Tristan_C
Emperor
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2006
- Messages
- 1,731
I guess saving the American auto industry doesn't count. Or suspending the payroll tax. Or quadrupling wind farms and solar farms. Or his thousands of infrastructure repairs.
Ooh, storytime!
The GM bailout was pretty much the first thing he did as president, and it formally established him in my mind as a quintessential Chicago politician. He granted federal backing for bonds held by UAW workers, his allies. Public investors were left unprotected and sunk.
In Chicago, we had what is called a political machine, where a boss (like Daley or Stroger) directs the city's real estate and sales tax proceeds to his allies, in the form of high-paying public sector jobs, pensions, services, etc. In Chicago it was widely known during the Daley era that you needed to know somebody to get a public sector job, and they paid crazy salaries. In addition to entrenching its political support base in this manner, the machine gets a lot of money back in the process through donations by individuals and unions to the local political party. On the federal level you get "pork" but this system is much more intense than that, and normal politicians cannot get away with it nationally. Immune to criticism because of his race, and getting a Nobel Prize for, um, some reason, Obama in 2009 was not normal. This is how GM was handled, in the tradition of machine politics.
I am not sure what to think of how he screwed the bondholders. On the one hand I do not support bailouts of this kind. They perpetuate bad behavior and socialize the losses. On the other hand the bondholders could be seen as victims of false information, bad knowledge, and ultimately, the bullying power of the UAW itself, which had negotiated the pensions system that sank the company. And the UAW got rewarded for this because they had a friend in the White House.
It was the revisions to the U6 methodology in the BLS that brought them. I would propose that most of the people in the BLS are more personally/politically sympathetic to Obama than they are to Trump, and that this may have affected the bureaucracy's inclination to modify the rubric then in ways they wouldn't do now. However, I wouldn't go so far as to formally accuse them of this. I am just raising the possibility, because there aren't any substantial justifications for why they did what they did.It was the Good Fairy who brought those 11.6 million jobs.