Topics

America the Beautiful

Arizona

Articles - Alan Caruba

Articles - American Thinker

Articles - Ann Coulter

Articles - Ben Johnson

Articles - Burt Prelutsky

Articles - Caroline Glick

Articles - Charles Krauthammer

Articles - Chuck Baldwin

Articles - Cliff Kincaid

Articles - Craig Cantoni

Articles - David Horowitz

Articles - David Limbaugh

Articles - David Roth

Articles - Frank Salvato

Articles - Frosty Wooldridge

Articles - Gabriel Garnica

Articles - IBD

Articles - James Taranto

Articles - Jerome R. Corsi

Articles - John W. Howard

Articles - Jonathan Tobin

Articles - MIchelle Malkin

Articles - Mac Johnson

Articles - Mark Steyn

Articles - Michael Reagan

Articles - Mike S. Adams

Articles - Newt Gingrich

Articles - Patrick Buchanan

Articles - Peggy Noonan

Articles - Phyllis Schlafly

Articles - Raymond Kraft

Articles - Red State Patriot

Articles - Sandra J. Miller

Articles - Sultan Knish

Articles - Thomas Sowell

Articles - Tom DeWeese

Articles - Tony Blankley

Articles - WSJ

Articles - Walter E. Willliams

Articles - William C. Douglas

Articles Laura Ingraham

Budget, Taxation and Fiscal Policy

Candidate - Barack Obama

Candidate - John McCain

Candidate - Sarah Palin

Congress

Congressional Spending & Earmarks

Constitution and Government

Domestic Issues and Politics

Economics and Business

Education

Energy

Entertainment

Environment

Featured Cartoons

Financial Market Commentary

Foreign Policy

Gender and Race

Gun Control

Humor

Immigration and Border Control

Iraq

Islam, Terrorism and WMD

Israel and Middle East

Law and Legal Issues

Media and Entertainment

Medicine and Healthcare

NAU & New World Order

National Defense and National Security

Philosophy

Political Thought

Public Service Announcement

Religion and Culture

Social Security

Socialism

Supreme Court

Technology

Trade and Commerce

U.S. Armed Forces

Video

Welfare and the Entitlement Culture

Search


Archives

September 2010
August 2010
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006

White House puts UAW ahead of property rights

Chrysler_Fiat_MIPS102.jpg
Chrysler headquarters is shown in Auburn Hills, Mich.,
Wednesday April 29, 2009. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

Last Friday, the day after Chrysler filed for bankruptcy, I drove past the company’s headquarters on Interstate 75 in Auburn Hills, Mich. As I glanced at the pentagram logo I felt myself tearing up a little bit. Anyone who grew up in the Detroit area, as I did, can’t help but be sad to see a once great company fail.

But my sadness turned to anger later when I heard what bankruptcy lawyer Tom Lauria said on a WJR talk show that morning. “One of my clients,” Lauria told host Frank Beckmann, “was directly threatened by the White House and in essence compelled to withdraw its opposition to the deal under threat that the full force of the White House press corps would destroy its reputation if it continued to fight.”

Lauria represented one of the bondholder firms, Perella Weinberg, which initially rejected the Obama deal that would give the bondholders about 33 cents on the dollar for their secured debts while giving the United Auto Workers retirees about 50 cents on the dollar for their unsecured debts.

This of course is a violation of one of the basic principles of bankruptcy law, which is that secured creditors — those who lended money only on the contractual promise that if the debt was unpaid they’d get specific property back — get paid off in full before unsecured creditors get anything. Perella Weinberg withdrew its objection to the settlement, but other bondholders did not, which triggered the bankruptcy filing.

After that came a denunciation of the objecting bondholders as “speculators” by Barack Obama in his news conference last Thursday. And then death threats to bondholders from parties unknown.

The White House denied that it strong-armed Perella Weinberg. The firm issued a statement saying it decided to accept the settlement, but it pointedly did not deny that it had been threatened by the White House. Which is to say, the threat worked.

The same goes for big banks that have received billions in government Troubled Asset Relief Program money. Many of them want to give back the money, but the government won’t let them. They also voted to accept the Chrysler settlement. Nice little bank ya got there, wouldn’t want anything to happen to it.

Left-wing bloggers have been saying that the White House’s denial of making threats should be taken at face value and that Lauria’s statement is not evidence to the contrary. But that’s ridiculous. Lauria is a reputable lawyer and a contributor to Democratic candidates. He has no motive to lie. The White House does.

Think carefully about what’s happening here. The White House, presumably car czar Steven Rattner and deputy Ron Bloom, is seeking to transfer the property of one group of people to another group that is politically favored. In the process, it is setting aside basic property rights in favor of rewarding the United Auto Workers for the support the union has given the Democratic Party. The only possible limit on the White House’s power is the bankruptcy judge, who might not go along.

Michigan politicians of both parties joined Obama in denouncing the holdout bondholders. They point to the sad plight of UAW retirees not getting full payment of the health care benefits the union negotiated with Chrysler. But the plight of the beneficiaries of the pension funds represented by the bondholders is sad too. Ordinarily you would expect these claims to be weighed and determined by the rule of law. But not apparently in this administration.

Obama’s attitude toward the rule of law is apparent in the words he used to describe what he is looking for in a nominee to replace Justice David Souter. He wants “someone who understands justice is not just about some abstract legal theory,” he said, but someone who has “empathy.” In other words, judges should decide cases so that the right people win, not according to the rule of law.

The Chrysler negotiations will not be the last occasion for this administration to engage in bailout favoritism and crony capitalism. There’s a May 31 deadline to come up with a settlement for General Motors. And there will be others. In the meantime, who is going to buy bonds from unionized companies if the government is going to take their money away and give it to the union? We have just seen an episode of Gangster Government. It is likely to be part of a continuing series.

By: Michael Barone
Washington Examiner Senior Political Analyst
05/05/09

Find this article at:
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/politics/White-House-puts-UAW-ahead-of-property-rights-44415057.html

Hat tip: Dave Amos

Posted May 7, 2009 06:26 AM
Read more on Constitution and Government

Navigation

About
Submissions
Subscribe
RSS Feed
Home

Recent Articles

Heirs to Fortuyn?

Muslim immigration and sclerotic welfare states push Europe right (sort of). Spring 2009 When the New Left emerged in the...

Read more...

The Left Is Making a Grave Mistake

The Left Is Making a Mistake in Ridiculing the Tea Parties The political Left in the United States is...

Read more...

Government Motors

President of the United States is a job with no shortage of responsibilities, but last week the Obama administration added...

Read more...

Steelers to loose Super Bowl Trophies

ESPN Updated: March 32, 2009 Pittsburgh, PA. The Super Bowl XLIII Champion Pittsburgh Steelers, the only team to win...

Read more...

Welcome to Mississagua



Read more...

Blogroll

Credits

Powered by Movable Type 3.2

Site design by Sekimori