(Nah. It's mostly the Democratic leadership knowing they can't be seen to be
too cozy with Goldman and the other big banks who have become the focus of
the current anticapitalist mood at the base of both of the major parties.
There are always be those on Wall Street, narrowly fixated on their own
immediate interests, who can't see the big picture and are genuinely
aggrieved. Orin Kramer, an investment banker and Democratic party fundraiser
with a more "nuanced" appreciation of the role of the state in capitalist
society, is not one of them. As he observes below: “There is some failure in
the finance industry to appreciate the level of public antagonism toward
whatever Wall Street symbolizes...but in order to save the capitalist
system, the administration has to be responsive to the public mood, and that
is a nuance which can get lost on Wall Street.”)

October 20, 2009
Wall St. Giants Giving Little to Obama Party Fund-Raiser
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK
New York Times

WASHINGTON — The Wall Street giants that received a financial lifeline from
Washington may have no compunction about paying big bonuses to their
dealmakers and traders. But their willingness to deliver “thank you” gifts
to President Obama and the Democrats is another question altogether.

Mr. Obama will fly to New York on Tuesday for a lavish Democratic Party
fund-raising dinner at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel for about 200 big donors.
Each donor is paying the legal maximum of $30,400 and is allowed to take a
date. Four of the seven “co-chairs” listed on the invitation work in
finance, and Democratic Party organizers say they expect that about a third
of the attendees will come from the industry.

But from the financial giants like Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and
Citigroup that received federal bailout money — and whose bankers raised
millions of dollars for Mr. Obama’s election — only a half-dozen or fewer
are expected to attend (estimated total contribution: $91,200).

Part of the reason, several Democratic fund-raisers and executives said, is
a fear of getting caught in the public rage over the perception that Wall
Street titans profiting from their government bailout may use their winnings
to give back to Washington in return. And the timing of the event, as the
industry lobbies against proposals for tighter regulations to address the
underlying causes of last year’s meltdown on Wall Street, has only added to
the worry over public appearances.

“There are sensitivities there,” said Scott Talbot, a lobbyist for the
industry’s Financial Services Roundtable. Political contributions “can make
a donor a target,” Mr. Talbot said. Many involved, though, say the low
attendance from those Wall Street giants also reflected a broader
disenchantment with Mr. Obama over the angry language emanating from the
White House over the million-dollar bonuses and anti-regulatory lobbying.

“There is some failure in the finance industry to appreciate the level of
public antagonism toward whatever Wall Street symbolizes,” said Orin Kramer,
a partner in an investment firm who is a Democratic fund-raiser and one of
the event’s chairmen. “But in order to save the capitalist system, the
administration has to be responsive to the public mood, and that is a nuance
which can get lost on Wall Street.”

Dr. Daniel E. Fass, another chairman of the event who lives surrounded by
financiers in Greenwich, Conn., said: “The investment community feels very
put-upon. They feel there is no reason why they shouldn’t earn $1 million to
$200 million a year, and they don’t want to be held responsible for the
global financial meltdown.” Dr. Fass added, “How much that will be reflected
in their support for the president remains to be seen.”

Mr. Obama remains a potent fund-raising draw. Plunging into the 2010 midterm
campaigns last week, he raised more than $3 million in one night in San
Francisco, speaking at a similar $30,400-a-couple dinner and a larger rally
with tickets at $1,000 and under.

In addition to the big-ticket dinner on Tuesday, Mr. Obama will also address
a more small-d democratic event at New York’s Hammerstein Ballroom, where
roughly 2,500 donors paying $1,000 or less will also make cellphone calls to
promote his health care overhaul. Over the next five days he will appear at
fund-raisers for Bill Owens, a candidate for a House seat in New York; Gov.
Jon Corzine of New Jersey (himself a former Goldman Sachs banker); Gov.
Deval Patrick of Massachusetts; and Senator Christopher J. Dodd of
Connecticut.

Democratic fund-raisers say the economic slump has dampened fund-raising
across every industry. Wall Street has lost Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch and
Lehman Brothers to consolidation in last year’s credit crunch. Some former
Obama fund-raisers on Wall Street have ascended to jobs in the
administration, like Michael Froman, a former top Citigroup executive who is
now an adviser on economics and national security.

Current Democratic fund-raisers say their 2008 take from Wall Street may
also have benefited from the personal connections of the party’s chief
fund-raiser that year, Philip D. Murphy, a former top executive at Goldman
Sachs. (He is now ambassador to Germany). And as in recent years, Democrats
are raising far more from Wall Street executives than Republicans, according
to campaign finance data sorted by the Center for Responsive Politics.

The Democrats, including House and Senate party committees and the party
itself, raised about $5.4 million in the first eight months of the year,
while the Republicans took in just $2.7 million.

So far in the current election cycle, though, Wall Street accounts for less
than half as much of the Democratic Party’s fund-raising as it did in 2008:
3 percent, or about $1.5 million out of a total $53.6 million in the
eight-month period, compared with about 6 percent, or $15.3 million out of
$260.1 million during the last election. (Republicans relied more heavily on
their party to support their presidential candidate in 2008, and the party’s
Wall Street fund-raising has fallen even further.)

Fund-raisers say smaller but lucrative businesses like hedge funds and
private equity firms now account for more of Wall Street’s political
contributions than the big banks that received bailout money, with the
possible exception of the famously generous executives of Goldman Sachs.

Employees associated with the financial firms that received bailout money
from the federal government contributed almost $70,000 to the Democratic
Party in the first half of this year. Most of that, $60,800, came from one
couple who each contributed the legal limit. At the time of the donation,
the husband, John M. Noel, had recently retired as head of a unit of the
insurance giant AIG called AIG Travel Guard.

Mr. Obama, though, still has the loyalty of other powerful friends on Wall
Street. Among the other chairmen of the Tuesday dinner in New York is Robert
Wolf, head of the American investment banking division of the Swiss giant
UBS Group. Mr. Wolf raised more than $500,000 for Mr. Obama’s campaign and
sits on a White House panel of outside economic advisers.

Mr. Wolf does not have to worry about the same appearance problems as Wall
Street rivals, however. His firm was bailed out by the government of
Switzerland, not the United States.

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