Friday, September 05, 2008

McCain and Palin: nothing means anything, by gimleteye

How disorienting it must be for top Republican donors to write a check against their own party to win the presidency. And writing checks, they are and will be next week, when Sarah Palin comes to Miami.

Presidential Candidate John McCain says it plainly: He is running against the status quo, he is running against the lobbyists in Washington, D.C., and he can't wait to unleash Palin on its culture. What John McCain is really saying to top donors in states like Florida is that he is running against what they built: a red state majority based on the Rove/Cardenas/Bush plan to put campaign money spigots in every infrastructure project from the Panhandle (St. Joe) to Homestead (LBA/sprawl).

Florida's top donors must believe, as in other red states; John McCain doesn't mean it. And maybe he doesn't, because nothing means anything to a red state Republican. In Florida it is the Hurricane Hoffman/ WCI Communities effect.

In 2003, Al Hoffman-- then chair of WCI Communities, a condo/ home builder, and also finance chair for both Bush brothers (now, top fundraiser for John McCain)-- crowed to the Washington Post that suburban sprawl was "an unstoppable force". Why is sprawl an issue?

Because insta-grow communities in our suburbs and the American south and West-- in places like Pheonix, Las Vegas and Sacramento-- are littered with foreclosures, crashing neighborhood values, and the seeds of a financial tsunami.

Bloomberg reports, "Foreclosures accelerated in the second quarter to the fastest pace in almost three decades as interest rates increased and home values fell, prompting more Americans to walk away from homes they couldn't refinance or sell. New foreclosures increased to 1.19 percent, rising above 1 percent for the first time in the survey's 29 years, the Mortgage Bankers Association said in a report today." (US Mortgage Foreclosures, Deliquencies Rise to 29 Year High, Sept. 5)

Those crushed dreams belong to Republicans, too. Today Hoffman's former company is bankrupt and the entire array of special interests related to development and speculation is dazed as a bee colony hit by a cloud of smoke.

Most political observers have no idea how it happened, but the results are clear and articulated, partially, in today's report by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities: "Today’s extremely disappointing employment report shows that the economy remains mired in a slump and still waiting for something to jump start a sustainable recovery. Consumer spending supported by the stimulus payments that Congress enacted earlier this year helped keep the economy growing in the second quarter, but the headwinds from still-high energy prices, a weak housing market, tight credit markets, and continuing financial market uncertainty will make it difficult to sustain economic growth as the effects of the first round of stimulus wear off."

"Financial market uncertainty" euphemistically refers to the biggest threat to the nation's financial system since the 1930's.

Most people don't have any idea how to buy a Collateral Mortgage Obligation, a type of financial instrument at the heart of the multi-trillion dollar credit crisis and housing market crash, but the top donors from the real estate development industries do: at financial institutions like Bear Stearns (defunct) or Lehman Brothers, where Jeb Bush took a paid consultancy after leaving the Florida governor's office, now raising billions from Korea just to stave off bankrupcy.

This is what the foundation for Florida's future rests upon: the quicksand of capital "rescue plans" from vultures and sovereign wealth funds. Yesterday, Bill Gross, manager of the world's biggest bond fund, told Bloomberg News: "The U.S. government needs to start using more of its money to support markets to stem a burgeoning "financial tsunami". (U.S. Must Buy Assets to Prevent `Tsunami,' Gross Says) Fiscal conservatives should be apoplectic.

This isn't-- as Sarah Palin, George Bush, and John McCain claim-- the "angry left" talking. I'm not sure the Republicans cheering at their national convention understand this part: that nationalization of the US financial sector is happening right now, under the supervision of the Bush administration, while the party values continue to tout the "free market". Free market, to whom?

Today, the Republican spin machine is struggling to pin the socialization-- nationalization, if you will-- of the nation's backstop financial institutions, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, on someone else. How dare the Republicans accuse "liberals" for being angry about the fire sale of US assets to Asia, the Middle East, and even Russia? Have you filled up your car at Lukoil recently? The fact is that lefties and liberals have been no where in view, except as community organizers and neighborhood activists.

We didn't hear John McCain, last night in St. Paul, nor will Florida top donors hear Sarah Palin in Miami next week utter a solitary word of the fiscal irresponsibility that pushed the US economy into the biggest crisis since the Great Depression while making many of them a fortune in the process.

What I heard Presidential Candidate John McCain say, was that his campaign is running away from the Republican status quo lickety-split: change we can trust. What I heard was a convention full of Republican party faithful cheering against the performance and record of their own party and against the windfall profits that enriched their top donors.

So it is going to be interesting to watch Alaska Governor Sarah Palin vacuum political money from those top Florida Republicans before Hurricane Ike, whose name recalls a real Republican hero who precisely understood the threats of powerful vested interests against representative democracy.

Palin comes in the fundraising footsteps of her own political Alaskan enemies: Senator Ted Stevens and Congressman Don Young, both of whom have very close connections to wealthy South Florida Republicans donors.

I'm not sure what her sales pitch will be, but it is not likely along the lines of the truth: "write your check to the Republican National Committee or a 527 committee so we can continue to hold power even if it means running TV ads against what we represent." Nor is she likely to say anything along the lines of Bill Gross', "If we are to prevent a continuing asset and debt liquidation of near historic proportions, we will require policies that open up the balance sheet of the U.S. Treasury."

No. When Sarah Palin arrives for her coming out party by Miami's Republican elite, the media is likely to be shut out from everything but the choreographed entry of a shooting star.

This is what the Rovian politics of the past decade proved: how, if you control the mainstream media-- overtly through ownership (Fox News) or through intimidation (access to Larry King Live) and say a thing often enough; most Americans can be persuaded it is true.

In Miami on Monday, Sarah Palin will not be aiming against "all those special interests" because all those special interests are going to be her audience.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

You leave us with nothing to say. Too bad readers won't respond to what you write. they respond to talking points.

Anonymous said...

This could not be more true Gimmy:

This is what the Rovian politics of the past decade proved: how, if you control the mainstream media-- overtly through ownership (Fox News) or through intimidation (access to Larry King Live) and say a thing often enough; most Americans can be persuaded it is true.

Anonymous said...

Peggy Noonan caught on an open mike (Wall Street Journal Political Columnist):

Murphy: You know, because I come out of the blue swing state governor work. Engler, Whitman, Thompson, Mitt Romney, Jeb Bush. And these guys, this is all like how you want to (inaudible) this race. You know, just run it up. And it’s not gonna work.

Noonan: It’s over.

Murphy: Still, McCain can give a version of the Lieberman speech to do himself some good.

CT: Don’t you think the Palin pick was insulting to Kay Bailey Hutchinson, too (inaudible)

Noonan: I saw Kay this morning.

Murphy: They’re all bummed out. I mean, is she really the most qualified woman they could have turned to?

Todd: Yeah, I mean is she really the most qualified woman they could have turned to?

Noonan: The most qualified? No. I think they went for this, excuse me, political bullshit about narratives and (inaudible) the picture.

Yeah, but what’s the narrative?

Noonan: Every time the Republicans do that because that’s not where they live and it’s not what they’re good at and they blow it.

Murphy: You know what’s really the worst thing about it? The greatness of McCain is no cynicism and this is cynical.

And as you call it gimmicky.

Anonymous said...

Enough already, here is your liberal New York Times:

“Let me tell you something,” said Luanne Van Werven, a Republican delegate from Lynden, Wash., as the convention closed late Thursday night. “I secretly think Hillary loves Sarah Palin.”

Geniusofdespair said...

Rassmussen Poll For Today:

Obama now attracts 46% of the vote while McCain earns 45%. When "leaners" are included, it’s Obama 48%, McCain 46%

out of sight said...

Great post, Gim.

Shooting star, I think so. I just don't want her falling on my head!