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Schumer, Gillibrand, and the Wall Street payoffs.

Via Jen Rubin:

Wall Street money rains on Schumer

Wall Street has showered nearly $11 million on the Senate since the beginning of the year, and more than 15 percent of it has gone to a single senator: Democrat Chuck Schumer of New York.

[snip]

Of the $10.6 million the industry has given to sitting senators this year, more than $7.7 million has gone to Democrats. Schumer got his $1.65 million; his New York colleague Kirsten Gillibrand took in $886,000; Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada received $814,000; Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd of Connecticut scored $603,000; Colorado freshman Michael Bennet got $401,000; and Agriculture Committee Chairman Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas— who will have a big say on the derivatives portion of regulatory reform — got $336,000.

Mind you, it’s a perfectly rational decision on Wall Street’s part: paying protection money often is. Despite Yahoo/Politico’s somewhat disingenuous suggestion of ‘Stockholm Syndrome,’ what actually is happening here is a trade. Wall Street gives Schumer – and his new junior partner Gillibrand* – money, and Schumer makes sure that all those potentially fatal regulations and restrictions and investigations that Schumer says and talks about never happen.  Remember, this is the guy who declared that the American people don’t care about “little porky amendments:” he’s about as populist as T. Coddington Van Voorhees VII.

On the bright side, every other person on that list above is worried about their reelection prospects next year – or, in Gillibrand’s and Bennet’s case, worrying about being actually elected.  As well they should be: if you’re going to be pro-business, be pro-business.  If you’ve determined to foment class warfare**, foment class warfare.  But this have-it-both-ways pioneered by Schumer (and understudied by Gillibrand) reveals a certain lack of seriousness about one’s nature.

Moe Lane

*There’s a reason why she got more than either Reid or Dodd, both of whom are arguably better investments.

**The Tea party people are currently demonstrating that this does not mean the same as ‘populist,’ much to the rage of progressives.  It makes their heads hurt to see a genuinely popular, business-friendly mass movement; libertarians, please note.

Crossposted to Moe Lane.

COMMENTS

  • bk

    Fat cat donations to Republicans equates to buying their votes and of course is a sure sign of racism on the part of the donor.

    Fat cat donations to Democrats are a sign that the people are good-hearted and just looking to save our country now that Obama has rescued it from the brink of the abyss.

  • eburke

    to Dems are OK and donations to Pubs are eeeeeevilll.

  • mikefisk

    …”Every election is an advance auction of stolen goods.”

  • AceInTX

    I paraphrase…but can’t think of a better example to describe what Wall Street and any privately owned corporation who gives money to Schumer and the Democrats are doing when they give them money

  • cwilson

    “The Capitalists will sell us the rope with which we will hang them.”

    but the quote is apparently apocryphal — that is, nobody ever actually said it:

    There may be truth in the much-quoted remark that Lenin is alleged to have made about the capitalists’ eagerness to sell their goods (the profit motive is, after all, unideological), but it is almost certainly a fake. Lenin was supposed to have made his observation to one of his close associates, Grigori Zinoviev, not long after a meeting of the Politburo in the early 1920s, but there is no evidence that he ever did. Experts on the Soviet Union reject the rope quote as spurious.

  • AceInTX
  • seandparnell

    You are now ready to join the “reform” movement, which is built on the idea that spending money to advance MY ideas is OK, but when those who dare dissent from the approved orthodoxy spend money to advance THEIR ideas, well – calamity! corruption! confusion! chaos!

    Fortunately the “reform” complex is rapidly being unwound by a Supreme Court that recognizes what the phrase “Congress shall make no law…” means.

    Sean Parnell
    President
    Center for Competitive Politics
    http://www.campaignfreedom.org

  • bk

    Duke Cunningham was a crook, but John Murtha is just doing his job of looking out for his constituents.