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Simon Johnson, HuffPo: The White House Needs Elizabeth Warren, Now More Than Ever

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highplainsdem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-03-10 08:20 AM
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Simon Johnson, HuffPo: The White House Needs Elizabeth Warren, Now More Than Ever
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/simon-johnson/the-white-house-needs-eli_b_778122.html

Simon Johnson

MIT Professor and co-author of 13 Bankers
Posted: November 3, 2010 06:55 AM

The White House Needs Elizabeth Warren, Now More Than Ever


The White House today is under pressure, with insiders asking: After the strong showing of the Republicans in the midterm elections, should the president move to the right or to the left?

This is entirely the wrong way to think about the problem - the administration needs to get beyond its mental framework of early 2009, which led it sadly astray with regard to the financial sector. The President needs to find people and themes capable of cutting across the political spectrum; specifically he needs to promote strongly the ideas of Elizabeth Warren - what we need in financial services, above all else, is much more transparency.

The premise - and central mistake - of the Obama administration in 2009-10 can be summed up in what the president said to leading bankers on that fateful day, March 27, 2009: "My administration is the only thing between you and the pitchforks".

The organizing notion then, provided by Larry Summers and presumably Tim Geithner, was that the "responsible" administration would protect global megabanks from "dangerous" populists, in return for cooperation and better behavior. This kid gloves strategy turned out to be a very bad bet - not only is it far from best practice with regard to handling failed financial systems (there must be consequences for executives and shareholders, at the very least), but it also allowed banks and their close allies to bounce back to profitability and use that cash (underwritten by the taxpayer) to oppose the administration on financial reform and, according to credible public reports, to funnel large amounts of money into various "populist" anti-administration midterm campaigns.

-snip-
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