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The effect:

Obama Doesn’t ‘Begrudge’ Bonuses for Blankfein, Dimon 
By Julianna Goldman and Ian Katz
Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama said he doesn’t “begrudge” the 
$17 million bonus awarded to JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie 
Dimonor the $9 million issued to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. CEO Lloyd Blankfein, 
noting that some athletes take home more pay.

The president, speaking in an interview, said in response to a question that 
while $17 million is “an extraordinary amount of money” for Main Street, “there 
are some baseball players who are making more than that and don’t get to the 
World Series either, so I’m shocked by that as well.”

“I know both those guys; they are very savvy businessmen,” Obama said in the 
interview yesterday in the Oval Office with Bloomberg BusinessWeek, which will 
appear on newsstands Friday. “I, like most of the American people, don’t 
begrudge people success or wealth. That is part of the free- market system.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aKGZkktzkAlA#

The cause:

In a Message to Democrats, Wall St. Sends Cash to G.O.P.
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK
New York Times
February 8, 2010

WASHINGTON — If the Democratic Party has a stronghold on Wall Street, it is 
JPMorgan Chase.

Its chief executive, Jamie Dimon, is a friend of President Obama’s from 
Chicago, a frequent White House guest and a big Democratic donor. Its vice 
chairman, William M. Daley, a former Clinton administration cabinet official 
and Obama transition adviser, comes from Chicago’s Democratic dynasty.

But this year Chase’s political action committee is sending the Democrats a 
pointed message. While it has contributed to some individual Democrats and 
state organizations, it has rebuffed solicitations from the national Democratic 
House and Senate campaign committees. Instead, it gave $30,000 to their 
Republican counterparts.

The shift reflects the hard political edge to the industry’s campaign to thwart 
Mr. Obama’s proposals for tighter financial regulations.

Just two years after Mr. Obama helped his party pull in record Wall Street 
contributions — $89 million from the securities and investment business, 
according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics — some of his 
biggest supporters, like Mr. Dimon, have become the industry’s chief lobbyists 
against his regulatory agenda.

Republicans are rushing to capitalize on what they call Wall Street’s “buyer’s 
remorse” with the Democrats. And industry executives and lobbyists are warning 
Democrats that if Mr. Obama keeps attacking Wall Street “fat cats,” they may 
fight back by withholding their cash.

“If the president doesn’t become a little more balanced and centrist in his 
approach, then he will likely lose that support,” said Kelly S. King, the 
chairman and chief executive of BB&T. Mr. King is a board member of the 
Financial Services Roundtable, which lobbies for the biggest banks, and last 
month he helped represent the industry at a private dinner at the Treasury 
Department.

“I understand the public outcry,” he continued. “We have a 17 percent real 
unemployment rate, people are hurting, and they want to see punishment. But the 
political rhetoric just incites more animosity and gets people riled up.”

A spokesman for JPMorgan Chase declined to comment on its political action 
committee’s contributions or relations with the Democrats. But many Wall Street 
lobbyists and executives said they, too, were rethinking their giving.

“The expectation in Washington is that ‘We can kick you around, and you are 
still going to give us money,’ ” said a top official at a major Wall Street 
firm, speaking on the condition of anonymity for fear of alienating the White 
House. “We are not going to play that game anymore.”

Wall Street fund-raisers for the Democrats say they are feeling under attack 
from all sides. The president is lashing out at their “arrogance and greed.” 
Republican friends are saying “I told you so.” And contributors are wishing 
they had their money back.

“I am a big fan of the president,” said Thomas R. Nides, a prominent Democrat 
who is also a Morgan Stanley executive and chairman of a major Wall Street 
trade group, the Securities and Financial Markets Association. “But even if you 
are a big fan, when you are the piñata at the party, it doesn’t really feel 
good.”

Roger C. Altman, a former Clinton administration Treasury official who founded 
the Wall Street boutique Evercore Partners, called the Wall Street backlash 
against Mr. Obama “a constant topic of conversation.” Many bankers, he said, 
failed to appreciate the “white hot anger” at Wall Street for the financial 
crisis. (Mr. Altman said he personally supported “the substance” of the 
president’s recent proposals, though he questioned their feasibility and 
declined to comment at all on what he called “the rhetoric.”)

Mr. Obama’s fight with Wall Street began last year with his proposals for 
greater oversight of compensation and a consumer financial protection 
commission. It escalated with verbal attacks this year on what he called Wall 
Street’s “obscene bonuses.” And it reached a new level in his calls for 
policies Wall Street finds even more infuriating: a “financial crisis 
responsibility” tax aimed only at the biggest banks, and a restriction on 
“proprietary trading” that banks do with their own money for their own profit.

“If the president wanted to turn every Democrat on Wall Street into a 
Republican,” one industry lobbyist said, “he is doing everything right.”

Though Wall Street has long been a major source of Democratic campaign money 
(alongside Hollywood and Silicon Valley), Mr. Obama built unusually direct ties 
to his contributors there. He is the first president since Richard M. Nixon 
whose campaign relied solely on private donations, not public financing.

Wall Street lobbyists say the financial industry’s big Democratic donors help 
ensure that their arguments reach the ears of the president and Congress. White 
House visitors’ logs show dozens of meetings with big Wall Street fund-raisers, 
including Gary D. Cohn, a president of Goldman Sachs; Mr. Dimon of JPMorgan 
Chase; and Robert Wolf, the chief of the American division of the Swiss bank 
UBS, who has also played golf, had lunch and watched July 4 fireworks with the 
president.

Lobbyists say they routinely brief top executives on policy talking points 
before they meet with the president or others in the administration. Mr. Wolf, 
in particular, also serves on the Presidential Economic Recovery Advisory Board 
led by the former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul A. Volcker.

Mr. Wolf was the only Wall Street executive on the panel and became the board’s 
leading opponent of what became known as the Volcker rule against so-called 
proprietary trading, according to participants. Such trading did nothing to 
cause the crisis, Mr. Wolf argued, as the industry lobbyists do now. (The panel 
concluded that the crisis established a precedent for government rescue that 
could enable big banks to speculate for their own gain while taxpayers took the 
biggest risks.)

Mr. Wolf and Mr. Dimon, who was in Washington last week for meetings on Capitol 
Hill and lunch with the president, have both pressed the industry’s arguments 
against other proposed regulations and the bank tax as well — saying the rules 
could cramp needed lending and send business abroad, according to lobbyists.

Both men are said to remain personally supportive of the president. But UBS’s 
political action committee has shifted its contributions, according to the 
Center for Responsive Politics. After dividing its money evenly between the 
parties for 2008, it has given about 56 percent to Republicans this cycle.

Most of its biggest contributions, of $10,000 each, went to five Republican 
opponents of Mr. Obama’s regulatory proposals, including Senator Richard C. 
Shelby of Alabama, the ranking minority member of the Banking Committee.

The Democratic campaign committees declined to comment on Wall Street money. 
But their Republican rivals are actively courting it.

Senator John Cornyn of Texas, chairman of the National Republican Senatorial 
Committee, said he visited New York about twice a month to try to tap into Wall 
Street’s “buyers’ remorse.”

“I just don’t know how long you can expect people to contribute money to a 
political party whose main plank of their platform is to punish you,” Mr. 
Cornyn said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/08/us/politics/08lobby.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&pagewanted=print


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