[blind-democracy] Warren Increases the Pain Factor for Choosing Corporate-Friendly Democrats

  • From: Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 10 Sep 2015 22:21:06 -0400


Dayen writes: "A little-noticed report on candidates for an open spot on the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) reaffirms that the reformist wing
of the Democratic Party is winning the tactical battle over financial
regulatory personnel."

Senator Elizabeth Warren. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)


Warren Increases the Pain Factor for Choosing Corporate-Friendly Democrats
By David Dayen, The Intercept
10 September 15

A little-noticed report on candidates for an open spot on the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) reaffirms that the reformist wing of the
Democratic Party is winning the tactical battle over financial regulatory
personnel.
Luis Aguilar, one of three Democratic SEC commissioners on the five-member
panel, announced he would step down in May. Initially, the White House
floated as a replacement Keir Gumbs, who has passed through the revolving
door, from SEC staff to the white-collar corporate law firm Covington &
Burling.
Covington & Burling counts most major U.S. banks among its clients, and is
the home of former Attorney General Eric Holder and several of his top
deputies. While at Covington, Gumbs allegedly gave CEOs tutorials on how to
avoid disclosing their corporate political spending. He also represented the
American Petroleum Institute before the SEC.
Pairing a corporate-friendly commissioner with SEC Chair Mary Jo White would
give her an assured vote, and marginalize the more reform-minded Democrat on
the panel, Kara Stein. That's why White lobbied to replace Aguilar with a
moderate.
But months of criticism of both Gumbs and the SEC's bank-friendly practices
created a delay, with the White House agreeing to vet additional candidates
who didn't have ties to corporate America. Last week, word leaked that
administration officials were considering Lisa Fairfax, a law professor at
George Washington University. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., listed Fairfax
as one of her top candidates for the SEC position.
Without this intra-party battle on personnel, the White House would likely
have selected Gumbs months ago, as he was their leading choice.
Led by Warren, reformers previously prevented Larry Summers from becoming
Federal Reserve chair, and forced Antonio Weiss to withdraw from a
nomination for the No. 3 position at the Treasury Department.
The Obama administration, despite a clear preference for moderates with Wall
Street ties for financial regulatory positions, now must consider a far
broader range of personnel. Warren and company have prioritized this,
believing that personnel affects policy when regulators must implement and
enforce laws, or exercise independent judgment. Reducing Wall Street's
influence inside those agencies will have a salutary effect on outcomes.
That explains the reform wing's satisfaction with forcing Hillary Clinton to
take their side on anti-revolving door legislation last week. Her Democratic
opponent Bernie Sanders would be reliably expected to hire reform-minded
regulators for his White House staff, should he get the chance. Influencing
those who may not always share those principles, like Clinton or Obama,
suggests far more clout.
By forming a united front on these matters, it makes it more difficult for
future Democratic administrations to use Wall Street as a policymaker talent
pool. This significantly changes the landscape of the party, regardless of
individual candidate views or the desires of Wall Street-aligned donors.
Obama may still pick Gumbs; he reportedly has the backing of Holder, his
colleague at Covington & Burling. Gumbs and Warren are set to meet this
week, according to the Wall Street Journal. But the interest in Fairfax
reflects the fact that she's more confirmable for Senate Democrats.
Daniel Gallagher, one of two Republican commissioners, announced his
intention to leave the agency on October 2. Aguilar plans to stay until a
replacement is named. Hester Peirce, former aide to Senate Banking Committee
chair Richard Shelby, is said to be the choice for the Republican vacancy.
If the White House doesn't want a short-staffed SEC as they finalize
Dodd-Frank rules, they could pair Fairfax and Peirce for a relatively
painless confirmation. By increasing the pain factor on choosing
corporate-friendly candidates, Warren and her allies have shown their muscle
in the fight over personnel.
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Senator Elizabeth Warren. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)
https://theintercept.com/2015/09/08/anti-bank-wing-making-headway-democratic
-party/https://theintercept.com/2015/09/08/anti-bank-wing-making-headway-dem
ocratic-party/
Warren Increases the Pain Factor for Choosing Corporate-Friendly Democrats
By David Dayen, The Intercept
10 September 15
little-noticed report on candidates for an open spot on the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) reaffirms that the reformist wing of the
Democratic Party is winning the tactical battle over financial regulatory
personnel.
Luis Aguilar, one of three Democratic SEC commissioners on the five-member
panel, announced he would step down in May. Initially, the White House
floated as a replacement Keir Gumbs, who has passed through the revolving
door, from SEC staff to the white-collar corporate law firm Covington &
Burling.
Covington & Burling counts most major U.S. banks among its clients, and is
the home of former Attorney General Eric Holder and several of his top
deputies. While at Covington, Gumbs allegedly gave CEOs tutorials on how to
avoid disclosing their corporate political spending. He also represented the
American Petroleum Institute before the SEC.
Pairing a corporate-friendly commissioner with SEC Chair Mary Jo White would
give her an assured vote, and marginalize the more reform-minded Democrat on
the panel, Kara Stein. That's why White lobbied to replace Aguilar with a
moderate.
But months of criticism of both Gumbs and the SEC's bank-friendly practices
created a delay, with the White House agreeing to vet additional candidates
who didn't have ties to corporate America. Last week, word leaked that
administration officials were considering Lisa Fairfax, a law professor at
George Washington University. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., listed Fairfax
as one of her top candidates for the SEC position.
Without this intra-party battle on personnel, the White House would likely
have selected Gumbs months ago, as he was their leading choice.
Led by Warren, reformers previously prevented Larry Summers from becoming
Federal Reserve chair, and forced Antonio Weiss to withdraw from a
nomination for the No. 3 position at the Treasury Department.
The Obama administration, despite a clear preference for moderates with Wall
Street ties for financial regulatory positions, now must consider a far
broader range of personnel. Warren and company have prioritized this,
believing that personnel affects policy when regulators must implement and
enforce laws, or exercise independent judgment. Reducing Wall Street's
influence inside those agencies will have a salutary effect on outcomes.
That explains the reform wing's satisfaction with forcing Hillary Clinton to
take their side on anti-revolving door legislation last week. Her Democratic
opponent Bernie Sanders would be reliably expected to hire reform-minded
regulators for his White House staff, should he get the chance. Influencing
those who may not always share those principles, like Clinton or Obama,
suggests far more clout.
By forming a united front on these matters, it makes it more difficult for
future Democratic administrations to use Wall Street as a policymaker talent
pool. This significantly changes the landscape of the party, regardless of
individual candidate views or the desires of Wall Street-aligned donors.
Obama may still pick Gumbs; he reportedly has the backing of Holder, his
colleague at Covington & Burling. Gumbs and Warren are set to meet this
week, according to the Wall Street Journal. But the interest in Fairfax
reflects the fact that she's more confirmable for Senate Democrats.
Daniel Gallagher, one of two Republican commissioners, announced his
intention to leave the agency on October 2. Aguilar plans to stay until a
replacement is named. Hester Peirce, former aide to Senate Banking Committee
chair Richard Shelby, is said to be the choice for the Republican vacancy.
If the White House doesn't want a short-staffed SEC as they finalize
Dodd-Frank rules, they could pair Fairfax and Peirce for a relatively
painless confirmation. By increasing the pain factor on choosing
corporate-friendly candidates, Warren and her allies have shown their muscle
in the fight over personnel.
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