Showing posts with label Wagoner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wagoner. Show all posts

April 25, 2009

More Obama firings

According to the New York Post, President Obama is just getting started on his power tripping;

Citigroup CEO Vikram Pandit's job security is increasingly in jeopardy as momentum grows in Washington to oust him.

With the bank stress tests wrapping up, sources tell The Post that regulators think they might have to make the bold move of removing Pandit to signal Washington is taking as hard a line with the banks as it did with General Motors when it effectively ousted GM CEO Rick Wagoner.

The talk of Pandit being dismissed comes amid speculation that a visit to Citi's offices by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner a week and a half ago might have been to discuss a change at the bank's helm. However, people familiar with the meeting said the visit was simply to conduct a checkup on the bank.
It's wonderful news. Think about it, the President is going to solve Citigroup's problems the way he did for GM by getting rid of Wagoner, because as we all know, he knows better than the rest of us...

This does not bode well for the whole concept of free market economics. I don't know how anyone can argue that this has any sort of differentiation from a command economy.

April 20, 2009

Backdoor socialism - ask Rick

Is this Government as investor or is it backdoor socialism?

NEW YORK (AP) -- American International Group Inc. completed a sale of preferred stock and issued warrants to the Treasury Department as part of a previously announced plan to receive additional financial support from the government according to a regulatory filing submitted Monday.

New York-based AIG said in the Securities and Exchange Commission filing that it sold preferred stock and issued warrants to the government on Friday in exchange for $29.84 billion. The new funds are now immediately available for AIG's use.

The additional funding was announced last month when AIG disclosed a fourth-quarter loss of $61.7 billion, the largest ever quarterly corporate loss in U.S. history.

As part of the deal, AIG must avoid bankruptcy and the government must remain the majority owner of the insurer. The agreement also restricts AIG's ability to
repurchase stock and requires limits on corporate expenses, lobbying and
executive compensation.



Government investment, backdoor socialism? That depends. Ask Rick Wagoner and see what sort of answer you get.

March 30, 2009

Two Dangerous Precedents

The reaction from the right has been appropriately visceral. It has been as strong as to be expected. So far though, it's been self contained. In other words there is not yet a groundswell of opposition to the Presidential over-reach in forcing GM CEO Rick Wagoner to resign. There have not been million man marches protesting this lunacy.



What this amounts to is one dangerous precedent for America. The United States is supposed to be a democracy. It is supposed to be a free market-based system. It is beelining away from that very, very quickly - on both counts. The government should not be dictating operating conditions to companies. That's called fascism.

Wikipedia contains the following definition of fascism;

Fascism is a radical, authoritarian nationalist ideology that aims to create a
single-party state with a government led by a dictator who seeks national unity
and development by requiring individuals to subordinate self-interest to the
collective interest
of the nation or race. Fascist movements promote violence
between nations, political factions, and races as part of a social Darwinist and
militarist stance that views violence between these groups as a natural and
positive part of evolution.

He may eschew the violent portion of this definition but certainly the ACORNs of the world prove there's an adherence to the class warfare side of the definition as well. Socialist goals, fascist methodologies. Sounds like some bad egg historical figure.

The government does not own GM (not yet anyway), the provided bailout money to GM. They have a right to tie conditions to the bailout money as far as things like re-payment schedules, and changing the conditions to the current environment that led to the problem. Doing that as part of the conditions to the opening of purse strings, is reasonable. So is the company choosing to forgo the bailout money. And so is the company being left to it's own devices to meet the agreed upon conditions.

Otherwise the government is by proxy, assuming ownership of a private company. Do I think the US government can run an automobile company better than the private sector? Of course not - they couldn't run a lemonade stand as well as a village idiot.



The point is that this is meddlesome, it is autocratic and it treads on ground that is anathema to free markets, individualism and freedom itself. Some may feel that Wagoner was not the right man for the job. Some may feel that the conditions imposed for further bailout money are justifiably harsh and Wagoner is paying the price because he wasn't strict enough. Regardless, would you want the government coming into your business and telling you to resign? Or into your place of work and telling them to fire you?

It's just not right. What's worse, is it's going unopposed. Which brings us to dangerous precedent number two. Why did Wagoner acquiesce?

If I were Wagoner I think I would have called the administration's bluff. That power to intimidate and coerce did not exist before yesterday. If Wagoner had said no, then what?

GM would have been denied bailout money. And they would have had to file for bankruptcy protection and then the union would be forced to capitulate on it's positions. And that flies in the face of the Obama constituency. Then you would have seen the Obama administration either really ramp up it's bullying or else, more likely capitulate themselves.

They have already deemed GM too important to fail. And then they tried to blackmail the CEO into quitting for pure political reasons they would have had to back down and paid GM anyway.

It's a messed up situation no matter how it played out, but by standing firm, Wagoner could have exposed the administration for what it really is - bullies and/or acting without thinking and not really in control of that which they claim to be in control. That would have been a news day worth seeing.

Obama thugs out Wagoner.

Politico: The first paragraph says it all:

The Obama administration asked Rick Wagoner, the chairman and CEO of General
Motors, to step down and he agreed, a White House official said.

This is not America.

True, Wagoner left a lot to be desired. But the government should NEVER be in the business of telling companies who to hire and fire. That decision belongs in the hands of the shareholders. Just as the shares do not belong in the hands of the government.

Obama can claim he is simply following Paulson's lead where Paulson had asked for the head of AIG CEO Robert Willumstad as part of that bailout. But if Paulson had decided to jump off a bridge... In a sense that is exactly what is happening here - they've decided to jump of the bridge of capitalism into the frozen waters of socialism.

Yesterday, I called it bizarre. Today, I'm calling it frightening.

December 8, 2008

Pot, meet Kettle

Talk about irony. Reuters this morning has this, in an article talking about how GM has an ad out admitting it has betrayed consumers;

Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, a Democrat from Connecticut
who is central to the effort to craft an auto bailout bill, on Sunday said GM
should replace Wagoner.


Please Mr. Dodd, keep that attention away from the financial bailout, and that sweetheart loan deal you got. The sub-prime calamity of trillions is far less important than this 35 billion dollar problem. You haven't covered off any issues in the millions of dollars yet , maybe you could go after a Library of Congress bailout next?
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