The Left likes to attack “robber barons.” But, in fact,
the Obama administration shows how the government routinely creates
“regulatory robber barons.”
Writes Tim Carney in the Washington Examiner:
President Obama on Monday was scheduled to give a pep talk for
American manufacturing at a factory in Durham, N.C., where Cree
Inc. makes LED light bulbs. Cree embodies Obama-era capitalism:
profiting from government grants, political connections,
revolving-door lobbyists and regulations that force people to buy
your product.
Cree deals mostly in light-emitting diode technology. The
company makes LED light bulbs and sells LED components to other
manufacturers to put in their own bulbs, automobiles or
electronics. This is by far the fastest-growing part of Cree’s
business.
Company Vice President Greg Merritt spoke about the LED boom in
April 2009 at a green-tech conference. “We are in a perfect storm
in some respects,” he said. After talking about new manufacturing
efficiencies, Merritt added, “The political environment for
sustainable technologies and energy efficiency is perhaps more
favorable today than it’s been for quite a while.”
Merritt should know — he and his colleagues helped shape that
“political environment.” Merritt lobbied Congress on the 2007
energy bill, “Specifically, provisions related to energy-efficient
lighting.” That is, Merritt and Cree’s other lobbyists supported
the law that will effectively outlaw the incandescent bulb, thus
creating unwilling demand for their more expensive LED bulbs.
In fact, Republicans, starting with President George W. Bush,
were
among the worst “bulb smashers” helping Merritt and Cree mulct
the public. Alas, the worst enemies of capitalism always have
been the capitalists.
It’s why President Obama can say he is for business while in
practice he attacks the market system. When I worked in the
White House so many years ago for Ronald Reagan, I remember
businessmen coming in and saying: “I believe in free markets,
but … .” Somehow they always deserved a special exemption
from markets, which were just so very unfair in their particular
and unique case.
The challenge for Republicans is to demonstrate that they are
for free enterprise, not for business. Otherwise they will
just end up promoting the same sort of regulatory robber barons who
did so much to create the 2008 crash.