Solyndra: Obama Warned Last Year, N.Y. Times Clueless Today
Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and then-National Economic Council Director Larry Summers warned President Obama in October 2010 that the Department of Energy's loan guarantee program was dangerously short on due diligence.
According to three reporters from the Los Angeles Times:
At a White House meeting in late October, Lawrence H. Summers, then director of the National Economic Council, and Timothy F. Geithner, the Treasury secretary, expressed concerns that the selection process for federal loan guarantees wasn't rigorous enough and raised the risk that funds could be going to the wrong companies, including ones that didn't need the help.
Energy Secretary Steven Chu, also at the meeting, had a different view. Under pressure from Congress to speed up the loans, he wanted less scrutiny from the Treasury Department and the Office of Management and Budget, or OMB…
In late October 2010, administration officials took their opposing views directly to Obama. In preparation, a memo was drafted by Summers, who remained wary of the program, and two others who were more supportive: then-energy advisor Carol Browner and Ron Klain, then chief of staff to Vice President Joseph Biden. The memo laid out their different concerns and options to fix a "broken process" for getting loans approved.
Warning that the program could "fail to advance your clean-energy agenda" by investing in companies that didn't need help, the memo proposed alternatives, including diverting the funds into grants available to the entire industry. By contrast, Energy Department officials wanted to end the "deal by deal" reviews by the Treasury and OMB, the memo said.
As evidence like this continues to pile up, the Obama Administration's media defenders can't abandon the idea that Solyndra's failure was capitalism's fault and therefore not foreseeable by officials who were doing their best in good faith. In the Washington Post, Dana Milbank allows that the Solyndra loan guarantee and bankruptcy wasn't President Bush's fault before explaining that, really, it was Bush's fault:
This doesn't mean that Bush is to blame for Solyndra or that the Obama administration should be absolved. Obama, whose administration gave the company the loan guarantee, deserves the black eye that Republicans have given him over the half a billion dollars squandered on the company. But the Republican paternity of the program that birthed Solyndra suggests some skepticism is in order when many of those same Republicans use Solyndra as an example of all that is wrong with Obama's governance.
"Loan guarantees aim to stimulate investment and commercialization of clean energy technologies to reduce our nation's reliance on foreign sources of energy," Bush's energy secretary, Sam Bodman, announced in a press release on Oct. 4, 2007. The release said the Energy Department had received 143 pre-applications for the guarantees and narrowed the list down to 16 finalists — including Solyndra. Bodman said the action put "Americans one step closer to being able to use new and novel sources of energy on a mass scale to reduce emissions and allow for vigorous economic growth and increased energy security."
Bush's Energy Department apparently adjusted its regulations to make sure that Solyndra would be eligible for the guarantees. It hadn't originally contemplated including the photovoltaic-panel manufacturing that Solyndra did but changed the regulation before it was finalized. The only project that benefited was Solyndra's.
It's certainly fair to point out, as Ira Stoll did at Reason yesterday, the Republican angles in the Solyndra debacle. House Oversight Committee Chairman Darrell Issa (R-California) recently made the self-contradicting claim that it's OK to "ask for money from whatever pool is available to help their constituents" as long as the process is "truly competitive and is without political interference" – and while Daily Kos manages to miss the irony of that comment, Kos is also right to point out how widely the cancer of corporate welfare has spread.
But this New York Times editorial is so inaccurate it must be intentionally misleading:
The United States, which three years ago led the world in investments in clean energy, has now fallen behind China and Germany, which provide far more generous subsidies. The failure of a single company — and anyone who knows anything about transformative technologies knows there will be failures — is no reason to stop our efforts to catch up.
There are important issues here that need a hard look. The Justice Department is investigating whether Solyndra was upfront about its problems with investors. A House committee is asking whether the company's loan application was hurried along by Obama officials so that the White House could trumpet its job creation efforts.
The administration claims to have exercised due diligence and seems to have been forthcoming in responding to Congress. The company has been decidedly less so; two senior executives, citing the Justice Department inquiry, took the Fifth Amendment when they appeared before a Congressional committee on Friday.
Leave aside the economically illiterate notion that the United States is in some kind of race with other countries to dominate green industry – as if the marketplace were a flag-waving Olympiad or the Cold War's fictional "missile gap." The claim that the White House "seems to have been forthcoming in responding to Congress" flies in the face of all known facts about this case. To wit:
The Obama Administration has provided no explanation for its behavior toward Solyndra over the last twelve months – which includes having Department of Energy officials apparently sit in on board meetings.
Former Obama Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel claims not to remember anything about Solyndra, while the president's spokesman says he hasn't been briefed on the matter.
When the Department of Energy and the Office of Management and Budget finally coughed up officials to testify to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, they sent two guys who were not even around when the original loan guarantee was decided.
After the House investigation made Solyndra a national story, the administration unleashed a series of its own investigations, the only practical effect of which was to make it virtually impossible for the company's executives – whom Los Tiempos now blames for not cooperating – to testify.
And the obstruction continues. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu has not divulged any information about the Solyndra scandal. Nor has top adviser Valerie Jarrett. Last week, the House committee requested Solyndra-related correspondence among the Department of Energy, the White House and the Department of Treasury. The DoE now is apparently saying it won't be able to make its deadline for turning over those documents. I have calls and emails in on this report, but if the Energy Department is really claiming this, it is absurd given that the company's troubles have been known since the beginning of this year and Solyndra has been a major news story since the end of August.
The Bush Administration was at least this "forthcoming" during the Valerie Plame scandal. Why was The New York Times so stingy with its praise back then?
Back on Planet Earth, the San Francisco Chronicle's Debra Saunders dismantles the newest package of Solyndra excuses. (And when San Francisco is Planet Earth, you know you're in trouble.)
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It's certainly fair to point out, as Ira Stoll did at Reason yesterday, the Republican angles in the Solyndra debacle.
Those angles were that former aide for a Republican Senator who is no longer in politics worked for Solyandra and the program started under Bush. Don't you guys want to forget Ira ever wrote that piece? Because it is absolutely awful.
Of course if Bush were really at fault, I am sure the administration would still refuse to turn over the materials out of solidarity. No way all those documents they are hiding make Obama look bad. No, they make Bush look bad and Obama is just protecting the office.
And the obstruction continues. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu has not divulged any information about the Solyndra scandal.
Good to see that the winner of a "real" Nobel prize (Chu) can be every bit as greasy and unethical as the winner of a fake Nobel prize (Krugman).
Krugman's Nobel was deserved. No one would expect the guy who won the physics Nobel for giant magnetoresistance to be an authority on astrophysics -- they're totally different areas of the science. Likewise with Krugman's excretions on economic policy.
I was expecting you to name a different Nobel prize winner who is definitely mixed up in this, though.
I think "fake Nobel prize" refers to the fact that the economics prizes weren't endowed by Alfred Nobel, but was added latter. See wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N.....c_Sciences
I think "fake Nobel prize" refers to the fact that the economics prizes weren't endowed by Alfred Nobel, but was added latter. See wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N.....c_Sciences
Game respect game.
I guess the lesson here is that, while it takes Republicans to set up a greasy crapitalist scheme, it takes Democrats to really fuck it up bigtime.
So, vote Dem?
Yeah, the argument is that Republicans are just as corrupt, but Democrats are stupider and less willing to override the judgment of the experts for political reasons. (because even the Bush Administration turned down Solyndra after the DOE experts said it was a bad idea.)
That's what they want to run on?
Still say those look like prison bars that the robot's holding up.
The DoE now is apparently saying it won't be able to make its deadline for turning over those documents.
Isn't that, um, "unacceptable"?
unpossible.
"As evidence like this continues to pile up, the Obama Administration's media defenders can't abandon the idea that Solyndra's failure was capitalism's fault and therefore not foreseeable by officials who were doing their best in good faith."
I don't understand why anyone familiar with the history of the 20th Century didn't already know this, but yeah! For all you Progressives out there whose history books never made it past 1988?
It turns out that central planning doesn't work--even when Barack Obama is the Central Planner in Chief.
I know, it's hard to believe, but it's true--the problem with central planning isn't that we don't have the right people doing the central planning!
Once the Progressives digest that simple fact? Then maybe they can graduate to thinking about why the S&P 500 consistently outperforms so many money managers over the long term--regardless of their good intentions.
Seriously, how stupid do they have to be to think the market isn't smart enough to finance viable startups without input from Progressives?! Stupid is as stupid does--and doing stupid things like Solyndra is why Progressives are among America's stupidest people.
"I don't understand why anyone familiar with the history of the 20th Century didn't already know this, but yeah!"
The problem is that they really are uneducated, including in basic, recent history.
Cavanaugh, you can't hide behind the server squirrels forever. Sign your post.
And you can't do a piece referencing two different people named Valerie. It's weird.
At the very least, he should embed the Material Issue video if he is going to refer to multiple Valeries.
Enough government interference/intervention in the economy. If a startup business model is viable, it will attract private investment capital. End all corporate welfare and subsidies for the private sector!
What do you mean "this"??? Almost EVERYTHING the NYT reports is inaccurate enough to be misleading, when it comes to covering Obama's ass!
Subsidy ? investment.
That is all.
So government attempting to pick winners and loosers in a market, doesn't work and inevitably leads to graft and corruption!?
//Begin Sarcasm//
I am shocked, this must be the first time in the history of man that such good intentions have had disastrous unintended consequences.
//End Sarcasm//
God fucking dammit am I ever so fucking sick of this the-other-side-did-it-too weaseling around. This current turd in office rode into the presidency on the crest of an absolute tsunami of lies about being a responsible steward of public funds and now laughable platitudes about maintaining government transparency. Can we fucking let go of the Bush administration already? The current one is up to it's eyeballs in criminal negligence and all the media can find to do is speculatively hem and haw about the previous one.
Bush blamed the 2001 recession and security foibles on the Clinton administration too.
He had been in office less than a year. He didn't blame Clinton for it in 2003.
Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and then-National Economic Council Director Larry Summers warned President Obama in October 2010 that the Department of Energy's loan guarantee program was dangerously short on due diligence.
Yeah, but, uh Bush was warned about 9/11. So, you know, Solyndra isn't so bad, relatively, or whatever. BOOOOSH.
And uh, it's not really fair to expect socialists to understand the non-political side of money or business or markets. That's like expecting fundamentalists to understand evolution.
What about the claim by (I believe) the New York Times that the "not ready for primetime" e-mail was not actually referencing the half-a-billion dollar loan, but some subsidiary program?
"What about the claim by (I believe) the New York Times that the "not ready for primetime" e-mail was not actually referencing the half-a-billion dollar loan, but some subsidiary program?"
Why would that make the Obama Administration playing venture capital fund manager--using my future paychecks--okay?
I never said it would have, but it would change the narrative a little bit.
True visionaries scorn the profit, the loss, and the cries of the bourse, seeing the power of government as an instrument of economic justice.
Back when Obama was running, the science blogs were going ga-ga for him. The 'best and brightest' Liberal thinkers went on and on about how Chu would reverse years of Bush's assault on science and reason. Wired, Space.com, Slashdot, etc., all filled with this nonsense - and just about orgasmic about Chu.
Well, let's have a look at science since Obama/Chu took over.
Space program: dying.
SETI: on private funds.
Tevatron collider: still slated for death.
Space station: possibly to be abandoned.
Health care: in confusion as not sure what is coming with Obamacare.
Solar panels: Solyndra, anyone?
Wind turbines: Um, whatever.
Electric cars: See wind turbines.
World leader in supercomputing: Not any more!
Etc., etc.
Hope and change!