You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: Politix
The Trillion-Dollar Bailout May Change Our Politics Forever
2020-03-21
[Town Hall] - As members of Congress debate the terms of the trillion-dollar-plus coronavirus relief package for businesses and individuals, they would do well to remember our recent history.

Most people in professional Washington hate the populist era we are going through. The populist period exists because Americans already feel like their elected officials are more responsive to large corporate interests than to the individuals who elected them. This played out big-time after the Wall Street bailouts fueled the tea party on the right and Occupy Wall Street on the left.

People on the left and right agree that some government assistance is needed to avoid an economic catastrophe. On the individual level, many people with little savings have already lost jobs. Many more will. The best policy is likely just direct payments from the government targeted as quickly as possible to those most in need. It's going to cost a ton and comes with a huge downside down the road, but it's also hard to argue that we don't need it. That's actually the easy part.

On the corporate side, things get more complicated. People see empty airports, empty restaurants and closed-down businesses. They know many industries are suffering. People also don't want to throw our economy into a crisis. They will support a bailout, but if they later learn that the corporate world got anything that looks like a sweetheart deal out of this crisis, the political retribution will be overwhelming. Go ask the many members of Congress who lost seats in the wake of the financial crisis bailout. That was before this populist era even started.

Right this minute, there are teams of lobbyists trying to get all they can for their industry clients. It's their job. They are good at it. They understand the complicated issues more than anyone else, and they know the members of Congress and their staffs.

Sitting across the table will be the members of Congress (or, more likely, their staffs), who are supposed to represent the American taxpayers during the ongoing negotiations. They share the same worldview. Together, they will define the terms of the bailout, and it will likely be so complicated that it may take weeks, or even months, for the rest of us to know exactly what they did. Too many taxpayers feel like their elected officials are not looking out for their interests first at moments like these. The deals often come out looking too sweet for politically connected companies. If that happens, we will be saying hello to our first socialist president sometime down the road.
Posted by:g(r)omgoru

#6  #2 for Snark O' Day, but give #4 Honorable Mention.
Posted by: magpie   2020-03-21 13:26  

#5  Matt is on fire today. #2 is going to be hard to beat.
Posted by: SteveS   2020-03-21 13:18  

#4  "For Tagalog, press 1. For Bantu, press 2....For Finnish, press 108. For English, press pi to the 27th decimal point."
Posted by: Matt   2020-03-21 13:13  

#3  ^ Vicious
Posted by: Frank G   2020-03-21 11:35  

#2  I'm OK with the airlines getting a bailout, but they have to apply through the Delta customer assistance helpline.
Snark O'The Day
Posted by: Matt   2020-03-21 11:32  

#1  
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2020-03-21 11:24  

00:00