Elizabeth Warren Sells Out to Her Corporate Masters
She is supporting the Ex-Im Bank for the worst reason possible.

Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts rode to Washington—and progressive icon status—by promising "to work for the middle class and working families every chance I get" and, unlike Mitt Romney and other Republican corporate lackeys, ensure that "we don't run this country for corporations, we run it for people." So one would think that she would be the one leading the charge against the government-funded Export-Import bank that even President Obama once described as "little more than…corporate welfare."
In fact, it was Tea Party Republicans who fought to scrap this relic of the Great Depression when its term was set to expire at the end of this month—and Warren who said she was on the side of the bank's corporate beneficiaries.
Her office recently released a statement noting not that the bank is a hotbed of corruption (given that four of its employees were recently removed for allegedly accepting bribes and kickbacks), misgovernance (the bank has numerous times doled out financial assistance to companies filing fraudulent applications) and a taxpayer rip off whose time is up. Rather, it said that Warren "looks forward to reviewing the reauthorization" of the bank because it "helps create American jobs and spur economic growth."
Earlier this month, she ended up voting against the bank not because she had a change of heart about its value. Rather, its funding until 2015 was attached to Senate legislation to help arm moderate Syrian rebel, which she didn't support. (Ironically, some opponents of corporate welfare, such Republican Sen. Marco Rubio ended up voting to keep the bank alive because they supported the broader bill.)
Be that as it may, Warren must know that the bank does not live up to her rosy claims. In fact, it is the very essence of what she despises: crony capitalism or what she condemns as socialism "for rich people."
Created by FDR in 1934 with the baffling goal of financing trade with the Soviet Union, the bank, among other things, offers loans on sweet terms to foreign companies, even government owned ones, so that they can purchase American goods and create American jobs. For example, the bank extended financing to the Dubai-based Emirates Air to buy Boeing planes, never mind that the company already has access to limitless cash given that it is owned by the oil-rich United Arab Emirates. This in fact puts American airlines that have to purchase their planes on normal market terms at a competitive disadvantage, prompting Delta Airlines and Air Line Pilots Association to sue the bank.
In principle, the bank is supposed to help all exporters—big and small—equally. In practice, over 75 percent of its activities have supported a handful of large corporations. In 2013, as in previous years, Boeing got 30 percent—or $8.3 billion—of its total financial assistance—earning the bank the nickname of "Boeing's Bank."
Warren is certainly aware of this record because she gently queried Ex-Im President Fred Hochberg about it during recent reauthorization hearings. But in contrast to the legendary whipping she gave former Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner for bailing out too-big-to-fail Wall Street banks while letting smaller ones perish, she amiably accepted Hochberg's assurance that the bank would redouble its efforts to help small businesses going forward. Apparently, 80 years is not enough time.
But if the bank's record in helping small businesses is pathetic, its job creation record is downright abysmal. The bank claims that last year its $27.3 billion activities helped sustain 205,000 export-related American jobs. This calculation is based on a dubious methodology that has been questioned by the Government Accountability Office. But even if one accepts it, Veronique de Rugy of George Mason University's Mercatus Center notes, this works out to $131,200 in taxpayer exposure for every job sustained.
If the country must take on debt, wouldn't it behoove Warren, the self-proclaimed progressive champion of ordinary Americans to do so, say, to finance middle-class tax cuts rather than corporate boondoggles?
Why is Warren so sweet on the bank? It's not like Massachusetts companies receive disproportionate export aid. It's because, as former Democratic Massachusetts Congressman Barney Frank told the Huffington Post, Democrats have made a tactical decision to close ranks and dump their previous opposition to Ex-Im because they want to wrest Corporate America—and presumably its campaign contributions—from the GOP.
In other words, it appears the woman who went to Washington to vanquish the corporate powers-that-be has become a classic Washington insider serving those powers for their money. With a direct vote on the matter delayed until next year, she has time to reconsider, but don't stand on one foot.
A version of this column appeared in USA Today.
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Li-a-wa-tha!
Li-a-wa-tha!
Li-a!
Li-a!
Li-a-wa-tha!
By the shore of Gitche Gooney
By the shining Big-Government-Water
At the doorway of his wig wong
In the unpleasant smelly mourning
Li-a-wa-tha stood and lied through
her stained yellow faux-teeth
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GriewMYDhuA
??
My old Mexican friend. Here is some real native dubstep. =) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_zH9wHWMi_k
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_zH9wHWMi_k
"Selling out" requires principles to sell. Big Chief Populism is as devoid of principles as they come.
No, she has an overriding principle of more power for herself.
Exactly. You can't "sell-out" when your whole shtick was a scam to get yourself in power in the first place.
Rather, its funding until 2015 was attached to Senate legislation to help arm moderate Syrian rebel, which she didn't support.
Is it too much to ask that things be voted on separately?
Yep. It might require politicians to be held accountable for specific votes they cast.
She'll change that though, right?
It's called transparency and Native Americans like Warren have it!
Turd.Burglar.
Does that make her an Indian giver ?
And how!
How. And yes.
"Does that make her an Indian giver ?"
It makes her a lying control freak.
It also makes you look like a bigot.
Maybe to someone who buys into the idea that all conversations must be conducted as if there were people of all stripes in the room, people who may be offended by what is spoken, intent be damned.
You're not gonna find a lot of people like that around here, though.
True, and Warren deserves all the mockery she gets. I just do not see a reason to drag down a percentage of the population that has good cause to not trust the state, along with her.
Madame Defraud: Bonjour, scum.
Why is this so surprising?
There's your answer.
How
"we don't run this country for corporations, we run it for people."
There are many, many people who believe this nonsensical gibberish makes sense; I despair for the future of this once great nation.
It's just catchphrases, that's all. And you're right, it works. You can deliver an hour long lecture about the economic issues with raising the minimum wage to a 'living' standard, and all your opponent has to say is this to win over a crowd of voters. I'm starting to wonder if this is how Cicero felt when Caesar was reigning in Rome.
In hindsight. When the "Energy" of your economy depends upon slaves, and military expansion you are going to end up with a dictatorship.
Politics is all catchphrases.
Corporations are made of people!!
/Charleston Heston
It truly saddens me how few people notice that the real evil in that statement is the idea that the government "runs the country".
-jcr
I can recall once having at least some limited respect for at least a few Democratic politicians. Now they're a parade of total and obvious jokes: Obama, Warren, Biden, Clinton, Wasserman Schultz, Pelosi, Reid. . .I mean, when and how did this happen?
It's been a slow rot starting in the 1970s. Ganrgrene accelerates, you know.
That Wyden guy seems OK for a pussy communist. I haven't researched him in depth. But that's because I like to have one D I can say I kinda sorta like with a straight face. If I investigated too closely, I might lose that.
Whatever his other faults, Wyden seemed to actually care about regular Americans' privacy and civil liberties. He went much farther out on a limb than any of his colleagues to do so.
Now there's a serious confluence of fuckweasels...how much do they collectively lower the country's IQ when they all get together/
I'm surprised you don't have respect for Wasserman Schultz.
/immense sarcasm
Why include the picture of Tony at the top of the article?
Shhh! It might hear you and start posting ridiculous nonsense.
Kind of like the folktales about the Devil hearing when you say his name?
Holy crap, every image I see of that broad gets uglier than the last one!
In fact, it is the very essence of what she despises: crony capitalism or what she condemns as socialism "for rich people."
With all due respect Ms. Dalmia, I have yet to much evidence whatsoever that Ms. Warren has a particular problem with either of these things, in and of themselves. Do you have a basis for this conclusion? Her only observable problem with crony capitalism, at least in the case of financial services, seems to have been that the beneficiaries remained to independent after benefitting from government largesse. But that amounts to a demand for more intensive cronyism, if anything. And her only problem with "socialism for rich people", as far as I can tell, is that said socialism wasn't more broadly applied.
Yaaaaawwwwwnn
How would it be possible for the Ex-Im Bank to buy off "Corporate America"? A few $billion kicked in by Uncle Sam vs. what must be a gigantic amount of wealth in big biz hands...? Is it really possible to buy off some enormous chunk of support of Big Business by their hoping to benefit some day by the carrot's landing in their lap? I could understand Boeing and a few other favored businesses going for it because the benefits are manifest, but why should other businesses, who for all we know may be hurt by Ex-Im, throw in campaign finances on that basis?
A Tariff bank. How quaint.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SuMmYN6asIs
But this won't matter, because she supports the right subsidies otherwise.
(Ironically, some opponents of corporate welfare, such Republican Sen. Marco Rubio ended up voting to keep the bank alive because they supported the broader bill.)
You just wrote a whole column criticizing Warren when she voted CORRECTLY.
You should write a column criticizing RUBIO for voting FOR Syrian military crap and FOR Ex-Im, which are both BAD.
Had the same thought.
Rubio is mediocre at best anyway.
yeah but "democrat"
So it's okay.
So, one more Progressive Democrat has outed herself as an intellectually and morally bankrupt hack who could not possibly have gotten elected without the connivance of a complicity media.
*yawn*