Mayor 1%. Kari Lydersen. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Kari Lydersen
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Историческая литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781608462858
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not obligated to back the debt incurred by Fannie and Freddie, but they were exempt from taxes and regulations imposed on other private corporations, and the Treasury Secretary had the option of buying their debt and making it the obligation of US taxpayers.18

      In February 2000, Clinton appointed Emanuel to Freddie Mac’s board of directors for a term that expired in May 2001. In exchange, Emanuel got an annual payment and stock options. As the Chicago Tribune described it, Emanuel received “at least $320,000 for a 14-month stint at Freddie Mac that required little effort.” The board met only six times a year and Emanuel was not assigned to any committees, so he did not have to do much legwork to earn his stipend. The Tribune quoted fellow Freddie board member Neil Hartigan, a former Illinois attorney general, noting that “Emanuel’s primary contribution was explaining to others on the board how to play the levers of power.”19

      Looking the Other Way

      During the time Emanuel and other board members were supposed to be keeping tabs on Freddie Mac’s dealings, the GSE was carrying out behavior that government agencies would later deem illegal and unethical.

      At the time Emanuel was on the board, Freddie Mac was profiting handsomely from the kind of risky investments (including subprime mortgage loans) that would later bring the financial system crashing down. Freddie Mac executives notified Emanuel and the other board members of a plan to misconstrue the nature of their profits to shareholders, with accounting tricks that would basically put current earnings on the books in future years, ensuring Freddie Mac would appear profitable and executives would get juicy bonuses for years to come even if the risky investments began to tank.20

      The future of Freddie Mac was no small thing to gamble with. When the economic crisis started in 2007, Freddie and Fannie together had a stake in more than half of the nation’s home mortgages, for a total value of more than $5 trillion.21 Nearly every private mortgage lender in the United States depended on the GSEs to maintain liquidity in the market. Investors included countless US entities as well as foreign governments including China. So executives and board members knew well that jeopardizing the future stability of the institutions could have major economic and political ramifications across the globe.22

      In 2007 the US Securities and Exchange Commission charged Freddie Mac with securities fraud for actions between 1998 and 2002 that included overstating its earnings by 30.5 percent in 2000 and 23.9 percent in 2001 to maintain its image as the consistently profitable “Steady Freddie.” In a press release SEC enforcement director Linda Chatman Thomsen said, “As has been seen in so many cases, Freddie Mac’s departure from proper accounting practices was the result of a corporate culture that sought stable earnings growth at any cost.”23

      A 2003 federal investigation yielded a damning report by Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight director Armando Falcon Jr. that ordered Freddie to pay $585 million in fines and legal fees and restate $5 billion worth of earnings. Among many other things, Falcon said that presidential appointees to the lenders’ boards—like Emanuel—played no “meaningful role” and should be eliminated.24

      Falcon’s report accused Freddie’s board of directors (and senior management) of a “lack of attention” to the “corporate culture” and “tone at the top” that encouraged increasingly risky and deceptive maneuvers as a way to meet Wall Street expectations. The board and senior managers had “failed to establish and maintain adequate internal control systems.”25 And, Falcon said, the board “did not recognize red flags, failed to make reasonable inquiries of management, or otherwise failed in its duty to follow up on matters brought to its attention.”26

      In April 2006 Freddie Mac was fined $3.8 million by the Federal Election Commission for illegally using corporate funds for political fundraising, including during Emanuel’s tenure on the board. Senior vice president for government relations Robert Mitchell Delk and head of congressional relations Clarke Camper had hosted eighty-five often lavish fundraising events that netted $1.7 million.27 The commission noted that the board of directors reviewed documents outlining the illegal fundraising activities, which were framed as “political risk management.” At the time, the fine was the commission’s largest civil enforcement settlement.

      Most of Freddie Mac’s fundraising efforts were directed toward Republican candidates. An illegal $150,000 donation was made to the Republican Governors Association, and numerous fundraisers were held for Ohio Republican Michael G. Oxley, chair of the House Financial Services Committee.28 But Freddie also hosted events to support Democrats, including a fundraiser for Emanuel’s 2002 congressional campaign that netted a relatively paltry $7,000. Emanuel’s campaign also collected $9,500 from a lunch hosted by Freddie Mac CEO Leland Brendsel, later ousted because of the fundraising scandal. During the 2002 election cycle Emanuel collected a total of $25,000 in donations from people connected to Freddie Mac—more than twice the amount Freddie Mac–linked donors gave to any other candidate, according to the Chicago Tribune.29

      Freddie Mac officials likely concluded their fundraising for Emanuel and other powerful politicians paid off. Once in Congress, Emanuel was appointed to a subcommittee with responsibility for oversight of Freddie Mac.30 His office has said he recused himself from any proceedings that would have raised conflicts of interest.31 Chicago Sun-Times political correspondent Lynn Sweet argued that was not good enough:

      Emanuel told me he has no problem because he put his holdings into a blind trust and plans to recuse himself from any votes relating to Freddie Mac. “I chose to do something you don’t have to do,” he said, as if he deserved extra points. “I feel good about the actions I’ve taken to date,” he added. Emanuel had no business getting on the Capital Markets, Insurance and Government Sponsored Enterprises subcommittee as long as he had the Freddie Mac options—in blind trust or not. It would have been better if Emanuel sold the Freddie Mac shares he already owned before being sworn in last January and told Freddie Mac to forget about any future options to which he may be entitled.32

      Meanwhile, congressional disclosure documents showed that Emanuel had sold between $100,000 and $250,000 worth of Freddie Mac stock on February 21, 2003, a few days before the stock’s value dropped by 10 percent and before revelations that Freddie was being investigated for possible criminal behavior.33 The sale smacked of insider trading. At the time members of Congress were exempt from insider trading laws, a situation that changed in spring 2012, when President Obama, with strong bipartisan support, signed the STOCK Act, which prohibits congressional legislators from trading based on nonpublic information.34

      The website Business Insider noted in 2011, before the STOCK Act was passed, that Emanuel’s sales were “by no means illegal. . . . But the timing of the trades is certainly suspect, especially given Emanuel’s service on the board during the time period for which the federal government was investigating the actions of Freddie Mac executives.”35

      Freddie and the Economic Crisis

      The federal government ultimately took over the floundering Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae in 2008, promising to insure up to $300 billion worth of their loans.36 Emanuel was one of eighteen cosponsors of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, which gave the government authority to do the takeover.37

      In February 2009 the Obama administration committed to extend up to $400 billion to Fannie and Freddie to cover their losses.38 The administration lifted that cap in December of that year, just weeks before the December 31 deadline, after which a new bailout would have required congressional approval.39

      The debacle drew increased scrutiny to Freddie and Fannie, including the period when Emanuel served on the board. And it brought into the public eye the lashing Freddie Mac had taken at the hands of federal watchdogs. Risky investments of the kind made during Emanuel’s board tenure were blamed in part for the collapse of Fannie and Freddie, meltdowns that played a significant role in the economic crisis.

      In a letter written to Attorney General Eric Holder before the commitment of unlimited assistance to Fannie and Freddie, conservative pundit Grover Norquist, head of Americans for Tax Reform, and liberal Firedoglake blogger Jane Hamsher called for Emanuel to resign from the Obama cabinet and demanded that the Justice Department launch a federal investigation and empanel a grand jury. They wrote, “We believe there is an abundant