By George Neumayr on 11.26.08 @ 6:08AM
Morgan Stanley bailed Clinton out after he pardoned Marc Rich.
Establishment pundits used to note habitually that Bill Clinton,
for all his vices, wasn't greedy. His post-presidency has proven
even that tired bit of conventional wisdom wrong. Clinton has
relentlessly cashed in on his presidency, scooping up fees from
all sorts of derelict companies, old and new.
The party that casts itself as the champion of the poor is more
like the party of Wall Street plutocrats. That Bill Clinton's
most famous pardon went to a billionaire financier illustrates
the party's evolution. Clinton ended up soft on crime, only
deviating from Democratic custom by choosing a white-collar one.
Not long after pardoning Marc Rich, Clinton received from Morgan
Stanley -- in a small sign of Wall Street's client-indifference
and dereliction to come -- $100,000 for a speech at a
"high-yield" conference in Boca Raton. It was the first speech of
his post-presidency.
Only after clients erupted in outrage did Morgan Stanley
apologize for inviting him. It issued a beside-the-point
statement saying that it regretted not showing more concern for
its clients' feelings about Clinton's "personal" behavior. The
New York Times worried that "Morgan Stanley's decision
to criticize itself for arranging the speech could have a serious
impact on Mr. Clinton's post-White House income if other large
investment firms and corporations feared that they, too, could
face criticism from their clients by paying Mr. Clinton to
speak."
There was no need to fret. Since then Clinton has been up to his
eyeballs in easy money from Wall Street. Once Clinton returned to
the media's good graces and recovered his celebrity status, he
got back on Wall Street's speaking circuit. Tanking banks, into
whose executive ranks members of his administration graduated,
have given him
millions.
Famous Democrats have long divided their limousine drivers' time
between skid row and Wall Street, with Clinton perfecting the con
job: giving speeches to reckless financial firms, then counting
his loot back at his office in Harlem. A president who could
pardon a fugitive financier was someone from whom they could
learn much.
The press cast the Reagan years as the era of greed. But by
today's standards they look pretty sober. The lifestyles of the
filthy rich and famous really didn't get going until Clinton and
his financier pals arrived on the scene. Liberalism, contrary to
its propaganda, is always good for greed, as its underlying moral
relativism extends to all the capital sins. If right and wrong
are unknowable, then greed is good. The new morality, subjective
to the core, is a sustained defense of selfishness in one form or
another. Why wouldn't it extend to money too?
The Clinton alumni society at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
epitomizes this era of yuppie avarice, making millions while
crafting regulations based on left-wing ideological whims that
sent the housing market into a death spiral. Will any of the
Clinton-era architects of the subprime lending market be handing
their salaries back? Be giving up their corporate jets? No, they
will just re-route them to new speaking and consulting
opportunities, maybe even a trip to Davos to reflect on global
inequities.
The party of the very rich and the very poor now hands the bill
for Wall Street's collapse to the middle class. The special
interests legislation at which Democrats excel benefits people at
the top and the bottom but never in the middle. Clinton's
"middle-class tax cut" didn't materialize and there is no reason
to think Obama's will either. "Tax credits" will go to ACORN's
voters, bailouts to Robert Rubin's.
Meanwhile, Clinton will prepare for his next six-figure speech.
Morgan Stanley had bailed him out a long time ago, offering him
his first post-presidential platform to begin a new career as an
expert on crises he helped create and bad actors he let go.
topics:
Bill Clinton, Wall Street