Officials said they also were concerned about weapons being hidden in food packaging. Israel launched a three-week military offensive in Gaza in December 2008 that it said was meant to stop the firing of rockets by Hamas and other Palestinian militants into its territory. More than 1,000 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed in the conflict. More than 400 rockets and mortars have been fired from Gaza into Israel since the end of the 2008 military operation, killing one foreign worker last March, the Israeli army said. Hamas’s charter calls for the destruction of the Jewish state. Hamas leaders say they will renounce violence when Israel withdraws from territory occupied in 1967 and allows Palestinians to return to areas in Israel from which they fled in 1948. To contact the reporter on this story: Calev Ben-David in Jerusalem at cbendavid@bloomberg.net

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Supreme Court Blocks Public Financing In Arizona Elections

June 8, 2010

PHOENIX — The U.S. Supreme Court derailed a key part of Arizona’s campaign financing system on Tuesday, preventing the state from giving extra money to publicly funded candidates facing privately funded rivals and changing the election rules in the thick of primary season. The court stopped Arizona from disbursing so-called matching funds at least until it decides whether to hear the opponents’ full appeal. As they await a final ruling that may not come until the fall or even later, candidates and their advisers are reworking their strategies, with publicly funded candidates having to compete with fewer dollars. “This ruling is obviously going to have a direct impact on candidates’ strategy,” Arizona State University political science professor Patrick Kenney said. “They (the court) could have let that sit until that race is over.” The court’s brief order may have the greatest impact on the GOP gubernatorial primary, in which Gov. Jan Brewer, who is running with public financing, is facing a challenge from Buz Mills, a millionaire businessman largely using his own money in his first bid for office. Under Arizona’s system, candidates who opt for public financing can get matching funds up to two times their base amount when they’re outspent by privately funded rivals or targeted by independent groups’ spending. Critics say the funds chill free-speech rights of privately financed candidates and their contributors by inhibiting fundraising and spending. State officials and advocates of public campaign finance systems saying the matching funds help combat contributions-for-favors corruption and encourage more people to run for office. Lower courts that considered Arizona’s matching funds split on their constitutionality. In the governor’s race, Brewer has received her $707,000 base allotment but stood to get $1.4 million in matching funds. That’s because Mills has already spent roughly $2.3 million, mostly on television advertising for his largely self-funded campaign. Blocking matching funds helps Mills and hurts Brewer and Martin, Kenney said. But Brewer still has the incumbent’s advantage of name recognition that Mills must overcome, he said. Mills, who earned his fortune building cell phone towers, said he didn’t know how the ruling would affect his campaign or how much he’d end up spending. “We’re in this to win this race … whatever it takes to get there,” he said. Brewer said in a prepared statement that she was troubled by the Supreme Court’s action, saying it changed the rules in the middle of the election. Her campaign spokesman Doug Cole said Brewer’s basic allotment isn’t enough to pay for substantial television advertising. Cole said the campaign will have to rely more heavily on Internet videos and social media. Republican State Treasurer Dean Martin, planning to file within days for public funding, insisted that he won’t be hurt by the order. He said Brewer and he will have the same amount of money and that Mills hasn’t gained traction despite his spending. “Arizona will be able to have its first elections in 10 years without having the government place its thumb on the scales in favor of publicly financed candidates,” said Bill Maurer, an Institute for Justice attorney helping represent opponents of matching funds. Supporters argued that blocking matching funds disrupts campaigns already under way and will result in less free speech. “It’s going to result in much less speech, much less information in the marketplace of ideas,” said Todd Lang, executive director of Arizona’s public campaign finance system. Nearly half of the state-office candidates who qualified to run in the primary were running with public funding. Candidates qualify by collecting $5 contributions from voters, the number depending on the office sought. At least two other states, Connecticut and Maine, have similar provisions in their public campaign finance systems, but Tuesday’s Supreme Court order only affects Arizona. The Supreme Court issued another campaign finance-related ruling in January, when it upheld the First Amendment rights of corporations and labor unions to spend money on campaign ads. ___ Associated Press writers Mark Sherman and Jonathan J. Cooper contributed. Sherman contributed from Washington.

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Supreme Court Nominee Kagan May Get Confirmation Support From Republicans

June 1, 2010

By Laura Litvan June 1 (Bloomberg) — Some Republican senators are extolling the record of U.S. Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan , suggesting she might win confirmation with support from many members of the minority party. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Susan Collins of Maine and Richard Lugar of Indiana are among the Republicans praising her. They say Kagan’s background, including serving as dean of Harvard Law School , is impressive and her lack of judicial experience isn’t a barrier to serving on a high court. Barring surprises, there may be more votes for Kagan than for President Barack Obama ’s first Supreme Court appointee, Sonia Sotomayor , said Manuel Miranda of the conservative judicial group Third Branch Conference in Washington. Sotomayor was approved 68-31 last year. “Elena Kagan is going to get much more support from Republicans,” Miranda said in an interview, predicting the total would exceed 70. Kagan, 50, who as solicitor general is the Obama administration’s chief courtroom lawyer, was nominated May 10 to replace retiring Justice John Paul Stevens . Republicans have all but ruled out a filibuster to block a Senate floor vote. Democrats control the Senate 59-41, one vote short of the 60 needed to overcome the delaying tactic. Republicans said they will withhold judgment on the nomination until her confirmation hearings, noting that they are waiting for the release of documents from Kagan’s work more than a decade ago in President Bill Clinton ’s White House. The hearings begin June 28. Gays in the Military Kagan’s critics have focused on her lack of judicial experience and her opposition, as Harvard’s law school dean, to military recruiting on the campus in protest over the policy of banning openly gay men and women from serving in the armed forces. Neither issue has gained much traction with some Republicans. “The fact that she hasn’t been a judge doesn’t scare me off,” Graham said on May 27. “I don’t think that argument is going to go very far.” Lugar said he has supported almost every high court nominee in his 34 years in the Senate, and there is nothing so far in Kagan’s record to change that. “I generally take the position of feeling that the president, whoever that is at the time, should have the opportunity to make a nomination and to have serious consideration of that nomination,” Lugar said. Military Recruiters The prohibition on military recruiters at Harvard’s law school will be explored at the hearings. Kagan supported a lawsuit aimed at overturning Congress’s ban on federal funds for schools that barred military recruiters. A federal appeals court supported her view, and the military was required to go off campus to recruit students. The Supreme Court reversed that decision, holding that the military could require federally funded schools to allow recruiters, and Kagan allowed them back. The top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee , Jeff Sessions of Alabama, accused Kagan in a Senate floor speech on May 24 of lacking a legal basis to bar the recruiters while the Supreme Court was reviewing the matter. “She gave big law firms full access to recruit bright, young associates,” Sessions said, “but obstructed the access of the military” to recruit lawyers to “represent our soldiers as they were risking their lives for our country.” Eased Concerns Some Republicans — including Collins, Olympia Snowe of Maine and Scott Brown of Massachusetts — said Kagan has eased their concerns in private talks with her. “I saw no evidence that she is anti-military,” Collins said in an interview. The hearings could still be contentious. Lawmakers in both parties want to look into memos and e-mails Kagan wrote while serving as a White House associate counsel in 1995 and 1996 and as a deputy assistant for domestic policy from 1997 to 1999, when Clinton was president. Leonard Leo, executive vice president of the conservative Federalist Society , said those records may hold surprises. He said Chief Justice John Roberts left a paper trail on such issues as civil rights and abortion from his work in the administration of President Ronald Reagan , prompting questioning at his confirmation hearings. Documents related to Kagan’s work could be extensive. She is the first high court nominee to have served a president during the e-mail era, Leo noted. “One of the things I think we’ll see is a lot of candor” in the memos, he said. “We live in a world where you’re one sound bite away from really creating a problem for yourself,” Graham said. “So you never know.” To contact the reporter on this story: Laura Litvan in Washington at llitvan@bloomberg.net

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Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva: Let’s Tell Big Oil: You Break It, You Buy It

May 28, 2010

In 1989, the Exxon Valdez tanker leaked 11 million gallons of oil into Alaskan waters. The spill took over the American imagination – no one thought a single accident would cause so much ecological damage. It was, for lack of a better term, our environmental Chernobyl. Arctic habitats for birds and marine life quickly became a wasteland. The lawsuits lasted for nearly two decades. Ultimately, the Supreme Court found a punitive damages judgment of $5 billion against Exxon excessive, and the company was asked to pay very little for the economic pain the spill had caused. Exxon recouped most of its cleanup and legal costs thanks to insurance policies. For the world’s oil companies it was a signal that if disaster strikes, toughing it out is preferable to paying your fair share. That cannot happen again with the BP Deepwater Horizon spill. It’s time we brought corporate liability law in line with the scope of this catastrophe. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, Horizon has already leaked between 17 and 39 million gallons. It has officially eclipsed the Exxon Valdez. This spill will impact the Gulf region, and the nation, for decades to come. There’s no question that BP is to blame. There’s also no question that when it comes to oil rig safety, we’ve lived in blissful ignorance long enough. Oil rigs can no longer be presumed safe and sound, either structurally or environmentally. Indeed, this spill is only a surprise to those who weren’t paying attention. On Feb. 24, before Horizon exploded, I wrote a letter to recently departed Minerals Management Service (MMS) Director Elizabeth Birnbaum calling for an MMS investigation of why BP was allegedly allowed to operate a separate rig known as Atlantis, also in the Gulf of Mexico, without 90 percent of its subsea construction documents approved by an engineer. A whistleblower brought his concerns to BP’s and MMS’ attention last year, but nothing was done. Why should it take an act of Congress and a major environmental emergency to get MMS to investigate credible allegations of mismanagement at one of the world’s largest oil rigs? This was not a one-time slipup – the entire MMS culture of cheerleading for the drilling industry has to be recognized for what it is, and it needs to end. MMS is currently conducting its investigation of Atlantis’ safety, but has recently said it will miss its original deadline of May 31 to issue its report. I eagerly await the agency’s findings. But whatever MMS concludes regarding Atlantis, we already know much of what we need to know: oil drilling is about large profits, and MMS allowed industry to pursue those profits at any cost. This is not just hyperbole. Eleven people died on Deepwater Horizon. We’re told that no one could have predicted this, and no one is to blame. I don’t believe that, and neither do the American people. Neither should Congress. BP will pay for the Gulf cleanup, which some experts estimate could cost as much as $14 billion. The effort will take years. But the damage done extends far beyond the environment. Fisherman cannot fish. Tourists are not visiting the hotels or beaches. Restaurants and other small businesses are losing customers left and right, and the tide of oil shows no signs of stopping. The economic life of the Gulf has been devastated. Yet the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 limits the liability of parties responsible for offshore oil spills to cleanup costs, plus $75 million in economic damages. $75 million will not even scratch the surface of the long-term economic damages that Horizon has wrought. That’s why, last week, I introduced HR 5355. The “no cap” bill would completely eliminate the arbitrary $75 million liability cap, because the best way to ensure responsible behavior is to make corporations responsible for their actions. They benefit when things are going well, so why should taxpayers take the hit when things go badly? A single dollar of public money spent to clean up after BP is one dollar too many. When the bottom line is at stake, industry will change its behavior for the better. Any cap we place on economic compensation is inherently arbitrary, so let’s not have one. Hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars in revenue will be lost as a result of BP’s careless actions. Livelihoods will be put on hold or simply destroyed. Under current law, BP will only have to pay for a fraction of the damage — yet the company is still blocking journalist access to affected beaches for fear of exposure. It’s time to demand greater responsibility and accountability from the oil industry. Only when these multi-billion dollar companies are forced to bear the full costs of their actions will they take safety seriously. Let’s send a simple, responsible message to Big Oil: “You break it, you buy it.”

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Obama Proposes Bill That Would Force Spending-Cut Votes to Reduce Deficit

May 24, 2010

By Roger Runningen and Nicholas Johnston May 24 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama today sent legislation to Congress that aims to reduce the record budget deficit by forcing lawmakers to vote on spending cuts he proposes. “It’s another tool, so it adds to the arsenal, in trying to cut back on unnecessary spending,” White House budget director Peter Orszag said in a conference call with reporters. Obama is trying to seize greater control over this year’s $3.7 trillion budget by proposing an alternate to the line-item veto that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional in 1998. Under his proposal, after passage of each spending bill, the president could submit within 45 days a package of cuts, or “rescissions,” to spending that he deems wasteful. Congress would be required to vote on the package, up-or-down without amendment, within 25 days. Top lawmakers in the House and Senate were being briefed on the proposal today, Orszag said. The procedure meets a constitutional test because the proposed spending cuts would take effect only if Congress approves, giving the lawmakers the final voice on spending. Republican Response House Republican Leader John Boehner of Ohio said the president already has the power to make Congress cut spending. “If President Obama is truly committed to fiscal responsibility, he will use the authority he already has under the law to force Congress to vote immediately on spending cuts,” Boehner said in a statement, referring to a section of the 1974 Budget Act that compels such votes. “With our national debt nearing $13 trillion and Democrats on the verge of adding another $200 billion to the deficit, why can’t we start cutting wasteful Washington spending right now?” Boehner said. The legislation comes as the House prepares to consider a jobs-and-tax-increase bill that would raise the federal deficit by an estimated $134 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The Democratic-controlled Congress probably won’t pass an overall budget resolution setting spending caps this election year, according to Earl Blumenauer , an Oregon Democrat on the House Budget Committee, because of huge deficits. “You have the problem, always, of people not wanting to cast difficult votes in an election year,” Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad , a North Dakota Democrat, said May 15. $1.55 Trillion The White House budget office projects a record $1.55 trillion deficit in the year ending Sept. 30, up almost 10 percent from last year’s $1.41 trillion, the current high. The administration will update its budget-deficit forecast in July or August. Obama’s legislation “would be particularly effective in reining in programs that are heavily earmarked or not merit- based as well as those that are plainly wasteful and duplicative,” the White House said in the statement. Obama created a presidential commission to examine ways to cut the deficit and on Feb. 1 proposed a three-year freeze on the growth of non-defense discretionary spending in the budget that begins Oct. 1. Congress hasn’t acted on that proposal. Jeffrey Liebman , acting deputy director of the Office of Management and Budget, will explain details of the proposed legislation at a hearing May 26 scheduled by Senator Russ Feingold , a Wisconsin Democrat and chairman of a Senate Judiciary subcommittee. Feingold said in a statement that the plan “appears to be constitutional.” One-Third of Budget Obama’s plan would apply to about one-third of the budget that’s considered discretionary spending, or money that’s approved by lawmakers each year. Two-thirds of the budget, including mandatory programs such as Medicare or Social Security, would be exempt from spending cuts, as would interest payments on the national debt, Orszag and Liebman said. President George W. Bush proposed similar legislation in 2006 but it failed to attract support. This year is different, Orszag said, citing record spending brought on partly by bank bailouts and a stimulus spending program. “The fiscal context has changed,” Orszag said on the conference call. “Ongoing deficits have become a growing concern.” To contact the reporter on this story: Roger Runningen in Washington at rrunningen@bloombert.net Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net

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Jason Schmitt: Download Illegally, It’s the Right Thing to Do

May 24, 2010

The music business is a touchy subject hinged between the pay for your consumption model and the instant gratification/I want it all for free mentality. The problem with the two downloading camps is the fact that they divide us into two distinct societal groups: One with penalty; one with privilege. And more unfortunate than the act of illegally downloading, is this behavior generating more power for those engaged in the practice. Illegal downloading, and the technological knowledge to conduct it effectively is continuing to increase the massive separation between the “haves” and the “have-nots.” Huge mult-inational, multi-billion dollar enterprises come into this equation as helpless pawns under the ultimate discretion and control of the end computer user. A 15-year-old boy sitting in his living room eating Fritos is in control as he goes online. The zillions of dollars that have been spent to both stigmatize downloading as “illegal” and occasionally persecute perpetrators comes to fruition as a barely audible whisper as he sees the file dangling in the digital divide waiting to be picked from the tree. I know this is unstable ground to tread, and this conversation runs deep with people. Warner/Elektra/Atlantic used to have me on the roster as an employee, but due to shifting of assets (read: illegal downloads taking the cash), my regional office in Novi, Michigan was disbanded quickly. I was annoyed after the news and angry at the shape that the music business was transforming into. I’ve lived with the resentment and, perhaps, had an epiphany. From my 2010 vantage point, after watching the war between the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and illegal downloading for quite some time, I have no option but to say: go illegally download everything you want. My reasoning for such a bold statement isn’t for my own greed, frugality, or to stick it to the man. Instead, my thought process exists to protect the under privileged. We live in an economic period which is widening the class gap between rich and poor, and cutting out the middle. From this reasoning, if a kid in Silicon Valley with a $3,000 silver laptop has the privilege from his Palo Alto technical education allowing him to figure out how to go on ZTorrent (a file exchange program), and download away to his hearts content — without paying Owl City for Fireflies, or a Mad Men episode, or for the $1,000 Final Cut Pro Suite — the act of the file showing up on his hard drive speaks more of his societal privilege than of his moral ethics. In contrast, a large portion of my student body at Wayne State University graduated from Detroit Public Schools and have no concept of how to go about downloading files illegally. Why should an underprivileged student in one of my Detroit classes say she is going to spend $4.50 to go rent a video for my course? She is being blatantly penalized for her lack of a technical education provided by her schools, peer group, and larger community. Her life does not need another penalty. There are ramifications for my willy nilly sentiments, and I understand them. It is estimated in a March 2010 International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) study that two million people are employed in the broader music economy. Roughly 4,000 artists are signed to major record company rosters. The Institute of Policy Innovation commissioned a 2005 study covering sound recording, motion pictures, business software and video games. The study found that the losses due to piracy in the 2005 U.S. economy accounted for $58 billion in output, over 370,000 jobs, and $2.6 billion in tax revenue. We can expect the ramifications to have increased significantly in a current view. I also understand there is some serious financial outlay given to signed artists by the record labels, and they deserve compensation for the risks they engage in. The majority of artists signed to record labels will lose money. The current costs associated with breaking a successful pop act in major markets, according to a March 9, 2010 IFPI study, is typically hovering around the million dollar mark per act. That is a big coin to lose if it doesn’t work out. It rarely does. Currently, the labels are still huge corporations operating adequately in conjunction with illegal downloading. Maybe it is just my Detroit genetics, which is quite used to seeing massive companies (a.k.a. the Big 3) scaling back across the board. The industries becoming more lean doesn’t mean that they are gone, or even that they are not profitable — just that they are different entities now than they were before all the globalized hoopla began. Perhaps it is a good idea to have the music industry give some power back to the people. I think the working class, not the most privileged, need a vitamin B12 shot of support. As of the January 2010 U.S. Supreme Court ruling, corporations can now provide endless funding to political candidates and now more significantly than ever alter the influence of the individual citizen in the democracy. If that’s the case, I am going to make the assumption that corporations have more than enough clout in my society. Author and media critic Douglas Rushkoff argues in his book, Life, Inc. , that, in fact, corporations trump humans in all kinds of ways. They don’t die. They don’t get sick. They can wait out a new political election to get officials (who they can legally buy off now) into office to amend legislation to fit their needs and bottom lines. Nearly always the changes corporations make to society take power and control away from average citizens for the end goal of providing a higher rate of return for the company shareholders. Case and point: the RIAA in 2008 convinced Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen to sign a bill (SB 3794) into law which requires colleges in his state to exercise appropriate means to ensure that computers on campuses are not being abused for distributing copyrighted material. Although the 2008 legislation looked to be the start of something big, IFPI released its report on digital music as of 2009. The report says that despite initiatives by the music industry, 95% of music downloads continue to be illegal. This is one of the rare cases in society where the masses are winning against the corporate elite. Not for long. The RIAA and associates recently trotted to the courts for some more help to quell this nuisance to their gross sales. This time it looks to stick a little more firmly. A May 12, 2010 federal court ruled that P2P service provided by LimeWire and its operators are liable for inducing widespread theft (or information delivery). It didn’t take all that long to get the big courts on the side of the company. The RIAA states, “The court decision is an important milestone in the creative community’s fight to reclaim the Internet as a platform for legitimate commerce.” Let’s look at the act of downloading and the concept of “legitimate commerce.” The April 2010 Report to Congressional Committees on Intellectual Property pays respect to the fact that if a consumer “illegally” downloads media, the copyright infringer will have extra disposable income (due to significant consumer savings) and the money can be found to reappear in the U.S. economy as the consumer spends the funds on other goods and services. Although the act of “illegally” downloading a file is taking away the profit margin from the copyright holder, we see the quest to maintain copyright exclusiveness in nearly all manufacturing/technology industries. Ford Motor Company always loses engineering ideas to India. The iPods and iPads of the world have been reverse-engineered by hundreds of global firms trying to improve their products. It is well known that companies in the global economy need to adopt the leakages into their business models. At least the power as it relates to illegal music downloading in the U.S. keeps the economic funds hanging around our own back door. The divide of illegal music downloading doesn’t exist exclusively from pedagogical differences of communities such as Detroit and Palo Alto. It also rears its head socioeconomically and relates to age. Does the average Wal-Mart shopper, who stereotypically isn’t the highest on the socioeconomic totem pole, really need to send $13.50 toward the Britney Spears’ camp due to their lack of education, older age, or lack of “know how” in a digital society? The problem here is, due to the restructuring of the industry, most artists do not see much of the $13.50. The money that is being paid by the less advantaged is paying a dying infrastructure that has huge interest bearing loans that are given by some of the top banks who borrow their money primarily from the Chinese. The plea from the music industry, which seems to have only gross sales in mind, is that if you illegally download you are hurting the artists themselves. This logic is far from true. The Internet sensation Fireflies by Owl City would not have broke without the web. The song now is the most downloaded song on the web and the creator Adam Young has mounted a very profit heavy world tour in its shadow. Countless other artists have recently gotten success holistically from their own talent. Not just from media campaigns orchestrated by huge multi-national labels, but from homegrown abilities. That seems liberating, fair, and exciting for my future on the planet. Perhaps digital files traded freely due to their usefulness, intrigue, or artistic merit (and not due to affiliation with multi-national companies) is one of the last true democracies left in our country. If you think I am off track, there are swarms of people who will agree. Ted Nugent stated during an interview with me in 2008 that, “Technology has fucked the music thing. People think they can get bread for free because they have a direct pipeline to the bakery.” Someone with the musical tenure of Nugent has seen his fair share of change in musical consumer evolution: from vinyl records to eight tracks to analog tapes to CD to the current end all, be all — digital mp3s. I wish I wrote “Cat Scratch Fever” when society decided eight tracks were passé and millions had to go out and buy the same song on an analog tape and again on CD. Talk about profit for no extra work. The thoughts of the day would undoubtedly be hinged on what color do I want my new yacht to be. For more recent artists, the made in the shade profits from album sales is a vernacular never learned fluently. Their lack of submersion in the artist royalty stream never occurred, which made these artists more willing to concede their album sales. Kid Rock is one such artist. Rock is in direct opposition to Nugent’s view and he stated in an interview with me in 2008 that, “I would give my records away for free if I could.” His view has made his business relations more than a little shaky at times with Atlantic Records. The record label told Rock he should stand out against illegal downloading. Rock was far from agreement with their plea. Instead, Rock said, “the labels have been ripping off artists for years, now that somebody found a way to rip them off, they want me to speak up for them, fuck all those motherfuckers. I want to go play live, make my money there.” David Grohl of The Foo Fighters is in a similar vein as Kid Rock. Grohl says in a December 2009 Time interview that, “I don’t have a problem with people downloading music. To me the important thing is that people come to the shows and see the music live and have that personal experience with the band. I’ve made a decent living making music. I’d feel greed if I asked for more.” This counterculture voice ringing the tone of “it is ok to download illegally” does not often carry far. Even if you are wielding some serious musical success like Kid Rock or David Grohl, few media channels will promote their stance, and they end up muting the counter arguments. So, when all is left to settle, we end up hearing the voices which promote “fair use” and “legitimate commerce.” The voice which promotes illegal downloading is sanitized — the same company that owns Kid Rock’s label owns many of the radio stations that plays his songs and many of the magazines that report on his music. You can best bet a voice against the corporate mission doesn’t have a chance. I believe that if “wrong” is right for some kid in a Silicon Valley coffee shop then “wrong” must be right for all of society, including the less technologically savvy. If we continue to head down this downloading double standard path, we are continuing to hurt communities that have already seen their fair share of hardships and privilege those who are already privileged. From my view, most of the regional communities in the U.S. are in worse shape than the billion dollar record labels.

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Billionaire Ambani Brothers Agree to Seek `Harmony,’ Deal on Gas Supplies

May 23, 2010

By Rakteem Katakey May 23 (Bloomberg) — India’s estranged billionaire Ambani brothers, who split the family empire in 2005, today agreed to compete against each other for the first time, easing a dispute that stalled a power generation project and a telecoms merger. Mukesh Ambani and Anil Ambani , the world’s richest siblings, scrapped all existing non-competition agreements between their business groups, and said they hoped “very soon” to negotiate a deal for supplies of gas from India’s largest field. India’s Supreme Court this month ordered the brothers to rework a gas-supply agreement that Anil Ambani said entitled his company buy the fuel below a government-set price. Negotiations will “eliminate any room for further disputes between the two groups,” according to the statements today. Reliance Industries Ltd. , run by Mukesh, and the Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group Ltd., led by his younger brother, said in statements they will not compete in gas-based power generation. Reliance Industries won a lawsuit against Reliance Natural Resources Ltd. , an Anil Ambani group company, this month over the sale of natural gas from the KG-D6 field in the Bay of Bengal. In the years since the two brothers split their father’s company, their feud has halted plans for a major north Indian power plant and led to a court battle and a scuttled merger between Anil Ambani’s Reliance Communications Ltd. and South Africa’s MTN Group Ltd. ‘Hopeful and Confident’ The brothers’ companies said in statements they “are hopeful and confident that all these steps will create an overall environment of harmony, co-operation and collaboration between the two groups.” Boards of both groups have agreed to scrap the 2006 agreements that barred competition between them, the company statements said. Under the 2005 pact to split the Reliance group, Mukesh kept the petrochemicals, oil and gas units along with the flagship company, Reliance Industries. Anil got newer businesses such as power, telecommunications, financial services and entertainment. Both retained rights to the Reliance name. In October 2007, Anil’s side of the business complained to the Indian markets regulator that Reliance Industries was trying to stall the initial public offering of the younger brother’s Reliance Power Ltd. Nine months later, Anil’s mobile phone services company, Reliance Communications, called off merger talks with MTN Group after Reliance Industries threatened to block the sale if it wasn’t given the first option to buy shares in Reliance Communications. To contact the reporter on this story: Rakteem Katakey in New Delhi at rkatakey@bloomberg.net

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British Airways Cabin Crews Cleared to Strike as Appeals Court Rejects Ban

May 20, 2010

By Steven Rothwell and James Lumley May 20 (Bloomberg) — British Airways Plc ’s 12,000 cabin crew are free to resume strike action over pay and staffing levels after a court overturned a ruling blocking the walkout. Flight attendants could start a five-day strike as early as next week after the Court of Appeal in London said the Unite union’s failure to provide members with a breakdown of ballot results didn’t render the vote on work stoppages invalid. British Airways says a walkout would ground 30 percent of flights slated to carry 25,000 people a day, including 40 percent of long-haul services from London Heathrow. Europe’s third-biggest carrier had already reverted to a reduced schedule today in preparation for the appeals court decision. “Further strikes will be unavoidable if the company does not immediately work with us to address the outstanding issues,” Unite General Secretary Tony Woodley said after the ruling. “BA must now accept that negotiation, not litigation, is the only way to secure the settlement we all want.” No action will be taken before May 24, when Unite had been due to stage the second of four five-day walkouts it had originally planned, the union said in a statement. Unite lawyer John Hendy said at the start of the appeal hearing that the strike strategy would be revived if the claim was upheld. Shares Fall British Airways, which said it was “disappointed” at today’s decision and may lodge an appeal of its own, was down 3.2 percent at 186.5 pence as of 12:47 p.m. in London after falling as much as 4.1 percent following the ruling. Shares of the company, which says it may log a record pretax loss of 600 million pounds for the fiscal year to March 31 when it reports results tomorrow, are down 0.6 percent this year, the fourth-best performance on the eight-member Bloomberg EMEA Airlines Index, which is down 17 percent. Unite had originally called the first of four stoppages for May 18, having already held two walkouts over seven days in March that cost British Airways 45 million pounds ($65 million). The strike was blocked on May 17 when High Court Judge Richard McCombe ruled that Unite’s reliance on e-mails, the Internet and notices in airport crew rooms meant it hadn’t adequately told members about the result of a month-long ballot. The union argued that workers were perfectly aware of the results and that nobody had complained about being ill-informed. “BA cabin members are highly computer literate,” Lord Chief Justice Igor Judge said in today’s ruling. “They use the Internet on a daily basis. The website is indeed the most effective way of communicating.” Split Decision The three judges who delivered the decision ruled two to one for Unite, and British Airways could now seek to take the case to the Supreme Court in London, the U.K.’s most senior appeals tribunal, said Anthony Fincham, head of employment law at CMS Cameron McKenna. Today’s result was no great surprise given that the initial High Court decision was based on “a narrow technicality” and there was “clearly room for a different view,” he said. Lawyers for British Airways afterwards told the court that the company is reserving its right to appeal, a spokesman said. The walkouts planned by Unite, part of the first sequence of strikes at British Airways since 1997, could cost the company more than 100 million pounds, based on the March losses. That would be equivalent to half the 205 million-pound operating profit analysts predict the London-based carrier will earn in the fiscal year that began on April 1. ‘Fair Offer’ “Unite’s strikes have failed twice and they will fail again,” British Airways said in a statement after the ruling. “We have put forward a very fair offer that addresses the concerns Unite has raised. We believe cabin crew would accept it if it was put to them in a fair and secret ballot.” Negotiations over new terms for flight attendants began 15 months ago. Relations with Unite worsened in November, when Chief Executive Officer Willie Walsh used voluntary departures to cut crew levels without consulting the union after the global recession led to a collapse in demand for air travel. Unite has said the latest contract offer is an improvement on previous proposals and might be acceptable to its members should British Airways agree to reinstate travel privileges for cabin crew who went on strike in March and also take back workers who were suspended or fired during the dispute. Failed Talks The latest talks between the sides at the state-funded Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service came to a “premature end” this week after the High Court decision, General Secretary Woodley said on May 18. The two parties have said they’re open to negotiations and U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron ’s new government also intervened this week, with Transport Secretary Philip Hammond urging the sides to “keep on talking for as long as it takes.” CEO Walsh says he won’t budge on the need for savings and decisions taken regarding striking employees. “The City will take a dim view if Walsh gives any ground,” Howard Wheeldon , senior strategist at BGC Partners LP in London, said this week, referring to London’s financial district. “The cupboard is bare.” Under the strike timetable in place today, British Airways will seek to fly about 70 percent of customers who have bought tickets with the help of crews who turn up for work. It has rented eight planes from other airlines and charter companies, together with pilots and flight attendants, in an effort to operate 50 percent of short-haul Heathrow services. Routes from London’s Gatwick and City airports won’t be affected. The U.K. airline will seek to rebook some passengers whose flights have been canceled with 53 other carriers including alliance partners American Airlines, Iberia Lineas Aereas de Espana SA and Qantas Airways Ltd. To contact the reporters on this story: Steven Rothwell in London at srothwell@bloomberg.net ; James Lumley in London at jlumley1@bloomberg.net

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Liu Is Approved by U.S. Senate Panel for Appeals Court as Republicans Balk

May 13, 2010

By Laura Litvan May 13 (Bloomberg) — The Senate Judiciary Committee approved on a party-line vote the nomination of law professor Goodwin Liu to be a federal appeals court judge, clearing the way for possible confirmation by the full Senate. In opposing Liu, Republicans on the panel said they are concerned he will be an activist judge, comments foreshadowing the debate bound to come up when senators weigh the nomination by President Barack Obama of U.S. Solicitor General Elena Kagan for the Supreme Court. Today’s vote was 12-7 for Liu, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley. Liu, 39, could be a nominee for the high court if another vacancy occurs while Obama is in office. “It’s quite clear he’s on the avant garde of judicial activism,” said Senator Jeff Sessions of Alabama, the ranking Republican on the panel. He said Liu’s writings suggest he would interpret the Constitution in ways that deviate from the intent of its authors. Democrats said Liu, nominated to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals based in San Francisco, is clearly qualified and pointed to his statement at a hearing last month that he could set aside his personal views and decide cases based on legal precedent. “I don’t think anyone should question his qualifications or character,” said Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy , a Vermont Democrat. Test of Strength Liu’s nomination may be a test of Republicans’ ability to block Obama judicial candidates, with Democrats one vote short in the full Senate of the 60 needed to end filibusters. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid , a Nevada Democrat, hasn’t said when he might schedule Liu’s confirmation vote, given an already-crowded chamber agenda this summer. That includes a likely vote on Kagan, who Obama nominated May 10 to succeed retiring Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens . Reid’s spokesman, Jim Manley , said in a statement today that the senator “is committed to the timely confirmation of Goodwin Liu, as well as the other stalled judicial nominees.” Obama is seeking to reshape the judiciary after eight years of appointments by former President George W. Bush , a Republican. The Liu nomination sparked strong partisan opposition. Constitution Issue He is former chairman of the board of the American Constitution Society , a Washington-based group of liberal lawyers and law students. He also is a co-author of a book that says judges should interpret some portions of the Constitution – - including those pertaining to privacy rights — using modern- day views. At his confirmation hearing, Liu was asked about his positions on school desegregation, the death penalty and gay rights. Republicans questioned him at length about his opposition to Bush’s nominations of Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito . Liu had testified against Alito, saying his “record envisions an America where police may shoot and kill an unarmed boy to stop him from running away with a stolen purse,” and where “federal agents may point guns at ordinary citizens during a raid, even after no sign of resistance.” Liu said at his own confirmation hearing that he has a high regard for Alito’s accomplishments, and said his earlier comments used “unnecessarily colorful language.” Senator Lindsey Graham , a South Carolina Republican, said today Liu’s writings on many issues were “completely unnerving,” and convinced him Liu is better suited for politics, not the judiciary. ‘Bridge Too Far’ “This guy’s a bridge too far for me,” said Graham, the only Republican on the Judiciary Committee to vote for Obama’s nomination last year of Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor . Senator Orrin Hatch , a Utah Republican, expressed similar concerns. “Changing the Constitution’s meaning changes the Constitution itself, and if judges can do that then they control the Constitution,” he said. Among Liu’s defenders, Senator Dianne Feinstein , a California Democrat, said, “He’s someone who has excelled throughout his young life.” To contact the reporter on this story: Laura Litvan in Washington at llitvan@bloomberg.net .

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Elena Kagan Picked for U.S. High Court as Path to Confirmation Seen Clear

May 10, 2010

By Greg Stohr May 10 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama selected Elena Kagan , his top U.S. Supreme Court lawyer and the former dean of Harvard Law School, to fill a vacancy on the court and for the first time give it three female members. Kagan, 50, would succeed retiring Justice John Paul Stevens and likely take his place in the court’s liberal wing on many issues. Kagan has an understanding of the law “as it affects ordinary people,” Obama said at the White House. “Her passion for the law is anything but academic.” A New York native and former Clinton administration official, she will face attacks from Republicans for opposing military recruiting on the Harvard campus because of the services’ gay ban. Confirmation is probable because Democrats and independents hold 59 seats in the Senate and need help from only a single Republican to ensure a floor vote on the nomination. Justice Sonia Sotomayor , who Obama named to the court last year, won confirmation 68-31, with nine Republicans voting to approve her. Kagan, whom Obama appointed as the first female U.S. solicitor general, would be the youngest member of the nine- justice court and the only one who hadn’t previously served as a lower court judge. She won confirmation as solicitor general last year on a 61-31 vote. Bridge Builder At Harvard, where she was the first female dean, she built a reputation as a bridge builder, supporting conservatives Jack Goldsmith and John Manning for teaching positions. Faculty colleagues including Charles Fried , who served as solicitor general under Republican Ronald Reagan , credit her with easing the ideological strife that had pervaded the campus. Kagan also hosted a celebration at Harvard honoring conservative Justice Antonin Scalia . “She is a trailblazing leader, the first woman to serve as dean of Harvard Law School and one of the most successful and beloved deans in that school’s history,” Obama said. Fried was one of five former Republican solicitors general to support her nomination for that position last year. Although some Republicans questioned whether she had enough experience for the post — she had never argued a case in court — she was confirmed. Kagan has limited her public comments on policy issues, creating only a handful of openings for opponents to attack her fitness for the court. Military Recruiters She has drawn criticism for her efforts to block military recruiters from the Harvard Law School campus. Kagan backed a challenge to a law that required universities receiving federal funding to give the military equal access. The Supreme Court unanimously upheld the law in 2006. Her stint as solicitor general would probably prevent her from taking part in some Supreme Court cases early on. The last solicitor general to ascend to the court, Thurgood Marshall , disqualified himself in more than 60 argued cases in his first term, mostly because his office had played a role in the litigation. Kagan attended Princeton University and then Harvard Law School. She clerked for Marshall, whom she describes as one of her heroes, and spent two years as a litigator at Williams & Connolly LLP in Washington. She later took a teaching job at the University of Chicago Law School, where she helped recruit Obama to the faculty. Kagan worked in the Clinton administration’s White House counsel’s office and then as a domestic policy adviser, acting as the administration’s lead negotiator on anti-tobacco legislation. In 2003, she became the first female dean of Harvard Law School. Disappointed Liberals Since being nominated as solicitor general, Kagan has disappointed liberals with some of her positions, particularly on terrorism questions. At her confirmation hearing last year, she said that, should U.S. agents capture a suspected al-Qaeda fundraiser abroad, that person could be held indefinitely as an enemy combatant. As solicitor general, she urged the Supreme Court to block Guantanamo Bay inmates who weren’t considered a threat from being released into the U.S. In a 2001 law review article Kagan argued for stronger presidential control over administrative agencies, a position more often associated with conservative scholars. Kagan was one of four people who interviewed with Obama in person for the vacancy. The president also met with federal appellate judges Merrick Garland of Washington, Diane Wood of Chicago and Sidney Thomas of Montana. Kagan was one of four candidates who met with Obama last year before he picked Sotomayor. Kagan, who is Jewish, isn’t married and doesn’t have children. Stevens’ retirement will leave the court without any Protestant members for the first time. To contact the reporter on this story: Greg Stohr in Washington at gstohr@bloomberg.net .

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Jeff Madrick: A "Modest Proposal" for Capital Market Reform: Close Down Rule 144A

May 5, 2010

This article was co-written by Stephen Diamond. Years ago, it is unlikely deals like Goldman Sachs’ now infamous Abacus would have been sold. The securities laws written in the 1930s demanded more accountability than we have today, not only for public offerings of stocks and bonds, but for private placements like Abacus. Such private placements had to go through a review process before the Securities and Exchange Commission and issuers were held to high standards of disclosure. No longer. Enter Rule 144A . In one simple step the Securities and Exchange Commission could remove a major cause of the recent credit crisis by shutting this rule down. Issued in 1990, the rule was the SEC’s attempt to make it easier for companies to sell securities in so-called “private placements.” Private placements avoid advance SEC review of disclosure about an offering and, more importantly, exempt issuers, as well as their directors, officers, accountants and underwriters from the most effective liability provision in the federal securities laws, Section 11 of the Securities Act of 1933. Section 11 allows investors who are misled to sue those parties for damages. Issuers face “strict liability” under this provision while other parties who help prepare the disclosure escape liability only by following a rigorous due diligence process. Under Rule 144A, an issuer of a mortgage backed security or a note linked to a collateralized debt obligation can be sold initially to an investment bank and then re-sold immediately to so-called “qualified institutional buyers” such as pension funds, banks, insurance companies and mutual funds. The “Abacus” CDO transaction at the heart of the SEC’s charges against Goldman Sachs, for example, was completed using Rule 144A. While appropriate in limited circumstances, such private securities sales have exploded in size and complexity. More than a trillion dollars of such offerings were made in 2006 alone, triple the amount in 2002. The significant losses experienced by even large financial institutions suggest that the original justification for Rule 144A — that large institutions could, in the words of a leading Supreme Court case, “fend for themselves” — no longer holds. In fact, the SEC itself now admits “investors and other participants in the securitization market did not have the necessary tools to be able to fully understand the risk underlying those securities and did not value those securities properly or accurately.” In response, the SEC recently proposed to tweak the disclosure requirements for asset backed securities. But their proposal does not go far enough. The strict liability penalty of Section 11 and the mandatory SEC review process were at the heart of the original design of the securities laws in the New Deal era. They insure that investors in public markets are provided full disclosure of the risks associated with a securities transaction. In the words of Justice William O. Douglas, an SEC Chairman prior to his elevation to the Supreme Court, Section 11 was consciously intended to have an in terrorem effect so severe that those who prepared the offering would be hyper vigilant in disclosing risks to investors fully and clearly. In addition, the review process conducted by the SEC’s Division of Corporate Finance is intensive, rigorous and adversarial with the SEC acting, as Justice Douglas said it should, as “the investor’s advocate.” The Commission’s staff asks tough questions and often pushes the issuer and the underwriters and their counsel to make significant changes to the disclosures in order to make sure these are complete and comprehensible to investors. Now Rule 144A has given rise to a massive parallel private market largely outside of these protective measures. Thus, diligence and disclosure standards can weaken considerably. One academy study found that yields on bonds issued in 144A transactions are higher than those on registered public offerings due to the “lower liquidity, information uncertainty, and weaker legal protection for investors” found in these deals. While some of the anti-fraud remedies of the securities laws still apply in 144A transactions, these have been watered down in recent years by Congressional action and judicial interpretation. In a series of opinions authored first by Justice Powell and then by Justice Kennedy, the Supreme Court has steadily scaled back the scope of the securities laws. Opinions by Justice Kennedy, in particular, limited the impact of anti-fraud protections as well as the ability of investors to sue gatekeepers who play a significant role in preparing offerings. The combination of legislation, judicial opinions and SEC rule-making over the last thirty years laid the ground work for the crisis we are now experiencing. It is time to undo the damage. Putting an end to the unregulated world of Rule 144A offerings would be a great place to start. Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0 .

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Obama Will Fight For New Campaign Finance Rules To Counter Citizens United

May 1, 2010

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama on Saturday pressed Congress for swift action on measures to restrict political advertising by corporations and labor unions, saying that “no less than the integrity of our democracy” is at stake. Legislation introduced in Congress this week would require that corporations and unions identify themselves in political ads they pay for and that the chief executive or other top official state that “I approve this message.” The measures are in response to a 5-4 Supreme Court ruling in January that upheld the First Amendment rights of these groups to spend money on campaign ads, thus enhancing their ability to influence federal elections. Obama slammed the decision at the time, saying the court had given a “green light to a new stampede of special-interest money in our politics” and pledging to work with Congress on a “forceful response” to the ruling. With the November midterm elections looming, Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address that it was important that Congress act swiftly to ensure that the voices of the American people aren’t drowned out by deep-pocketed corporations and other special interests. The president said the proposals would give voters the important information they need to evaluate the claims in ads paid for by “shadowy campaign committees,” corporations and special interests. He said he would fight to see them become law. “Now, of course, every organization has every right in this country to make their voices heard,” Obama said. “But the American people also have the right to know when some group like ‘Citizens for a Better Future’ is actually funded entirely by ‘Corporations for Weaker Oversight.’” The proposals also would also bar foreign-controlled corporations and government contractors from spending money on U.S. elections and prohibit political spending by companies that accepted government bailout money. Corporations and unions also must disclose campaign-related spending on their websites and report such spending to shareholders and members. The measures are unlikely to become law without a fight. The Senate’s Republican leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, long an ardent opponent of putting limits on campaign spending, criticized the bills as being more about election advantage than transparency, accountability or good government. He noted that two of the Democratic sponsors, Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York and Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, led the effort to elect Democrats to Congress. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce also has promised to fight attempts to “muzzle or demonize” independent voices in the electoral process. The lawmakers said their goal is to have the legislation on the books by July 4, to take effect before Nov. 2 election. ___ On the Net: Obama address: http://www.whitehouse.gov

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Takefuji Sues Merrill Lynch for $309 Million of Losses on Structured Bond

April 29, 2010

By Finbarr Flynn April 30 (Bloomberg) — Takefuji Corp. sued Merrill Lynch Japan Securities Co. for about 29 billion yen ($309 million), claiming the brokerage failed to provide sufficient explanation of a financial transaction. Takefuji, a Japanese consumer lender, entered into a deal with Merrill Lynch in 2007 to remove a 30 billion yen bond from its balance sheet. As part of the transaction, Takefuji invested the same amount in a structured bond set up by Merrill Lynch, Kentaro Itai , a Takefuji spokesman, said in an interview. Takefuji ended up booking a 29.6 billion loss on the investment in the year ended March 31, 2008, after the value of the securities backing the bond slumped in value. Merrill Lynch, which was bought by Bank of America Corp. last year, failed to fully explain the risks involved in the deal, Itai said. The Japanese company sued Merrill Lynch in the Tokyo District Court on April 28, according to Itai. The bond, which was scheduled to mature in 2020, was liquidated in 10 months, after the value of underlying securities fell, he said. “We deny the allegation, and we will defend ourselves vigorously,” said Takayuki Inoue , a Tokyo-based spokesman at Merrill Lynch. Takefuji’s credit rating was downgraded one level by Moody’s Investors Service in March to Caa2, eight notches below investment grade, citing pressure on the company’s liquidity. Japan’s four largest consumer lenders, including Takefuji, have booked 2 trillion yen in losses during the past three fiscal years after the Supreme Court ruled in 2006 interest charges in excess of 20 percent were illegal. Takefuji has 42.4 billion yen of 1.5 percent notes due in 2018 that investors can ask it to redeem on June 19, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The Tokyo-based company’s “current efforts to increase liquidity” will enable it to “prepare the necessary amount of cash,” Katsuhide Takahashi , a credit specialist at Citigroup Global Markets Japan, said in a note to clients April 26. Takefuji, which has reported losses of $7.5 billion since April 1 2006, has declined 2.6 percent this year, after dropping 46 percent and 73 percent respectively in the two previous years. Takefuji is forecasting a profit of 13 billion yen for the year ended March 31. The company’s shares fell 0.8 percent to 379 yen at the 11 a.m. trading break in Tokyo. To contact the reporter on this story: Finbarr Flynn in Tokyo at fflynn3@bloomberg.net

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Obama Says He’ll Announce Supreme Court Nominee by May to Replace Stevens

April 21, 2010

By Roger Runningen April 21 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama said he will announce a nominee to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens by next month and that he’ll seek a candidate who values individual rights and privacy when ruling on cases. Obama said he’s confident the nomination will go through the Senate confirmation process in time to have Stevens’s successor in place when the court begins its next term in October. The president, repeating the stand of his predecessors, said he won’t have any “litmus tests” on abortion rights. “But I will say that I want somebody who is going to be interpreting our Constitution in a way that takes into account individual rights, and that includes women’s rights,” he said. “That’s going to be something that’s very important to me.” Obama discussed the high court vacancy at the White House today with Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy , the Democrat who heads the Judiciary Committee, and Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions , the senior Republican on the panel. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky also attended the Oval Office meeting. They will be at the forefront of the confirmation process. Reid said afterward that “there was a really good tone set” during the session. He and Leahy said they have suggested names for potential justices to the president while declining to name anyone publicly. They said no individuals were discussed in the meeting. Talking With Candidates Stevens, 90, announced April 9 that he will retire at the end of the court’s term this summer. The president already has begun talking with and vetting potential nominees for the high court, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said today. Obama said whoever replaces Stevens will have “some tough shoes to fill.” The Supreme Court term begins on the first Monday in October. Obama nominated Sonia Sotomayor to succeed Justice David Souter on May 26 last year and she was confirmed Aug. 6. “We are certainly going to meet that deadline” and may accelerate it “a little bit” to give the Senate more time, Obama said today. Sotomayor had a “smooth, civil, thoughtful nomination and confirmation process,” Obama said, and he hopes for the “exact same thing this time.” Changed Makeup Leahy said he wants Obama to choose someone who will help change the current makeup of the court, which he called “a very, very activist, conservative activist Supreme Court” that makes many decisions with a one-vote margin. “I think this does not reflect the American people, but reflects more of a partisan agenda,” Leahy said. Gibbs said the president’s advisers have been providing him with expanded lists of potential court picks that reflect diverse backgrounds. Obama said April 9 he is looking for a nominee who not only has sound judgment and is dedicated to the rule of law, but also for someone who has “a keen understanding of how the law affects the daily lives of the American people.” The nominee also must understand that in a democracy, “the powerful interests must not be allowed to drown out the voices of ordinary citizens,” he said. Leading candidates include U.S. Solicitor General Elena Kagan and federal appellate judges Diane Wood in Chicago and Merrick Garland in Washington. All were considered for the Supreme Court vacancy Obama filled last year with Sotomayor, who replaced Justice David Souter . Other potential court nominees include federal appellate judge Sidney Thomas ; Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano ; Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm ; former Georgia Chief Justice Leah Ward Sears ; and Harvard Law School Dean Martha Minow . To contact the reporters on this story: Roger Runningen in Washington at rrunningen@bloomberg.net

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Citizens United Response To Be Very Limited, Will More Meaningful Reforms Follow?

April 16, 2010

When the United States Supreme Court handed down its Citizens United v. FEC ruling in January, it did more to sound the alarm on special interest money in politics than any campaign finance reformer could have dreamed. The first instinct among legislators in responding is to not make the perfect the enemy of the good. But the question still circulating is: how far will that response go? There is some worry that a quick political gesture could very well supplant meaningful, further-reaching policies to address the role money plays in American elections. The legislative response to Citizens United will be limited, yet it could lay the groundwork for ushering in a novel approach to campaign finance going forward: one that bypasses the Roberts Court’s favoritism for the wealthy few by activating the lower- and middle-income many. Of course, this will all depend on the Democratic leadership’s endurance on the issue. Immediately following the Court’s ruling in January, the White House and Democrats in Congress vowed to soften the blow from the decision through whatever means possible. In his weekly radio address, after criticizing the decision during his State of the Union, Barack Obama promised a ” forceful response ” from his administration. And in a conference call to reporters , Senator Charles Schumer dismally warned that, “if we don’t act quickly, this decision will have an immediate and devastating impact on the 2010 elections.” Now, just three months later, Schumer and Congressman Chris Van Hollen intend to follow through on the promises with the formal introduction of a Citizens United fix bill in the coming days. Back in February, the two high-ranking Democrats (Schumer is a former DSCC Chairman and the third ranking Democrat in the Senate; and Van Hollen is the current DCCC Chairman) put forward a preliminary itemized plan to address the effects of Citizens United that would withstand judicial reversal by operating within the legal framework established by the Court in its decision. According to Van Hollen spokeswoman Bridgett Frey, the bill was released early on so as to allow ample time “to incorporate feedback and craft strong legislation that responds to the court’s decision.” The February proposal, which Van Hollen described as a ” right-to-know bill ” — had six major provisions, which included: banning election expenditures from foreign interests and pay-to-play entities, namely government contractors and TARP recipients; enhancing disclaimers to identify the sponsors of ads; enhancing transparency and the public disclosure of political spending; setting clear and affordable rates for political advertising for candidates, especially TV airtime; and prohibiting corporations from coordinating electioneering activities with a candidate or party. The final bill is said to be pretty close to that original framework, minus a provision that would require that corporations increase disclosure of political spending to their shareholders (this is to be included in a separate Financial Services bill instead). Congressional spokespeople tell me that the salient concern is having it withstand further Supreme Court challenges. And while it has yet to garner support from across the aisle, polling suggests that it could be a prime candidate for the long lost art of bipartisanship. The question of whether each element of the bill is susceptible to judicial reversal is a prudent one — and the answer is very much up in the air for some provisions. According to Richard Briffault , Columbia Law School’s Joseph P. Chamberlain Professor of Legislation and a noted authority on the Court’s history of campaign finance rulings, “the bill seems to go to the limit of what Citizens United left open — foreign corps, pay-to-play, disclaimers and disclosure, coordinated expenditures — without crossing the line…[But] the extension of pay-to-play to independent expenditures probably pushes hardest.” Briffault has concerns that certain elements could be difficult to hash out in practice, such as determining whether a firm qualifies as “foreign” enough (the bill sets this at 20% foreign owned, but the controlling interest in a public company isn’t always static), or whether it is legal to impose a new TARP restriction on bailout recipients after they’ve already accepted funds under the original conditions. Moreover, extending the pay-to-play ban on contractors and TARP recipients to independent expenditures could prove problematic, since it is precisely this distinction that Citizens United did away with in the first place. Beyond these possible trip-ups, Briffault sees the Schumer-Van Hollen proposal as instituting only very mild extensions of already existing laws. Other Court followers are even less confident in the proposed bill’s judicial resiliency. For his part, Harvard Law professor Lawrence Lessig , a leading progressive voice in campaign finance matters, sees almost every provision in the proposed legislation as either ineffective window dressing, or as a prime target for the Court to strike down. He tells me, “I think one could not be too strong about this: It is absurd to suggest this is a ‘fix’ to Citizens United. The bans are plain targets for new lawsuits… All and all — [this bill is] a complete zero. And a strong signal of the failure of the Democrats to deliver on the reform promise of this administration.” Lessig is a staunch proponent of the Durbin-Larson Fair Elections Now Act , and for amending the Constitution to give Congress sole power over campaign finance laws. The Fair Elections Act is essentially the “public option” for electoral fundraising. It was introduced in March 2009 by Democratic Party Whip Richard Durbin and then-Republican Senator Arlen Specter and would provide voluntary public campaign financing to candidates who reach a certain dollar amount through small contributions of $100 or less. Once one opts in, he or she receives funding both for the primary and general elections, as well as a few other perks, such as broadcast advertising subsidies. In an essay shortly following the Citizens United ruling, Lessig praised the Fair Elections proposal as a means for providing “an immediate balance to the deluge of corporate funding that this next election will now see. More importantly, it will give candidates a way to fight that deluge without themselves becoming even more dependent upon private, special interest funding. No other reform — including reforms that try effectively to reverse Citizens United — could be as important just now. No other reform should distract us from pushing strongly to get Congress to pass this statute now.” Those crafting the Schumer-Van Hollen bill will tell you that the Fair Elections Act has no chance of making it to the president’s desk at this juncture. Nevertheless, Congressman John Larson , its House-side sponsor and Chairman of the House Democratic caucus, may propose it as an amendment. With 141 co-sponsors in the House, it’s hardly a pipe dream. The problem is in the Senate, where it has but 10 co-sponsors (a list that is noteably lacking Schumer’s name ). It’s not politically unreasonable that the Democratic leadership is proceeding cautiously and in narrow terms. No system is overhauled in a single stroke, and they’re legislating within the parameters of what is admittedly a difficult political environment. The result is that the Schumer-Van Hollen bill will likely be exceedingly limited in its effect on political spending; and most with whom I spoke regard it more as an obligatory political gesture than anything else. Aside from the necessary need to do something , the Democrats’ bill cannot be expected to make a “radical difference in the mix of resources and politics,” Michael Malbin tells me. Malbin, the Executive Director of the nonpartisan Campaign Finance Institute in Washington, DC, sees the Schumer-Van Hollen bill as good in spirit and worth pushing through to the president’s desk, but, ultimately, as a political necessity with only a few very mild, superficial policy benefits. At best, the new regulations may theoretically lend slightly more transparency to the paper trail of campaign monies through more disclosure and the Stand By Your Ad provision for CEOs. But even this is seen as wishful thinking by some. In response to stricter disclosure rules, Lessig points to Marcos Chaman and Ethan Kaplan’s Iceberg Theory of Campaign Contributions [ pdf ], which demonstrates that special interests don’t actually need to run election ads when the mere threat of doing so will suffice. As Lessig notes, “those threats are not disclosed.” This is also an area where Briffault agrees, telling me, “I suppose that some people think that the disclosure and disclaimer requirements … will reduce corporate spending. I doubt that it will. I think the law does as much as the Supreme Court will allow, but for those who think that corporate spending is the problem, this bill won’t and can’t stop that.” Most other provisions in the bill are said to fall similarly short. According to Lessig, the campaign-corporation coordination ban looks good on paper, but is more or less meaningless in the Internet age. The same can be said for the ban on foreign influence. As Loyola Law School professor and author of the Election Law Blog Rick Hasen tells me, there is a trade off between having the bill withstand judicial challenge, on the one hand, and having it provide truly effective regulation on the other. According to Hasen, “if ‘foreign’ corporation is defined broadly, it will be unconstitutional; if defined narrowly, it won’t do much.” For many observers, the worst case scenario is that our political leaders will convince themselves that they have adequately addressed what the Court’s ruling in FEC v. Massachusetts Citizens for Life, Inc. (1986) described as the “corrosive and distorting effects of immense aggregations of wealth that are accumulated with the help of the corporate form and that have little or no correlation to the public’s support for the corporation’s political ideas.” The current political stalemate is quite familiar in the history of the campaign finance debate. The Roberts Court has made it abundantly clear that free speech trumps all else in its rulings. As Briffault wrote in a 2008 Brookings Institution essay , describing the Court’s 2007 ruling in Wisconsin Right to Life v. FEC : ” WRTL also abandoned [the] view that in campaign finance cases the Court should reconcile and balance free speech values with other concerns like political integrity, the promotion of democracy, and respect for Congress’s efforts to balance these goals. Instead, Roberts’s opinion framed the case entirely from a First Amendment perspective. It was not about the rules governing the corporate role in financing elections but simply ‘about political speech.’” **** The foremost misconception — or at least exaggeration — plaguing the Citizens United ruling is that, in the words of President Barack Obama , it “reversed a century of law that I believe will open the floodgates for special interests … to spend without limit in our elections.” This gives the decision too much credit. In reality, the floodgates were already open. During the 2008 Minnesota Senate race between Democratic contender Al Franken and Republican incumbent Norm Coleman , the corporate-funded U.S. Chamber of Commerce ran a television advertisement depicting Franken with duct tape over his mouth. A narrator’s voice came in to say: “High taxes hurt. But it seems like every time Al Franken opens his mouth he talks about raising taxes. This from a guy who was caught not paying his own taxes in 17 states … Maybe he shouldn’t open his mouth … Tell Al Franken that high taxes aren’t very funny.” This ad ran before Citizens United , and it was on the up-and-up in accordance with the Robert Court’s 2007 WRTL decision because it qualified as ” issue advocacy ,” rather than ” express advocacy ” for a specific candidate. Or in other words, the ad was permitted because it did not directly call for a vote for or against Franken. As Lessig has noted, this is the status quo that reversing Citizens United would return us to. Non-party election communications like the Chamber’s Al Franken ad were generally exempt from regulation for decades, from 2002 back to 1976, when the court created the distinction between “issue” and “express” advocacy in its Buckley v. Valeo decision. During that era, whether or not electioneering communications qualified as “express advocacy” — which was subject to regulation — depended on whether they contained the “magic words,” such as vote for/against or elect/reject . In 2002, the McCain-Feingold Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act sought to rein in the special interest spending binge of the 1980s and 1990s with a ban on soft money to the parties, and a ban on corporate electioneering communications within 60 days of a general election (both of which are provisions that the Court actually upheld in its 2003 McConnell v. FEC ruling). However, following John Roberts’ appointment in 2005 , and, more importantly, Samuel Alito’s in 2006 , the Court transitioned back to narrowing the grounds for regulation and opening the door for independent political spending. In its 2006 Randall v. Sorrell decision the Court struck down Vermont’s attempt to regulate campaign contribution limits. And in WRTL v. FEC the Court did away with McCain-Feingold’s corporate and union electioneering communication provision — thus re-allowing corporations and unions to run “issue advocacy” ads, as long as their only reasonable interpretation wasn’t as an “appeal to vote for or against a candidate.” When people like the president say that Citizens United opened the “floodgates,” what they mean is that corporations (and unions) no longer have to worry about the “issue advocacy” vs. “express advocacy” distinction. The Chamber of Commerce can now run an ad that says, “Vote for Candidate A,” instead of “Tell Candidate A that high taxes aren’t very funny.” Whether or not there actually will be a flood of corporate expenditures in the upcoming November election is yet to be seen. For his part, Malbin doesn’t think this will be the case, telling me, “I don’t think most for-profit corporations are likely to increase their public affairs budget because of Citizens United . They will probably just move money around within that already existing budget.” This suggests that some corporations may indeed indulge in the lesser restrictions, but that they won’t break the bank doing so. With the dual standoff between a deregulatory Court on the one hand (Justice Stevens’ retirement will not alter the liberal-conservative composition of the Court), and a demonstrably obstructionist and anti-regulation Congressional opposition on the other, any promising path forward for the Democratic leadership would seem elusive. Nevertheless, there is a novel approach among serious thinkers across the ideological and political spectrum that is increasingly gaining traction among Members of Congress and the administration. Rather than battling the inexorable stream of political money from the wealthy few, the answer, according to some, may lie in addressing the other side of the equation: the middle- and lower-income “many.” Malbin is one of the experts pushing for this new approach to campaign finance. He looks at the history of Supreme Court rulings on the matter, the failure of restrictive legislative measures to truly stymie the flow of special interest money into elections and politics (there are always ways around restrictive laws, he points out), and the burden on non-wealthy or knowledgeable participants to navigate the sea of complex regulations and concludes that past campaign finance reform efforts have approached the situation from the wrong side. Along with Anthony Corrado of Colby College, Thomas Mann of the Brookings Institution , and Norman Ornstein of the American Enterprise Institute-Brookings Election Reform Project , Malbin is the co-author of a paradigm-shifting report published this year — ” Reform in an Age of Networked Campaigns ” — that advocates “activating the many” instead of “focusing on attempts to further restrict the wealthy few.” The authors put faith in the notion that “if enough people come into the system at the low end there may be less reason to worry about the top.” A central proposal of the report’s reform recommendations is a public financing option very similar to the Durbin-Larson Fair Elections Act. But there are also other policy measures for incentivizing small-scale donor participation that could garner wider support in the aftermath of Schumer-Van Hollen. One is to make broadband access affordable to all. Having demonstrated the profound effect of the Internet and social networking on electioneering during the 2008 presidential campaign, this is something the Obama administration is already working on this with its National Broadband Plan . Alongside broadband access is a policy goal nebulously known as ” network neutrality ,” which advocates the regulation of Internet providers whose service would possibly discriminate against certain political or issue speech that threatens the company’s interests. These efforts suffered a blow recently with a D.C. Circuit Appeals Court ruling that will now limit the FCC’s authority to regulate Web traffic . However, if policy changes are made to reclassify Internet access as a “telecommunications service” instead of an “information service” then the FCC could regain some of its lost authority. Malbin and his colleagues also call for a central government website to host, “all electorally relevant material about political spending that is required to be disclosed under current law,” and for States and the federal government to provide free software to facilitate electronic disclosure filings that would be made immediately available to the public. Despite hefty corporate and special interest resistance, ideas like these are trudging steadily forward in campaign finance policy discussions. The Schumer-Val Hollen bill does seek to enhance corporate disclosure, but the efficacy of these measures would increase dramatically if this information were to be made more readily accessible to the general public through a central online clearinghouse. But even if stricter disclosure regulations are accepted to be an effective deterrent, they still don’t do anything “to radically change things one way or the other,” Malbin says. According to Malbin, the only ultimately effective counterbalance to corporate and special interest spending in elections is an expansion of the playing field to include “the many.” For example, Malbin tells me that in most states it would only take 4 or 5 percent of the electorate giving $50 each to introduce meaningful balance to elections for Governor and the State legislature. He has the numbers to prove it. Policy measures as simple as rebates or tax refunds for low-income donors, individual contributions limits to give small-scale donors more weight against the wealthiest, and publicly funded contribution matching that applies only to small donations have all demonstrated promise for successful implementation. A new interactive tool on the Campaign Finance Institute website puts some to the test. Using data from the 2006 election cycle, with the state of New York as an example, if the government matches small donations ($100 or less) at a rate of 3-to-1, it more than doubles the distribution of contributions from this donor group from 4 percent to 10 percent. When public contribution matching only for small donations increases to 5-to-1 the percentage of $100 or less funders more than triples, from 4 percent to 14 percent. And when a 5-to-1 public matching only for small donations is complemented by a $2,000 individual contribution limit, the percentage of $100 or less funders more than quadruples, from 4 percent to 17 percent. Malbin tells me that these ideas to activate and engage “the many” are beginning to take hold alongside the traditional instinct to just construct more temporary walls. Most campaign finance proposals in the past year and a half — including the Durbin-Larson Fair Elections Act — are looking more towards implementing this approach. However, the Schumer-Van Hollen response to Citizens United does not. It’s far more politically tailored to the immediate outrage since January and intentionally forgoes pushing larger, more reformative measures. For his part, Malbin sees this as an understandable approach, telling me, “I don’t think anybody would look at the Senate right now and think they could get 60 votes to pass [something like] the Fair Elections Act this year.” Nevertheless, he sees Schumer-Van Hollen — and the likely floor vote on Larson’s Fair Elections amendment especially — as at least a symbolic political gesture. If the Democratic leadership continues forward with corollary efforts — such as for affordable broadband access, network neutrality, and a streamlined electronic disclosure process; and if Members in Congress continue to hone policy proposals and political rhetoric towards incentivizing small donors instead of continuing the endless corporate/special interest regulatory chase, then the future could be brighter than what many cynics would have one believe. The Internet — and social networking especially — has broken down traditional barriers to accessing information and propounding ideas more thoroughly than any other factor in modern history. The new media elements operative in Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential victory will only matter increasingly more going forward, regardless of whether the Supreme Court continues to open more doors for corporate electioneering. And even in today’s intractable political climate, measures that supplant what is seen as plutocracy with democracy can be sold to both sides of the aisle (as the presence of moderate figures like Specter and retiring centrist Senator Evan Bayh on the Fair Elections sponsor list suggests). The slowly growing consensus among those who are actually in a position to return balance to American elections bodes well for the voice of the “many,” at least in the long run. But they will likely need political diligence and constant reminders to see it through.

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Obama Shuns Liberals as White House Mulls Choice for High Court Opening

April 11, 2010

By Greg Stohr April 12 (Bloomberg) — Justice John Paul Stevens ’s retirement from the U.S. Supreme Court may remind progressive legal groups that reshaping the judiciary ranks low on President Barack Obama ’s priority list. As Obama considers his choice for a successor, such groups as the Alliance for Justice and the American Constitution Society, which back broad protection of individual rights, likely will wield far less influence than their conservative counterparts did under President George W. Bush . The leading prospects — U.S. Solicitor General Elena Kagan and federal appellate judges Merrick Garland and Diane Wood — are relative moderates. Kagan has backed strong presidential authority over national security; rulings by Garland and Wood suggest they would expand rights only gradually. “The candidates who are truly liberals aren’t really on the table,” said Tom Goldstein , a Washington appellate lawyer whose Scotusblog Web site tracks the court. “You can just tell that it’s not where the White House is headed, and the groups themselves seemingly accept it.” Liberals say they want someone who will do more than support abortion and gay rights. They are seeking a justice to challenge the “originalism” of Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas , who say the Constitution should be interpreted in line with the meaning of its words when they were adopted. “Conservatives have framed the constitutional debate in their terms,” said William Marshall, a University of North Carolina law professor who sits on the American Constitution Society’s board. “We need people on the court who will be able to respond to that.” Favored Candidates Favorite candidates of liberal groups include Stanford Law School Professors Pam Karlan and Kathleen Sullivan and University of Chicago Law School Professor Geoffrey Stone . None was among the nine candidates the White House considered for the seat filled last year by Sonia Sotomayor . Conservatives had similar wish lists when Bush filled two vacancies. The difference is that Bush leaned on a group of outside advisers, including former Attorney General Edwin Meese and Leonard Leo of the Federalist Society. Two of the four lawyers Leo recommended — John Roberts and Samuel Alito — wound up on the court. “Groups on the left don’t have that kind of standing with the Obama administration,” Goldstein said. Of the leading prospects to succeed Stevens, Wood, 59, has done the most to offer a theory of constitutional interpretation. In a 2005 law review article , she criticized originalism, saying the Constitution should be interpreted flexibly to reflect “the norms Americans have adopted.” Constitutional Interpretation At the same time, Wood said of the Constitution: “There is no reason to suppose that it will move systematically in either a ‘liberal’ or a ‘conservative’ direction.” Kagan, 49, Obama’s top Supreme Court advocate, has adopted much of the Bush administration’s approach toward national security, putting her at odds with civil libertarians. In a 2001 law review article she argued for stronger presidential control over administrative agencies, a position in line with conservative calls for a “unitary executive.” Garland, 57, may be the most conservative of the three, particularly on criminal issues. Curt Levey , executive director of the Committee for Justice, which opposed Sotomayor’s appointment, said his group likely would devote “little or no money” toward attacking Garland. “It is likely that Justice Stevens will be replaced by someone who is not as liberal as he is,” said Pamela Harris , a former Stevens law clerk and the executive director of the Supreme Court Institute at the Georgetown University Law Center in Washington. “That is just the realities of the politics of the confirmation process.” Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, including Jeff Sessions of Alabama, yesterday said they wouldn’t try to block a vote on a mainstream nominee. Judges as Umpires Obama has largely eschewed ideologically focused judges. At her confirmation hearing last year, Sotomayor said the judicial role is limited. She accepted Roberts’s characterization of judges as neutral umpires and distanced herself from Obama’s statement that “empathy” should guide jurists. “The task of the judge is not to make law,” Sotomayor said. “It is to apply the law.” Obama’s lower court nominees similarly have tended toward the noncontroversial. An exception is Goodwin Liu , a law professor at the University of California at Berkeley whom Obama nominated to the federal appeals court in San Francisco. “One could say that Liu and a couple of district court nominees are the only real leftists,” Levey said. Liberal Letter In February, 11 leading liberal academics wrote Obama urging him to act “with far more energy and dispatch in the vitally important task of nominating and confirming federal judges.” The group, which includes Stone and Columbia University President Lee Bollinger , said Obama has “an historic opportunity to reestablish our nation’s commitment to the core values of our Constitution.” Stone, who as the dean at Chicago hired Obama to teach there, said he doubts the president will choose a justice liberal enough to be an ideological counterweight to Roberts and Alito. “I think he’s not inclined to fight that fight,” Stone said. Obama “will likely want to appoint someone who ultimately will not be regarded as that controversial.” To contact the reporter on this story: Greg Stohr in Washington at gstohr@bloomberg.net .

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James Love: Corporate Special Interests for Controls on Campaign Spending?

April 10, 2010

In Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the US Supreme Court has presented the United States with an astonishing future — one of unlimited spending on campaigns by corporations. No developed country has faced this possibility — it is really uncharted waters, even for a political system as openly corrupt as the current one. We are facing the possibility of a true failed state, which can lose any semblance of ethics or democratic responsiveness to the public interest or good government. In the past presidential election, the Obama ticket spent about $730 million, and the McCain ticket spent about $333 million, or $1.063 billion. The combined total was less than one month of the sales of Lipitor, a single patented pharmaceutical drug sold by Pfizer, or a little more than one percent of sales for Exxon Mobil in the 4th quarter of 2009. The total spending on the 2006 Congressional election was $2,9 billion, less than one quarter of revenue for Haliburton, a firm heavily dependent upon government policy and contacts. Given the benefits of “owning” shares of members of Congress, it is hard to predict the equilibrium of this market, but it certainly will involve corruption of biblical proportions, bad government decision making, and vast outlays to exercise parity with competing “investors” in influence. Clearly there is a need for reform. The traditional civil society sector where I work is weak these days, and no one high up in the White House or the Congress seems to be breaking a sweat to fix the problem either. One possible strategy for reform is to mobilize political support from the very entities that have created the mess in the first place — the corporate special interests. The argument runs as follows. While there may be short term gains in openly buying influence, the longer run scenario makes everyone worse off. Over the top corruption has hardly been good for economic development anywhere. And, when everyone can do it, the competition will drive up the price of influence, dissipating the very profits companies hope to make. Right now the U.S.A. is the biggest profit center in the world for most companies. Can they really afford for the United States to enter a predictable slide into a third rate economic power? And how much of their quarterly profits do they want to allocate to financing television ads for politicians who rarely stay bought. Maybe as the momentous consequences of the Citizens United Decision become more obvious and concrete, Exxon, Pfizer, Disney and others will start bribing Congress and the President to put some reasonable limits on the amount of the bribes it is legal to accept — acting not out of concern for democracy or the public interest, but for the bottom line.

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Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens, Leader of Liberal Bloc, to Retire

April 9, 2010

By Greg Stohr April 9 (Bloomberg) — Justice John Paul Stevens , the leader of the U.S. Supreme Court ’s liberal wing, said he will retire, giving President Barack Obama his second chance to shape the closely divided court by appointing a successor. Stevens, the court’s oldest justice at age 89, served for 34-plus years and supported gay and abortion rights and limits on government support for religion. He was the only current justice to say the death penalty was unconstitutional. Stevens’s replacement is likely to have similar views and might even make the court more conservative on some issues. Among the candidates the Obama administration is considering to succeed him are U.S. Solicitor General Elena Kagan and federal appellate judges Diane Wood and Merrick Garland . “Justice Stevens’s unique and enduring perspective is irreplaceable,” Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy , a Vermont Democrat, said in a statement. He called on Republicans to join in “a thoughtful and civil discourse” to consider Obama’s choice for a successor. Obama was aboard Air Force One this morning headed back to Washington from Prague when his counsel, Bob Bauer , told him by phone that Stevens had sent a letter revealing his intentions, said a White House official who requested anonymity. Stevens wrote that he had concluded “it would be in the best interests of the court to have my successor confirmed well in advance of the commencement of the court’s next term” in October. Senate Consideration Obama will have to get his nomination through the Senate, where Democrats and allied independents hold 59 of the 100 seats. They will need at least some Republican cooperation to get the 60 senators needed to bring the nominee up for a vote. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said his party will “make a sustained and vigorous case for judicial restraint and the fundamental importance of an even-handed reading of the law.”      “Even if Justice Stevens’s liberalism has led to many decisions I oppose, I respect his devotion to the institution and the gentlemanly manner in which he always carried out his work,” McConnell said. Senator Jon Kyl , an Arizona Republican, said on April 4 he doubted his party would use a filibuster to block consideration of a nominee. The administration is preparing to move quickly with a nomination, a person familiar with White House discussions said last week. Praise From Roberts Stevens “has enriched the lives of everyone at the court through his intellect, independence and warm grace,” said Chief Justice John Roberts in a statement. “We have all been blessed to have John as our colleague,” said Roberts, who almost always is aligned in opposition to Stevens when the court divides 5-4 on sensitive issues. Stevens, a 1975 appointee of Republican President Gerald Ford , was a testament to the ability of a justice to evolve on the court. He was something of a maverick in his early years, often writing separate opinions to make fine legal distinctions or provide a unique analysis. More recently he became a liberal coalition builder, working to secure swing justice Anthony Kennedy as the fifth vote to bolster the rights of suspected terrorists held at Guantanamo Bay and to allow more consumer lawsuits. He served as the voice for his wing of the court in high-profile dissents, as when the court this year struck down decades-old restrictions on corporate campaign spending. “While American democracy is imperfect, few outside the majority of this court would have thought its flaws included a dearth of corporate money in politics,” Stevens wrote in a 90- page dissent. Second-Oldest He will step down as the second-oldest justice ever to serve on the court, behind only Oliver Wendell Holmes , who retired in 1932 at 90 years, 10 months. Stevens’s tenure puts him two years behind William O. Douglas , the longest-serving justice with 36 years of service. Stevens said he will serve until the end of the term in late June or early July. The high court is scheduled to rule in dozens of cases, including fights over gun rights and the fraud conviction of former Enron Corp. chief executive officer Jeffrey Skilling . Kagan, 49, and Wood, 59, interviewed with Obama last year before he appointed Sonia Sotomayor to succeed David Souter on the high court, according to a different White House official. Garland, 57, was one of nine candidates the White House considered for that vacancy, though he didn’t meet with Obama. Solicitor General Kagan is the first woman to serve as solicitor general, the federal government’s top Supreme Court advocate. She took that post after serving as the first female dean of Harvard Law School , her alma mater. Wood, a judge on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago since 1995, has developed a reputation there as an intellectual jurist willing to take on her more conservative colleagues Richard Posner and Frank Easterbrook . Garland, a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, is perhaps the most conservative of the trio, often siding with the government on criminal questions. Charmaine Yoest , president of the anti-abortion Americans United for Life, said her group would oppose “a judicial activist” if Obama chooses someone who would “impose their own social agenda through the courts.” Nancy Keenan , president of NARAL Pro-Choice America, said Obama should name someone who “supports the constitutional right to privacy” that the Supreme Court invoked to legalize abortion nationwide in 1973. To contact the reporter on this story: Greg Stohr in Washington at gstohr@bloomberg.net .

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Video: John Paul Stevens to Retire From U.S. Supreme Court: Video

April 9, 2010

April 9 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Al Hunt and Peter Cook talk with Margaret Brennan about Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens’s plan to retire and the outlook for his potential successors. The retirement of Stevens, the court’s liberal wing leader and its oldest justice at age 89, gives President Barack Obama his second chance to shape the closely divided court by appointing a successor. The Obama administration is focusing on three candidates to succeed Stevens: U.S. Solicitor General Elena Kagan and federal appellate judges Diane Wood and Merrick Garland, according to a White House official familiar with the situation. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Ronald J. Colombo: The Unintended Benefits of Corporate Free Speech

April 5, 2010

Much ink has been spilled over the merits of Citizens United v. FEC – the Supreme Court’s recent opinion extending First Amendment protections to corporate (and labor union) political speech. Some herald the decision as a victory for liberty – others see the decision as a setback for democracy. Few, however, appear to be considering the importance of the decision from another angle: its effect on the very nature of corporations themselves. I suggest that in the long run, the impact of Citizens United could have positive effects not currently envisioned. What exactly is a business corporation? What is its role in society? For whose benefit is it to be managed? Courts and commentators have wrestled with these and related questions for decades – if not centuries. And today, the lack of a clear and stable understanding of the nature of the business corporation persists. As a result, corporate law is marked by some serious contradictions. On the one hand, directors (the individuals primarily entrusted with overseeing corporate management) are told that they have a fiduciary duty to maximize shareholder profits. But on the other hand, directors are told that they may temper that duty out of a concern for other, nonshareholder constituencies (such as corporate employees). On the one hand, laws are passed limiting the ability of corporations to make campaign contributions (out of a concern, among others, that this essentially forces shareholders to support candidates and causes that they might be opposed to). But on the other hand, laws are passed empowering directors to donate corporate funds (essentially shareholder money) to charities of their choice. Shareholder proposals that are not “significantly related” to a company’s business are supposedly improper, yet the SEC and courts routinely approve shareholder proposals that are primarily political in nature and have little if anything to do with the corporation’s business (such as proposals regarding universal health care legislation). And in both the academy and the media, corporations are criticized as “soulless” profit-maximizers, yet are expected and called upon to act with a conscience and to be socially responsible. Thus, corporate directors receive mixed signals from bench and bar regarding the norms of director behavior, and the role of the corporation in society. Some voices demand that directors chart an unrelenting course in pursuit of profit, while others exhort directors to steer toward the fairer waters of good, responsible corporate citizenship. As would be expected, directors appear to be split on which voices they hear and heed. This explains why some corporations rank among the noblest institutions in our society, while others rank alongside the very worst. Sadly, even in the latter case, many directors are probably doing what they understand is demanded of them given the duties of their office. All this suggests that the nature of the business corporation, and its role in our society, has not yet been fixed. We are at a crossroads. Under existing law (as promulgated, interpreted, and understood), the business corporation need not be an intrinsically greedy and selfish enterprise, existing only to generate shareholder returns. Such impulses can lawfully be moderated. Corporate directors need not check their morals at the boardroom door and decide all questions unidimensionally, with regard solely to whether a particular course of action increases or decreases profitability. Rather, directors are empowered to bring their consciences to bear upon their decision making just as each and every one of us (hopefully) does so in all the decisions we make throughout our days. A critically important question for our society is whether directors will guide their companies down this road of enlightened self-interest, versus the alternative road of putting profits ahead of people and principles. And this is where Citizens United comes into play. For it has long been observed that individuals tend to conform themselves to their perceived roles. People commonly rise (or descend) to what is expected of them. (In fact, studies have shown that students majoring in economics, when simply taught that human beings are intrinsically self-interested, actually become more self-interested themselves.) Businesspeople are not immune from this phenomenon. If corporate managers and directors are expected to play a particular role, they generally will. All things being equal, they will generally conform to the norms of their profession – fulfilling their duties as best they understand them. As discussed, the precise nature of that role and these norms is currently unclear. Citizens United may help clarify both in a positive direction. Citizens United stands for the proposition that business corporations are not inherently suspect entities. They are not expected to act in such a sub-human fashion as to justify stripping from them the free speech protections enshrined in the First Amendment. Their participation in our nation’s political process is welcomed because they genuinely have (or, more accurately, can genuinely have) something of value to add to public discourse. Had Citizens United come out the other way, it very well could have tipped the balance against more socially responsible corporations, cementing Michael Moore’s caricature of the corporation and its role in the minds of both directors and jurists. In short, by treating business corporations like citizens, the Supreme Court may have unwittingly encouraged business corporations to act more like citizens. And that would be a good thing.

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Kagan, Judges Said to Be Considered for Supreme Court Vacancy

April 3, 2010

By Greg Stohr April 3 (Bloomberg) — The Obama administration, contemplating the possible retirement of U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens , is focusing on three candidates to succeed him, a White House official familiar with the deliberations said. The group includes U.S. Solicitor General Elena Kagan and federal appellate judges Diane Wood and Merrick Garland , the person said, speaking on the condition of anonymity. Stevens, who will turn 90 on April 20, told the New York Times in an April 2 interview that he will decide soon whether he will step down. “The president and the Senate need plenty of time to fill a vacancy,” Stevens told the newspaper. Stevens hasn’t communicated his intentions to the White House one way or another, according the person familiar with the deliberations. President Barack Obama hasn’t begun discussing particular candidates with aides, and the list of leading candidates could change in the coming weeks, the person said. “We’ll be prepared if a vacancy arises, but there’s no vacancy on the court, and there’s no short list awaiting a potential vacancy,” White House spokesman Ben LaBolt said in an e-mail. White House officials expect that any retirement announcement would come after the high court’s last argument of its current term, on April 28, the person said. The administration is preparing to move quickly with a nomination, the person said. Obama Interviews Kagan, 49, and Wood, 59, interviewed with Obama last year before he appointed Sonia Sotomayor to succeed David Souter on the high court, according to a different White House official. Garland, 57, was one of nine candidates the White House considered for that vacancy, though he didn’t meet with Obama. Kagan is the first woman to serve as solicitor general, the federal government’s top Supreme Court advocate. She took that post after serving as the first female dean of Harvard Law School , her alma mater. Kagan won praise from conservatives and liberals alike for smoothing over the ideological tensions that plagued Harvard Law School before she became dean in 2003. Still, her nomination to become solicitor general was divisive. She won confirmation on a 61-31 vote, with some Republicans voicing concern about her lack of courtroom experience and her opposition to on-campus military recruiting at Harvard. Intellectual Jurist Wood, a judge on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago since 1995, has developed a reputation there as an intellectual jurist willing to take on her more conservative colleagues Richard Posner and Frank Easterbrook . A graduate of the University of Texas School of Law, Wood is an antitrust expert, serving as deputy assistant attorney general under President Bill Clinton . Garland, a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, is perhaps the most conservative of the trio, often siding with the government on criminal questions. A Harvard Law School graduate, he worked in the Clinton administration’s Justice Department, overseeing the Oklahoma City bombing investigation and the successful prosecution of Timothy McVeigh . For last year’s vacancy, officials also considered Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano , Governor Jennifer Granholm of Michigan and then-Chief Justice Leah Ward Sears of the Georgia Supreme Court. Martha Minow , who succeeded Kagan as Harvard Law School dean, is also a possibility for the Stevens seat, the first White House official said. Stevens, appointed by President Gerald Ford in 1975, is the oldest and longest serving of the nine justices. The leader of the court’s liberal wing, he supports gay and abortion rights and limits on government support for religion. He is the only justice to say the death penalty is unconstitutional. To contact the reporter on this story: Greg Stohr in Washington at gstohr@bloomberg.net .

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Kagan, Two Judges Said to Be Considered by Obama for High Court Vacancy

April 3, 2010

By Greg Stohr April 3 (Bloomberg) — The Obama administration, eyeing the possible retirement of U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens , is focusing on three candidates to succeed him, a White House official familiar with the deliberations said. The group includes U.S. Solicitor General Elena Kagan and federal appellate judges Diane Wood and Merrick Garland , the person said, speaking on the condition of anonymity. Stevens, who will turn 90 on April 20, told the New Yorker magazine in March that he will decide soon whether he will step down. He hasn’t communicated his intentions to the White House one way or another, the person said. President Barack Obama hasn’t begun discussing particular candidates with aides, and the list of leading candidates could change in the coming weeks, the person said. “We’ll be prepared if a vacancy arises, but there’s no vacancy on the court, and there’s no short list awaiting a potential vacancy,” White House spokesman Ben LaBolt said in an e-mail. White House officials expect that any retirement announcement would come after the high court’s last argument of its current term, on April 27, the person said. The administration is preparing to move quickly with a nomination, the person said. Kagan, 49, and Wood, 59, interviewed with Obama last year before he appointed Sonia Sotomayor to succeed David Souter on the high court, according to a different White House official. Garland, 57, was one of nine candidates the White House considered for that vacancy, though he didn’t meet with Obama. First Woman Kagan is the first woman to serve as solicitor general, the federal government’s top Supreme Court advocate. She took that post after serving as the first female dean of Harvard Law School , her alma mater. Kagan won praise from conservatives and liberals alike for smoothing over the ideological tensions that plagued Harvard Law School before she became dean in 2003. Still, her nomination to become solicitor general was divisive. She won confirmation on a 61-31 vote, with some Republicans voicing concern about her lack of courtroom experience and her opposition to on-campus military recruiting at Harvard. Wood, a judge on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago since 1995, has developed a reputation there as an intellectual jurist willing to take on her more conservative colleagues Richard Posner and Frank Easterbrook . A graduate of the University of Texas School of Law, Wood is an antitrust expert, serving as deputy assistant attorney general under President Bill Clinton . Sided With Government Garland, a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, is perhaps the most conservative of the trio, often siding with the government on criminal questions. A Harvard Law School graduate, he worked in the Clinton administration’s Justice Department, overseeing the Oklahoma City bombing investigation and the successful prosecution of Timothy McVeigh . For last year’s vacancy, officials also considered Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano , Governor Jennifer Granholm of Michigan and then-Chief Justice Leah Ward Sears of the Georgia Supreme Court. Martha Minow , who succeeded Kagan as Harvard Law School dean, is also a possibility for the Stevens seat, the first White House official said. To contact the reporter on this story: Greg Stohr in Washington at gstohr@bloomberg.net .

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Bill de Blasio: Disclose Now!

April 1, 2010

Earlier this year, Justice Stevens ended his powerful dissent in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission with the following words: “While American democracy is imperfect, few outside the majority of this Court would have thought its flaws included a dearth of corporate money in politics.” While many have focused on how the Court’s decision in Citizens United challenges the integrity of our democratic process, it also represents a watershed moment in corporate governance. The ruling leaves investors in a world where company managers can legally spend shareholder capital on independent electioneering advertising without checks and without limits. As companies are not required to disclose their independent spending, shareholders cannot determine how much company capital will be spent on politics and what its impact will be on the bottom line. We now need to use every available avenue to hold corporations and their boards of directors accountable for their political spending. The regulations barring spending from corporate treasuries on campaigns did not just shape our political process; they also offered crucial protections for shareholders who could suffer from excessive corporate campaign spending. The potential gap between the interests of company managers and those of their shareholders represents a basic problem in corporate governance. Allowing unfettered campaign spending from corporate treasuries threatens to widen this gap. Studies of the relationship between spending on politics and risk and returns for shareholders bear out this risk. A study by economists at the University of Minnesota revealed a correlation between high levels of political spending and falling corporate governance standards and returns. The International Monetary Fund also released a working paper that demonstrated a negative relationship between spending on lobbying and performance among lending institutions. The problem is clear — without restrictions and without shareholder disclosure around campaign expenditures, companies, and by extension their shareholders, suffer. The current system denies U.S. shareholders measures to ensure transparency and accountability in their companies. The United States should follow the example of other countries that have required transparency and accountability of corporations that engage in political spending to their investors. As an example, in 2000, the United Kingdom amended its Companies Act to require all British companies to disclose and seek the consent of their shareholders before making substantial political contributions. As a result, managers submit proposed political budgets to their shareholders each year. A recent study by the Brennan Center for Justice suggests that this approach has protected investors and restricted the flow of excessive financial resources from British corporations into the political process. By mandating disclosure, the UK allows shareholders access to meaningful information they can use to hold their companies accountable. Congress should adopt legislation that gives shareholders information and the tools they need to hold corporations in which they invest accountable for their political spending. Investors should not wait for new laws to provide necessary protections; we should use tools that already exist to ensure that corporations do not exploit the new reality to undermine their companies’ financial health. Shareholders and institutional investors across the nation should demand more accountability and transparency from the corporations they own. In the 2010 proxy season, the New York City Employees’ Retirement System (NYCERS), the largest pension fund in New York City, filed shareholder resolutions requiring disclosure of political spending by numerous corporations in which it is invested. Now, we are calling for other institutional investors across the country to join us in support of these resolutions and to help us build a national shareholder movement for increased corporate disclosure and accountability. By working together we can help give all shareholders a much needed voice in how corporations decide to spend money on elections. The Supreme Court’s decision has created a new reality for how corporations participate in political campaigns and, by extension, how money influences our government. In the months ahead, corporations, candidates, investors and the public will all face a choice. Will we accept new levels of political spending with no limits and little disclosure or will we demand a new approach and sense of public responsibility from our country’s corporations? This decision will define our democracy for generations to come. It is up to all of us to get it right.

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Robert Kuttner: Next, Banking Reform

March 28, 2010

It was a pleasure to see President Obama exercise some leadership and muscle towards health reform, and more recently to pass a true “public option” for student loans. Apparently, the experience of leadership felt good, for the president decided to follow up by deciding to damn the torpedoes and making fifteen recess appointments, including Craig Becker to breathe some life into the National Labor Relations Board. Now, we need to see a similar display of presidential leadership on financial reform. The bill that passed the House last December is far too weak on all of the key issues. Gigantic banking conglomerates will remain “too big to fail.” There is no separation of commercial banking from investment banking or proprietary trading, nor meaningful reform of corrupted credit rating agencies. Regulation of derivatives such as credit default swaps is far too weak. Private equity companies and hedge funds are largely left alone. There is no serious reform of executive compensation. The next generation of bubbles is already incubating while we are still recovering from the damage of the previous one. The Dodd bill that will come before the full Senate later this spring is slightly worse in some respects, slightly better in others. The bill does include a version of Obama’s call to restore the Glass-Steagall wall between commercial and investment banking (the “Volcker Rule”); but where the House bill created an independent consumer financial protection agency, the Dodd bill places this new agency, of all places, in the Federal Reserve. It was the Fed’s total failure to enforce consumer protections on the books that invited the abuses that caused the collapse. The bankruptcy examiner’s revelations in his 2,200 page report about the behavior of Lehman Brothers should cause the White House to rethink its entire approach to financial reform. Basically, Lehman Brothers cooked its books for a few days four times a year, so that its quarterly reports would make the firm look far more solvent than it actually was. It used repurchase agreements (“repos”), which are short term loans, to disguise $30 to 50 billion worth of liabilities. This balance-sheet manipulation began in 2001, according to the examiner, Anton Valukas. This kind of behavior demonstrates the failure of three separate systems that are supposed to protect investors, creditors and the larger economy from willful corporate fraud. First, the Securities and Exchange Commission, which actually had personnel investigating Lehman at the time, and utterly missed what was going on right under the commission’s nose, in a lapse comparable to the Madoff scandal. Second, Lehman’s outside auditors, Ernst and Young, failed to blow the whistle. These abuses mostly occurred after Congress enacted the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act, explicitly to improve corporate auditing in the wake of the Enron fraud. Obviously, though corporate lobbies have been complaining that Sarbanes-Oxley inflicted too much red tape, the Lehman affair demonstrates that it is too weak to do the job. Auditors and executives, in principle anyway, are criminally liable for accounting fraud. But that did not deter Lehman from faking its books and Ernst and Young from going along. According to the examiner’s report, despite the auditor’s acquiescence, Lehman was not able to find a law firm in the US to sign off on its bogus accounting. So Lehman went to the U.K., found a law firm, Linklater’s, to provide an opinion letter under British law okaying the dubious bookkeeping, and then ran the transactions through a London subsidiary. One backstop, that has been weakened in recent years both by Congressional action and by Supreme Court rulings, is the right of investors or creditors injured by fraudulent behavior to sue. The original securities laws of the Roosevelt era envisioned that this kind of litigation–”private right of action”–would keep both corporations, their auditors and the SEC honest. But bipartisan legislation in the 1990s and two major Supreme Court decisions on 1994 and 2008 have effectively eliminated liability for aiding and abetting securities fraud. You can be sure if this right were still available, Ernst and Young would have though twice about giving Lehman a clean bill of health. The politics of financial reform are drastically different from the politics of health care reform. For starters, Wall Street is massively unpopular in the country. By contrast, in the case of health care, some of the bill’s own weaknesses – the mandate, the diversion of Medicare funds, the tax on premiums of high-quality insurance – raised legitimate questions among many voters; Republicans succeed in creating lies about the bill (pulling the plug on Grandma, etc.) that only multiplied concerns. In the end, passing the bill was a genuinely difficult vote for many Democrats. Financial reform is a whole other story. It’s not a difficult vote to tighten restrictions on predator banks (except when it comes to campaign finance). Judging by the recent comments of Senator Bob Corker, one of the senior Republicans on the Senate Banking Committee, Republicans are genuinely worried about finding themselves on the wrong side of a populist issue if they try to block financial reform the same way they tried to block health reform. On financial reform, the real problem is not the Republicans–but whether Democrats will be tough enough. They have far more political room to force the Republicans to take a difficult vote than they are exercise. A cynic might think that Democrats such as Chris Dodd and Chuck Schumer are more worried about keeping Wall Street and the Fed happy than about maximizing the moment for reform and demonstrating to regular Americans which side they are on. And if President Obama wants to appeal to bipartisanship, here is an area where bipartisanship can actually go hand in hand with good government. One example is the amendment to require an independent audit of the Federal Reserve, which was cosponsored by one of the most progressive Democrats in the House, Alan Grayson of Florida, and the libertarian Republican Ron Paul of Texas. With the support of over 300 House Democrats, that bipartisan provision made it into the final House bill. Another good bipartisan bill was the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act, cosponsored by Democratic senators Ted Kaufman of Delaware, Pat Leahy of Vermont, and Republican Chuck Grassley of Iowa, the same Grassley who was part of the obstructions and myth-mongers when it came to health reform. But Grassley and other heartland Republicans are fed up with the double standard that places Wall Street ahead of Main Street. The Act, approved last May, helps–but does not fully restore the right of an injured investor or creditor to sue for damages in cases of securities, including those who aided or abetted a fraud, such as auditors who signed off on cooked books. As Sen. Kaufman said in a recent floor statement , “I’m concerned that the revelations about Lehman Brothers are just the tip of the iceberg. We have no reason to believe that the conduct detailed last week is somehow isolated or unique. Indeed, this sort of behavior is hardly novel. Enron engaged in similar deceit with some of its assets. And while we don’t have the benefit of an examiner’s report for other firms with a business model like Lehman’s, law enforcement authorities should be well on their way in conducting investigations of whether others used similar ‘accounting gimmicks’ to hide dangerous risk from investors and the public.” A good place to start would be to require real audits, similar to the autopsy performed on Lehman Brothers, of all the banks that took taxpayer money under the TARP program. Anyone who thinks that this sort of cooking of books was confined to Lehman Brothers is a good candidate to buy the Brooklyn Bridge–or worse, a bond backed by a sub-prime loan. President Obama could accomplish audit this simply by directing his Treasury Secretary to do it. Obama has at last discovered that the public expects him to lead; and that Republican whining about the perils of majority rule cuts no ice. His administration has now squandered more than a year, being far too soft on the Wall Street system that crashed the rest of the economy. Now, with his own stock risking, he can show his mettle by demanding much tougher financial reform and daring the Republicans to block it. Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect and a Senior Fellow at Demos. His new book is A Presidency in Peril (Chelsea Green, April 2010)

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Swiss Court May Force UniCredit to Pay $321 Million in Communist-Era Case

March 27, 2010

By Tony Czuczka and Zoe Schneeweiss March 27 (Bloomberg) — UniCredit SpA’s Austrian unit may be forced to pay 240 million euros ($321 million) to the German government in a court case involving assets of the former East German Communist Party. The Zurich District Court of Appeal yesterday ruled in favor of the German government in a lawsuit that accuses UniCredit Bank Austria AG’s former AKB Privatbank Zuerich unit of helping to embezzle funds from companies in the former East Germany, Vienna-based Bank Austria said yesterday in a statement. The court reversed an initial ruling of the Zurich District Court, which had rejected Germany’s claim. Bank Austria, which is an intervening party in the case, will file an appeal to the Court of Cassation of the Canton of Zurich and to the Swiss Federal Supreme Court, according to the statement. The potential risk is about 128 million euros, or 240 million euros including interest as of yesterday, Bank Austria said. Court officials couldn’t be reached for comment after business hours yesterday. When the case went to court in 1994, Germany said that the bank helped launder 250 million deutsche marks ($171.5 million) that vanished from the accounts of two former East German trading companies after communism fell. Germany said that the funds were East German state assets that AKB helped shift to the Austria Communist Party in the 1990s after German reunification. Germany is being represented by Bundesanstalt fuer Vereinigungsbedingte Sonderaufgaben, the legal successor of Deutsche Treuhandanstalt, which was in charge of managing the assets of the former East Germany. To contact the reporters on this story: Tony Czuczka in Berlin at aczuczka@bloomberg.net ; Zoe Schneeweiss in Vienna at zschneeweiss@bloomberg.net .

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Health-Care Legislation Judged Able to Withstand Constitutional Challenge

March 24, 2010

By William McQuillen and Andrew Harris March 24 (Bloomberg) — Lawsuits by 14 states seeking to scuttle health-care legislation signed by President Barack Obama were given little chance of success in the face of the broad powers granted Congress by the U.S. Constitution, scholars said. Thirteen states led by Florida said the law signed yesterday illegally places a fiscal burden on their cash- strapped budgets with an expansion of state-run Medicaid. Virginia filed a separate suit contending the “individual mandate” requiring people to buy health insurance exceeds Congress’s powers. “It’s unlikely to succeed,” said Jack Balkin , a professor at Yale Law School in New Haven, Connecticut, of the effort by the states, equating the new law to Congress’s power to levy taxes. “Congress has the ability to force people to pay taxes. If it is a constitutional tax, then that is the ballgame.” The $940 billion health care overhaul subsidizes coverage for uninsured Americans, and is financed by Medicare cuts to hospitals and fees or taxes on insurers, drugmakers, medical- device companies and Americans earning more than $200,000 a year. Many of the changes enacted by the bill, such as requiring most people to have health insurance and employers to provide coverage, will take at least two years to go into effect. The 13 states joining in the lawsuit filed in federal court in Pensacola, Florida, claim that “the act represents an unprecedented encroachment on the liberty of individuals living in the plaintiffs’ respective states, by mandating that all citizens and legal residents of the United States have qualifying health care coverage or pay a tax penalty.” 13 States Joining Florida in the suit are Alabama, Colorado, Idaho, Louisiana, Michigan, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah and Washington. Along with a separate suit by Virginia filed in federal court in Richmond, the states asked the courts to declare the law unconstitutional and seek to bar its enforcement. The complaints were filed moments after Obama, a Democrat, signed the legislation, which totals more than 2,400 pages. “This is a continuation of politics by a national political faction that lost in Congress,” said Aziz Huq , a University of Chicago law professor, who predicted the lawsuits will likely fail. Twelve of the state attorneys general participating in the Florida case are Republicans. Buddy Caldwell of Louisiana is the lone Democrat. Virginia’s lawsuit was filed by Ken Cuccinelli, a Republican. The health-care overhaul will allow 16 million more Americans to qualify for Medicaid coverage, according to an estimate by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. It will cost the states billions of dollars to administer, according to the states that sued. ‘Ruin the State’ Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum said at a press conference yesterday that the act’s legislative mandates will cost his state billions of dollars. The legislation “will ruin the state financially,” said McCollum, who predicted the lawsuits would end up before the U.S. Supreme Court. The states claim the legislation will deprive them of sovereignty and violates the Constitution’s Tenth Amendment, which says powers not granted to the national government are reserved to the states, or the people. In its lawsuit, Virginia specifically attacked the new law’s requirement that Americans obtain health coverage, calling it unconstitutional. Charles Fried , a professor at Harvard Law School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, disagreed. ‘What Virginia Says’ “As long as the federal law is independently constitutional, it doesn’t matter what Virginia says,” said Fried, who served as solicitor general, the government’s chief lawyer before the U.S. Supreme Court, during the administration of President Ronald Reagan . “It’s like Virginia saying we don’t have to pay income tax.” The Florida lawsuit claims the reform contains “unfunded mandates” and is too financially burdensome at a time when states already need to cut their budgets. The attorneys general also said the law imposes an illegal tax on people “for their failure or refusal to do anything other than to exist and reside in the United States.” Balkin said throwing out the health care law may require overturning decades of court precedent leading back to the “New Deal” legislation of President Franklin Roosevelt . Robert Kaufman, a public policy professor at Pepperdine University in Malibu, California, who calls himself a “fervent opponent” of the new health law, said chances are slim that litigation by the states will reverse it. The Issue “The issue is whether this is constitutional, not whether this is wise,” said Kaufman, who is also an attorney. U.S. Supreme Court decisions since Roosevelt have tended to support a broad reading of the Constitution in allowing the federal government to regulate interstate commerce, Kaufman said. The Supreme Court in 2005 cited the Constitution’s Commerce Clause in upholding a federal ban on marijuana, showing the reach of that provision in the face of state laws allowing its use for medical reasons, said Peter Edelman , a constitutional law professor at the Georgetown University in Washington. “Bottom line, I don’t think there is any substance to any of the arguments,” said Edelman, who was an assistant secretary at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services during the administration of President Bill Clinton . “But you always have to put a small asterisk, given the current membership of the court.” The cases are State of Florida v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 10-cv-00091, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida (Pensacola); Commonwealth of Virginia v. Sebelius, 10cv00188, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia (Richmond). To contact the reporters on this story: William McQuillen in Washington at bmcquillen@bloomberg.net and; Andrew Harris in Chicago at aharris16@bloomberg.net .

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Hatch Says House Democrats `Nuts’ to Think Sunday Vote Settles Health Care

March 20, 2010

By Nicholas Johnston March 20 (Bloomberg) — Republican Senator Orrin Hatch said Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives are “nuts” to think tomorrow’s vote on health-care legislation will resolve the issue. If the measure passes, Senate Republicans have enough votes on at least two points of order to alter the measure and send it back to the House for a second round of votes, Hatch said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital with Al Hunt ,” airing this weekend. “If those people think they’re only going to vote on this once, they’re nuts,” Hatch said as House Democratic leaders rounded up support before the scheduled vote on President Barack Obama ’s top domestic priority. The senator from Utah also said the approach Democrats are using to pass the legislation in the House may be unconstitutional because the House and Senate aren’t voting on “exactly the same language.” The second-ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee , Hatch also said Supreme Court Associate Justice John Paul Stevens , 89, is “likely” to announce he is stepping down next month. That would allow Obama to name his replacement, and Hatch suggested Solicitor General Elena Kagan and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano as possibilities. ‘Pick Another Woman’ “I suspect he’s going to try and pick another woman or somebody from some ethnic group that hasn’t had a chance to be on the court,” Hatch said. Replacing Stevens would be Obama’s second pick for the nine-member court. Last year he named Sonia Sotomayor , the first Hispanic justice, to the court to fill the seat vacated by David Souter . On the issue of terrorism, Hatch, a member of the Senate intelligence committee, said the U.S. “may very well catch Osama bin Laden ,” the leader of the al-Qaeda network. “We are knocking off the top 20 one by one,” Hatch said. He criticized Attorney General Eric Holder for telling lawmakers March 16 that bin Laden isn’t likely to be captured alive. “I don’t think he should have said that,” Hatch said. Asked if he knew whether bin Laden’s capture is imminent, Hatch said, “I couldn’t say even if I did.” College Football On college sports, Hatch called the Bowl Championship Series , which oversees the college football national championship game, “a corrupt system” that funnels billions of dollars to “privileged conferences.” The Department of Justice has told Hatch it is considering whether to investigate the BCS for possible violations of antitrust law. “It’s a corrupt system and frankly we really do need to change it,” said Hatch, who turns 76 on March 22. “And I understand why they’d try and hold onto it. It’s a gravy train to them that nobody seems to look at or supervise or review.” Hatch said one of the points of order raised against the health-care legislation in the Senate would be related to the effect on Social Security revenue, and he expects Republicans will have the votes to win on that because it would require 60 votes to overturn. Less Revenue A proposed tax on high-end insurance plans would be scaled back under the House measure, which would mean less revenue for the Social Security system, Republicans say. That would violate Senate rules, they say. Democrats and two independents who usually side with the party have 59 seats in the 100-member body. The legislation represents the most significant health-care revamp since the Medicare program for the elderly was created in 1965. Under it, Americans would have more access to preventive care, Democrats say. Also, young adults could stay on their parents’ insurance until age 26. The measure has a 10-year $940 billion price tag. Hatch, who was first elected to his seat in 1976, predicted “outright warfare” in the Senate if Democrats use a process called reconciliation that would allow the chamber to pass the health-care measure with a simple majority. “That’s going to be something they’re going to have to live with the rest of their lives,” Hatch said. To contact the reporter on this story: Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net

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Hatch Says `Nuts’ to Think Sunday Vote Will Resolve Health Bill’s Debate

March 19, 2010

By Nicholas Johnston March 19 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Senator Orrin Hatch , a Utah Republican, said Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives are “nuts” to think that Sunday’s vote on health-care legislation will resolve the issue. Senate Republicans have enough votes on at least two points of order to alter the measure and send it back to the House for a second round of votes, Hatch said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital with Al Hunt ,” airing this weekend. “If those people think they’re only going to vote on this once, they’re nuts,” Hatch said as House Democratic leaders rounded up support before the scheduled March 21 vote on President Barack Obama ’s top domestic priority. Hatch warned that the approach Democrats are using to pass the legislation in the House may be unconstitutional because the House and Senate aren’t voting on “exactly the same language.” The top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee , Hatch also said Supreme Court Associate Justice John Paul Stevens , 89, the longest serving member of the court, is “likely” to announce he is stepping down next month. That will allow Obama to name his replacement, and Hatch suggested Solicitor General Elena Kagan and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano as possibilities. ‘Pick Another Woman’ “I suspect he’s going to try and pick another woman or somebody from some ethnic group that hasn’t had a chance to be on the court,” Hatch said. On the issue of terrorism, Hatch, a member of the Senate intelligence committee, said the U.S. “may very well catch Osama bin Laden ,” the leader of the al-Qaeda network. “We are knocking off the top 20 one by one,” Hatch said. He criticized Attorney General Eric Holder for telling lawmakers March 16 that bin Laden isn’t likely to be captured alive. “I don’t think he should have said that,” Hatch said. Asked if he knew whether bin Laden’s capture is imminent, Hatch said, “I couldn’t say even if I did.” On college sports, Hatch called the Bowl Championship Series , which oversees the college football national championship game, “a corrupt system” that funnels billions of dollars to “privileged conferences.” The Department of Justice has told Hatch it is considering whether to investigate the BCS for possible violations of antitrust law. ‘Gravy Train’ “It’s a corrupt system and frankly we really do need to change it,” Hatch said. “And I understand why they’d try and hold onto it. It’s a gravy train to them that nobody seems to look at or supervise or review.” Hatch said one of the points of order raised against the health-care legislation would be related to the effect on Social Security revenue, and he expects Republicans will have the votes to win on that because it would require 60 votes to overturn. A proposed tax on high-end insurance plans would be scaled back under the House measure, which would mean less revenue for the Social Security system, Republicans say. That would violate Senate rules, they say. Democrats and two independents have 59 seats in the 100- member body. The legislation represents the most significant health-care revamp since the Medicare program for the elderly was created in 1965. Americans would have more access to preventive care and young adults could stay on their parents’ insurance until age 26, Democrats say. The measure has a 10-year $940 billion price tag. Hatch predicted “outright warfare” in the Senate if Democrats use a process called reconciliation that would allow the Senate to pass the health-care measure with a simple majority. “That’s going to be something they’re going to have to live with the rest of their lives,” Hatch said. To contact the reporter on this story: Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net

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Hatch Says `Nuts’ to Think Sunday Vote Will Resolve Health Bill’s Debate

March 19, 2010

By Nicholas Johnston March 19 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Senator Orrin Hatch , a Utah Republican, said Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives are “nuts” to think that Sunday’s vote on health-care legislation will resolve the issue. Senate Republicans have enough votes on at least two points of order to alter the measure and send it back to the House for a second round of votes, Hatch said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital with Al Hunt ,” airing this weekend. “If those people think they’re only going to vote on this once, they’re nuts,” Hatch said as House Democratic leaders rounded up support before the scheduled March 21 vote on President Barack Obama ’s top domestic priority. Hatch warned that the approach Democrats are using to pass the legislation in the House may be unconstitutional because the House and Senate aren’t voting on “exactly the same language.” The top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee , Hatch also said Supreme Court Associate Justice John Paul Stevens , 89, the longest serving member of the court, is “likely” to announce he is stepping down next month. That will allow Obama to name his replacement, and Hatch suggested Solicitor General Elena Kagan and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano as possibilities. ‘Pick Another Woman’ “I suspect he’s going to try and pick another woman or somebody from some ethnic group that hasn’t had a chance to be on the court,” Hatch said. On the issue of terrorism, Hatch, a member of the Senate intelligence committee, said the U.S. “may very well catch Osama bin Laden ,” the leader of the al-Qaeda network. “We are knocking off the top 20 one by one,” Hatch said. He criticized Attorney General Eric Holder for telling lawmakers March 16 that bin Laden isn’t likely to be captured alive. “I don’t think he should have said that,” Hatch said. Asked if he knew whether bin Laden’s capture is imminent, Hatch said, “I couldn’t say even if I did.” On college sports, Hatch called the Bowl Championship Series , which oversees the college football national championship game, “a corrupt system” that funnels billions of dollars to “privileged conferences.” The Department of Justice has told Hatch it is considering whether to investigate the BCS for possible violations of antitrust law. ‘Gravy Train’ “It’s a corrupt system and frankly we really do need to change it,” Hatch said. “And I understand why they’d try and hold onto it. It’s a gravy train to them that nobody seems to look at or supervise or review.” Hatch said one of the points of order raised against the health-care legislation would be related to the effect on Social Security revenue, and he expects Republicans will have the votes to win on that because it would require 60 votes to overturn. A proposed tax on high-end insurance plans would be scaled back under the House measure, which would mean less revenue for the Social Security system, Republicans say. That would violate Senate rules, they say. Democrats and two independents have 59 seats in the 100- member body. The legislation represents the most significant health-care revamp since the Medicare program for the elderly was created in 1965. Americans would have more access to preventive care and young adults could stay on their parents’ insurance until age 26, Democrats say. The measure has a 10-year $940 billion price tag. Hatch predicted “outright warfare” in the Senate if Democrats use a process called reconciliation that would allow the Senate to pass the health-care measure with a simple majority. “That’s going to be something they’re going to have to live with the rest of their lives,” Hatch said. To contact the reporter on this story: Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net

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David Isenberg: Law and the Private Armies You Can Afford

March 17, 2010

Over the years I have read at least a hundred full fledged law journal articles on legal issues relevant to private military security contractors (PMC). Toss in other periodical literature on legal issues the number increases by hundreds. Mostly these are what you would expect; dense legalese that is mind numbingly, eye glazing, boring, and unreadable, without large amounts of coffee or other stimulants. But that is not to say they are without value. It is a hallmark of the “industry” as its advocates like to call it, that so many of the legal standards and laws (Geneva Conventions, Montreux Document , which are supposed to regulate PMC, remain hotly contested and fiercely argued. While that is, of course, good news for lawyers, who chalk up thousands of billable hours, representing firms like Xe Services (formerly Blackwater), DynCorp, and a host of others, it leaves everyone else who is impacted by such firms’ activities in a vulnerable position. Sometimes it takes someone who is not yet a practicing lawyer, as in a law student, to see the forest for the trees. Thus consider what Adam Ebrahim writes in the spring 2010 issue of the Boston University International Law Journal. In his article ” Going to War with the Army You Can Afford: The United States, International Law and Private Military Industry ” he notes: While addressing soldiers stationed at a remote military camp in Iraq in the fall of 2004, then Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld remarked infamously, “you go to war with the army you have, not the army you might want or wish to have at a later time.” In reality, the United States and other economically developed nations go to war not just with the armies they have, but with the private armies they can afford. Private military companies (“PMCs,” also referred to as “private military firms,” “private security contractors,” and other like titles) play an unquestionably prominent role in the twenty-first century military apparatus, offering logistical support, strategic consulting, and frontline combat operations. The modern world dictates that states, individuals, corporations, and international organizations need military security around the globe, and private companies appear ready to meet this task. .. As the private military industry thrives, domestic and international law struggles to keep pace. States, including the United States, have passed laws to regulate the industry, but domestic legislation faces jurisdictional and administrative problems in affecting the behavior of an industry that operates transnationally. International law in the twentieth-century reflected both public condemnation and government indifference by the western powers, resulting in an ill-defined legal regime that undercut [*184] mercenary activity in certain limited situations. n12 Yet the international legal regime, namely that propagated by the United Nations, neither responds to the frequency, scope, and conduct of present-day PMCs, nor addresses the distinctions between mercenaries and the modern industry. Like all law journal articles his is wordy, 20685 words to be exact, so I won’t quote extensively but his conclusion is that PMCs will take on an expanded role in future military operations, governed by domestic law. The problem with that is that, thus far, there have been numerous problems in both passing and implementing domestic laws. It wasn’t until just the past few years that the U.S. Congress began passing new laws and modifying old ones. Some of these, such as the modifications to the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act or the Uniform Code of Military Justice to deal with PMC, have yet to be tested all the way up to the Supreme Court, and there is reason to believe that at least the latter won’t survive that challenge. Also, these and other laws have yet to receive the proper resources, meaning people and money, to implement them. Given that some of these laws potentially require investigation and prosecution by a district attorney, who may not be inclined and certainly won’t have the money to spend on investigation, and, if required, prosecution, it is easy to see just one problem with the domestic legal approach. Even with stronger, more settled law the issue will hardly be finished. As Ebrahim notes, “As important as the recent Nisour Square charges may be, political will, legal ambiguity, judicial resources, and evidentiary problems make criminal prosecution of PMCs difficult.” While I think that Ebrahim sounds like various PMC trade associations when he writes “Although far from complete, the evolution of U.S. law presents an increasingly coherent framework through which to regulate PMC conduct and hold PMC personnel accountable.” he is absolutely correct when he says “In contrast to the developments in domestic law, international treaties and conventions have yet to see a similar progression and continue to apply to an outdated model of mercenary usage.”

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Eric C. Anderson: Beijing, Washington and Currency Manipulation

March 17, 2010

Apparently not satisfied with two wars, a national debt approaching $14 trillion, and endless partisan bickering, Congress now wants to pick a fight with China. On March 15, 2010, the collective “wisdom” of our elected representatives was resplendently displayed in a letter essentially demanding the Obama administration consider a revival of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act. Only in this case Washington would not be targeting all foreign imports, just those from China. Not to worry, China is only our second largest trading partner…this won’t have much effect at home…in the short run. Or at least before the November elections, the 130 legislators listed as signatories hope. This congressional effort to relive the events of 1930 assumed additional speed on March 16, when five senators including Charles Schumer (D-NY) and Lindsey Graham (R-SC) introduced legislation echoing the infamous letter. The proposed bill — hereafter the Schumer-Graham Tariff Act — would compel the Treasury Department to declare China a currency manipulator. The Schumer-Graham Tariff Act would also facilitate the imposition of import duties as a means of compensating for any perceived currency manipulation. In other words…back to Smoot-Hawley. Why all this shouting from the rafters? Congress — with its extensive economics experience and obvious comprehension of all financial issues — believes China is a “currency manipulator.” More specifically, the Capitol Hill denizens believe that “by pegging the renminbi to the U.S. dollar at a fixed exchange rate, China unfairly subsidizes its exports and disadvantages foreign imports.” Do the Chinese do this? You bet. Why? The Chinese Communist Party wants to maintain an economic growth rate that exceeds 8% a year as a means of generating employment and thereby providing their population of 1.3 billion a lifestyle most Americans would reject as outright deprivation. Furthermore, some analysts estimate an immediate revaluation of the yuan would result in the loss of 5 million Chinese jobs. In either case, members of the Chinese government, like politicians in Washington, realize employment and take-home pay matter. If Beijing fails to look out for her constituents, well, a number of Chinese politicians will be looking for work. So here’s what Beijing has done. Since July 2008 — the point at which it became apparent our banking crisis was going to cause a global recession — China locked the yuan to the dollar at an exchange rate of 6.83 to 1. This move came as a bit of a shock, as apparently many Western analysts figured China would be sucked down the economic sinkhole with everyone else. The technocrats in Beijing were not so inclined. After allowing the yuan to appreciate 21% against the dollar between July 2005 and July 2008, they decided to protect their peoples’ jobs — and thus remain atop China’s political hierarchy. Washington was not as logical. In a desperate bid to save their buddies on Wall Street, our elected representatives began exploring a means of printing more money and handing out bundles of cash. This worked for Wall Street — one look at the bonuses offered at Goldman Sachs last year confirms greed is good — it did nothing for Main Street. In a concerted effort to save their own hides and maximize profits, the banks who willingly accepted taxpayer cash refused to lend this taxpayer largess back to small businesses or anyone not employed at J.P. Morgan. The ultimate result, unemployment slithered past 10%. To make matters worse, our representatives on Capitol Hill could not agree on how to spend a stimulus package…thereby causing jobless rates to lock in…just about as tightly as the yuan peg to the dollar. The Chinese government–by the way — not only managed to spend its stimulus package in a timely manner, Beijing also worked to place responsibility for maintaining growth outside the central bank by encouraging lending in the private sector. (Yes, yes…I realize no minor element of this private sector borrowing was accomplished by local governments tasked with infrastructure development. The point is, Beijing didn’t simply go out and print more yuan — aka the U.S. Treasury solution — China’s government sought to employ domestic savings.) Back to Washington. What does the wise U.S. politician do in such a situation? Blame someone else…no, blame everyone else. The problem, of course, is that pointing fingers at our own ruinous financial system will not work. After the Supreme Court ruling in Citizens United no self-preserving politician is going to go after Wall Street. Nope, far easier to look outside the border and highlight the biggest, scariest target one can find. That used to be the Soviet Union…now it’s China. Now here’s the rub. The Chinese are no longer willing to abide this silliness. The opening salvo from Beijing came on March 14, 2010, when Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao told reporters, “We oppose mutual accusations between countries, and even using coercion to force a country to raise its exchange rate, because that’s of no help to reforming the yuan exchange rate. We don’t believe the yuan is undervalued.” I have to give Wen credit — he didn’t stop with this bit of defensive rhetoric. No, Wen chose to pitch the grenade back in Washington’s court. American politicians like to claim the Chinese are pursuing mercantilist policies, Wen declared we are protectionists. More specifically, he argued, “I can understand some countries’ desire to raise exports, but what I do not understand is depreciating one’s own currency and attempting to pressure others to appreciate, for the purpose of increasing exports. In my view, that is protectionism.” That’s right, Wen declared Washington is engaged in currency manipulation so as to encourage exports and thereby preserve American jobs. Stated more bluntly, Wen was highlighting Washington’s hypocrisy. On March 16, Beijing turned up the heat. A spokesman at the Chinese commerce ministry told reporters, “We hope that U.S. companies in China will express their demands and points of view in the U.S., in order to promote the development of global trade and jointly oppose trade protectionism.” Seems the Chinese have been watching President Obama’s public squabble with Justice Roberts over Citizens United …only Beijing appears to understand Citizens United can be used to buttress their cause. And Beijing’s thoughts on the Schumer-Graham Tariff Act? An unnamed official at the Chinese commerce ministry simply noted, “We oppose the over-emphasis on the yuan’s exchange rate.” According to this official, the yuan would remain pegged to the dollar. As he put it, “We have repeated ourselves multiple times. And we cannot be any clearer.” Alas, the Chinese are up against a wall on this issue. Even the august Paul Krugman is advocating the reinstatement of Smoot-Hawley. (My bet, Krugman does not share Ben Bernanke’s interest in studying the Great Depression.) In his March 15, 2010 New York Times column, Krugman suggest we place a 25% tariff on Chinese goods if Beijing does not back down on the yuan. Damn, even Smoot-Hawley was not that draconian…Krugman must have a secure gig…he sure seems unconcerned about potentially plunging the U.S. back into a severe recession.) So what is Beijing to do? First, ignore the noise from Capitol Hill. If we have learned anything in the last 18 months, it is that our elected representatives are incapable of coming to agreement on anything important. The proposed Schumer-Graham Tariff Act will inevitably run into opposition and grandstanding — or get buried in health care reform and overhaul of our financial regulations. Second, put pressure on U.S. corporations with operations in China. These corporate entities are sure to loose a pack of lobbyists and cash in an effort to preserve their profits by preventing a repeat of Smoot-Hawley. Third, engage the White House. President Obama has enough problems at home — he does not need to rile our largest foreign creditor. I’m not kidding on that final point. On March 16 — in the midst of all this sound and fury — Tim Geithner told reporters the Schumer-Graham Tariff Act is “just an illustration of how strongly people feel about this.” Geithner also avoided direct questions concerning plans to name China a currency manipulator. Instead the Treasury secretary pledged to “work very hard to make sure that U.S. firms will be able to compete on a level playing-field with China, in China and in the United States.” (Hint: go back and see my advice about pressuring U.S. firms with interests in China.) And what about Washington? What can Washington do to end this row. First, become conversant in the facts about China’s economic development. The yuan is slowly appreciating at home, Chinese labor prices are rising, and Chinese consumers are now starting to spend. (Beijing now rules the world’s largest automobile market.) Second, call off the dogs. The rhetoric is only going to abet Chinese intransigence on this issue. Having suffered through the century of humiliation, increasingly nationalistic Chinese citizens are not about to take orders from any foreign government — and will certainly not accept such an act from their civil servants. Finally, Washington can pursue this issue through tangible efforts to address our own financial disaster. The Chinese are likely to be much more willing to take risky moves with the yuan when Washington no longer appears on the brink of declaring bankruptcy. My parting thought, this is no time for a new Smoot-Hawley or a squabble with the Chinese. We need to get Congress back to work on substantive issues and save the off-shore finger pointing for more appropriate targets. I leave it to you to name the guilty parties.

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Yanukovych Hasn’t Fulfilled Pledge to Seek Court Approval for Government

March 15, 2010

By Kateryna Choursina and Daryna Krasnolutska March 15 (Bloomberg) — Ukraine President Viktor Yanukovych hasn’t acted on a pledge to Group of Eight and European Union representatives to seek a court ruling on the legitimacy of his parliamentary coalition, which was formed after a last-minute legislative change. “We have not received any requests from Yanukovych so far,” said Henadiy Chernenko, deputy head of the Kiev-based Constitutional Court ’s press service, by telephone today. Yanukovych on March 10 told western leaders he had “decided to ask” the court “whether a coalition and a government formed under the new law would be legitimate.” His first bid for the presidency five years ago was thwarted when the country’s Supreme Court sided with Orange Revolution forces that made Viktor Yushchenko head of state, The parliament on March 11 created a coalition and a government sympathetic to Yanukovych, prompting opposition allegations that the legislative amendments forced through to enable the move were unconstitutional. The Constitutional Court, which in 2008 upheld Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko ’s coalition because it was based on party blocs that represented a majority even after individual lawmakers switched sides, may have no legal choice but to brand the government illegitimate. Even so, some analysts said the court may find ways to avoid any destabilizing move. ‘Legally Dubious’ “Legally dubious changes to the coalition-building mechanism paved the way for the new majority,” Troika Dialog analyst Iryna Piontkivska wrote in a March 12 note. “The recent changes to parliamentary procedures do not seem to jibe with the constitution. However, petitioning the court” may “prove to be a lengthy process, even though there seems little doubt among legal experts that the Constitutional Court will consider the revised coalition mechanism unconstitutional.” Yanukovych’s newly appointed prime minister, long-time ally Mykola Azarov , and his Cabinet won majority support last week only after the parliament adopted a law allowing coalitions based on individual lawmaker affiliations instead of party groups. In 2008, Yanukovych failed to undo Tymoshenko’s majority after the court upheld a law allowing only coalitions based on party blocs. The new government’s shaky legitimacy may cloud its attempts to approve a budget for this year and meet the terms of a $16.4 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund. Disbursements have been frozen since November, putting in jeopardy the nation’s ability to pay for Russian gas that flows through to Europe and cover basic budgetary needs. ‘Fruitful’ The IMF’s resident representative in Kiev, Max Alier , on March 12 said a team from the fund will visit Ukraine this week to discuss the 2010 budget, which has yet to be passed. Alier said he had “fruitful” discussions with Deputy Prime Minister Serhiy Tigipko on the outlook for resuming the IMF program. Yanukovych’s new coalition, called Stability and Reforms, has 235 lawmakers in the 450-seat assembly and includes his Party of Regions, the Communist Party, Speaker Volodymyr Lytvyn’s group and 16 lawmakers from the parties of Yushchenko and Tymoshenko , who was dismissed by parliament last week. Tigipko said last week the coalition is “stable” and will increase in size. Azarov has promised lawmakers to submit a budget proposal within a month. He’s also said Ukraine needs an IMF program that “takes into account today’s reality.” Overplayed Azarov is “expected to focus on day-to-day government work rather than engage in political intrigues,” Kiev-based Dragon Capital said in a March 12 note to clients. His Cabinet “looks capable of implementing unpopular measures.” The IMF requires the government to cut the budget deficit to 4 percent of economic output from an estimated 11.5 percent shortfall last year. According to Dragon, “concerns about the Constitutional Court’s potentially pronouncing the current majority illegitimate” are “greatly overplayed.” The west is “unlikely to have any issues about the current coalition as long as it proves capable of reining in political instability and restarting reforms.” In 2008, only one of the Constitutional Court’s 18 judges ruled in favor of allowing coalitions to be formed outside party blocs. All 18 judges are sitting today. Still, the court “has proved on numerous occasions in the past to be very cautious and deliberate when deciding on sensitive political issues and reluctant to engage in open confrontation with the powers that be,” Dragon said. “We thus see no serious threats to the new ruling coalition stemming from the potential litigation.” ‘Awkward Position’ The judges may be forced to find legal loopholes to avoid the blatant inconsistency a ruling in favor of Yanukovych’s coalition would require, some analysts said. If the judges decide “legislative changes which enabled the majority were constitutional, the court will put itself in an awkward position by making a decision which contradicts its previous” ruling, said Yuriy Yakymenko , an analyst at the Razumkov Center for Economic and Political Studies in Kiev. It may resort to “hair-splitting” to avoid an “awkward situation” by deciding “not to consider the case on the grounds that it already studied a similar case.” If the legislative change is ruled unconstitutional, Yanukovych will dissolve parliament and call early parliamentary elections, said Hanna Herman, deputy head of the president’s administration, on TV Channel 5. To contact the reporters on this story: Daryna Krasnolutska in Kiev at dkrasnolutsk@bloomberg.net ; Kateryna Choursina in Moscow at kchoursina@bloomberg.net

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Kansas City School Board Closes Almost Half Of City’s Schools In Face Of Bankruptcy

March 11, 2010

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Facing potential bankruptcy, the board that governs the once flush-with-cash Kansas City school district is taking the unusual and contentious step of shuttering almost half its schools. Administrators say the closures are necessary to keep the district from plowing through what little is left of the $2 billion it received as part of a groundbreaking desegregation case. The Kansas City school board narrowly approved the plan to close 29 out of 61 schools Wednesday night at a meeting packed with angry parents. The schools will close at the end of the school year. Although other districts nationwide are considering closures as the recession ravages their budgets, Kansas City’s plan is striking. In rapidly shrinking Detroit, 29 schools closed before classes began this fall, but that still left the district with 172 schools. Most other districts are closing just one or two schools. Emotional board member Duane Kelly told the crowd of more than 200 people Wednesday night, “This is the most painful vote I have ever cast” in 10 years on the board. Some chanted for the removal of the superintendent, while one woman asked the crowd, “Is anyone else ready to homeschool their children?” Kansas City Councilwoman Sharon Sanders Brooks said the closure plan had prompted some housing developers to consider backing out of projects. “The urban core has suffered white flight post-the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court decision Brown v. the Board of Education, blockbusting by the real estate industry, redlining by banks and other financial institutions, retail and grocery store abandonment,” Brooks said to applause from the standing-room-only crowd. “And now the public education system is aiding and abetting in the economic demise of our school district,” she said. “It is shameful and sinful.” Under the approved plan, teachers at six other low-performing schools will be required to reapply for their jobs, and the district will try to sell its downtown central office. It also is expected to cut about 700 of the district’s 3,000 jobs, including about 285 teachers. District officials face dozens of issues as they begin the massive job of downsizing the district – reworking school bus routes, figuring out what to do with vacant buildings and slashing its payroll. Superintendent John Covington has spent the past month making the case to sometimes angry groups of parents and students that the closures are necessary. Once the district had enough desegregation money to build such amenities as an Olympic-sized swimming pool. But the effort to use upscale facilities and programs to lure in students from the suburbs never worked quite as planned. Covington has stressed that the district’s buildings are only half-full as its population has plummeted amid political squabbling and chronically abysmal test scores. The district’s enrollment of fewer than 18,000 students is about half of what the schools had a decade ago and just a quarter of its peak in the late 1960s. Many students have left for publicly funded charter schools, private and parochial schools and the suburbs. The school district also isn’t the only one serving students in Kansas City; several smaller ones operate in the city’s boundaries. Covington has blamed previous administrations for failing to close schools as the enrollment – and the money that comes with it – shrank. Past school closure plans were either scaled back or scrapped entirely. Administrators warned that without the cuts, the district would have been in the red by 2011. “None of us liked voting for this,” board member and former desegregation attorney Arthur Benson said, “but it was necessary.”

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