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Johann Hari: We have everything to fear from McCain

Thursday, 17 July 2008

When the almost six billion of us outside the US watch the contest for The Most Powerful Man in the World, we tend to focus on the candidates' foreign policies. If I was Iranian, say, I'd be anxious that John McCain keeps joking in public about killing me. As a bravo-bow after singing "bomb bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran" to the tune of the Beach Boys melody Barbra Ann, he responded to being told exports of cigarettes to Iran are high by guffawing: "That's a way of killing them!"

But there's a way in which the next US president will affect you even more directly than foreign policy. By his economic decisions, the next president will help swing the price of the food you eat and the wages you earn – wherever you live on earth.

So it's a little worrying that John McCain – who still has a reasonable chance of winning – says: "The issue of economics is not something I've understood as well as I should... To be honest, I know a lot less about economics than I do about military and foreign policy issues. I still need to be educated."

This is a man who can't tell his Sunni from his Shia, and who opposed the Northern Ireland peace process as a capitulation to terrorism. And he admits he knows even less about the economy than that. On one occasion, he let his irritation with the subject slip by referring to it as "the credit cunt".

When he is forced to talk about the economy, McCain has always given the same answer: "I rely on the circle I have developed over many years – people like Phil Gramm." He has Herbert Hoovered-up his slivers of economic theory from this man – but who is Gramm? Until he briefly sputtered into the headlines a few days ago, nobody had cared to look.

Phil Gramm is an ornery old ex-Texas senator who seems to have swooped out of the most scathing H L Mencken sketch. He became McCain's "best friend in politics" – and started speaking to him every day – when they linked arms to stop Hillary Clinton's 1993 push to extend healthcare to poor Americans.

He calls for "ruthlessly" slashing government spending – but only focuses on spending on the poor. When he was told paying for healthcare plunged many 80-year-olds into poverty, he said: "Most of us don't have the luxury of living to be 80 years old, so it's hard for me to feel sorry for them."

Later, one of those very 80-year-olds approached him because she was terrified she wouldn't be able to pay her medical bills. Gramm laughed and told her to find herself a rich husband. He chuckled: "People say I don't have a heart. I do. I keep it in a quart jar on my desk."

But most relevant to those of us outside the US is that Gramm – more than any other figure in American politics – made the two great financial scandals of our time possible, and nearly brought the global economy down with him.

How? Gramm says government regulation of the economy is "akin to communism", and must be destroyed. His first great step towards this goal came in the 1990s, when he championed and pushed through the law that exempted Enron from both government regulation and public disclosure, on the grounds these were "unacceptable fetters on the free market". Enron was his biggest campaign contributor, and employing his wife to the tune of a million bucks.

So thanks to Gramm, nobody was watching over Enron any more. As a result, they embarked on a massive programme of fraud and pillage. After taking over the electricity market in California, they deliberately engineered blackouts in entire cities to drive up the price for power. In a surreal move, Gramm blamed "environmental extremists" – the nearest bogeyman to hand – even after it was proven Enron execs had paid the power plants to "get creative" in turning out the lights.

Gramm learned from the Enron scandal – to go further and push harder. He turned his attention (and his fund-raising) to the mortgage companies. Since the 1930s, there had been an unwritten deal in US politics: the government would rescue the banks if they grew sick, but in return the banks had to take the sensible medicine of regulation. Gramm thought this was "crazy": why would banks ever need to be rescued in a free market?

So in 2000, while everybody was riveted by the Gore vs Bush stand-off in Florida, Gramm slipped into a vast 3,000-page bill 268 pages radically deregulating the banking system. A legal textbook later called this "a stunning departure from normal legislative practice"; few lawmakers noticed it was there when they voted. Suddenly, the roles that had been reserved in the US for regulated banks were handed over to a vast network of unregulated financial institutions called the "shadow banking system." They began to offer wildly unsustainable mortgages to the poor at supersonic interest rates. Through accountancy-acrobatics, they then bundled these risky loans into exotic packages of derivative commodities.

All this was only legal because of Gramm's legislative footwork. He swiftly moved on from the Senate to a megabucks job at UBS, one of the banks raking in billions from his changes.

Within a few years, the entire system began to collapse without the support beams of state regulation. Sub-prime mortgages predictably fell apart, with 2 million Americans – mostly black and Hispanic – facing repossession. The state has had to step in with a much heavier hand than before – and even that will not prevent a recession now.

The billionaire Warren Buffet pointed out that Phil Gramm has twice tossed "financial weapons of mass destruction" into the US economy. Yet instead of shunning him, McCain made Gramm the co-chair of his presidential campaign, and hinted he might make him Treasury Secretary. McCain – the supposed scourge of buying influence – was even happy for Gramm to be simultaneously a paid lobbyist for the mortgage industry and helping to write his speeches about the mortgage crisis. The Gramm-grip on McCain's policies shows: incredibly, the wannabe-president responded to the credit crunch caused by deregulation by calling for even more deregulation.

The biggest question in US politics should be: would you buy a mortgage from this man? But it's a sign of how shallow the media coverage is that Gramm's ideological fanaticism passed almost without comment; he only became an issue when he made a silly verbal gaffe, claiming America is only in a "mental recession". (In CEO-Land, this is true: they are walking away with $100m bonuses from their failures.) Only then did McCain distance himself.

So it seems for this putative president, causing two major economic crises is fine – but speaking about them crudely is a step too far. Yessir: if you liked the credit crunch, you'll love McCainomics.

j.hari@independent.co.uk

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Comments

64 Comments

Dr. Don Key,
It was the Republican party that put into law the civil rights laws this country has today. The Democrat party was not the main supporter of the civil rights movement in Washington.
This is not an excellent article. This article is meant to demonize people. It's meant to scare you. I can't believe some of you people think this is a good article. Some of you people must be brainwashed concerning McCain or the Republican party in general. Gramm laughing at an 80 year old woman telling her to find a rich husband. That's ridicules! McCain doesn't want to bomb bomb bomb Iran and he doesn't want to kill them by selling them cigarettes either. This writer wants to convince you that these people are not only heartless but murderers! This is a hit piece of the worst kind. What amazes me is some of you people believe it! Like I said before it's like when the Democrats were trying to tell everybody the Republicans want to throw you grandparents out into the streets!

Posted by turkey | 23.07.08, 16:29 GMT

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Excellent article. There are a few additional ironies in the story of Gramm/McCain. Firstly, while Gramm tends to demonize federal spending, throughout the course of his lifetime he has benefited over a million dollars in state and federal benefits--beginning with his birth in a US army hospital. Thus, his economics are not only radically insane, but also hypocritical.

Secondly, Gramm was once a Democrat. He represents the Southern shift from solidly Democratic, to Southern Republican. This shift began immediately after the end of the Civil War among white Southerners, and went into overdrive after Democrats supported the 60s Civil Rgihts Movement.

Thirdly, John McCain is himself a little bit funny. You might assume that one who has actually endured the horrors of war and torture, would approach the former with caution, and detest the latter. Neither case is true. Also, Phil Gramm, like most Republican leaders, has no military service. The term "chickenhawk" comes to mind.

Posted by Dr. Don Key | 22.07.08, 19:06 GMT

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Thanks, Johann, for the coverage of Gramm beyond the silly gaffe that got him tossed under the Straight Talk Express. You and the Texas Observer are doing good work.

Now, as to the comments I'm reading here (and elsewhere), it makes no difference who we elect as president, because the winner is going to have to deal with a sorry lot of fools, warmongers, and extremists called The American People. This election is showing just how far our national politics has devolved into a zero-sum game. Each side is determined that only their candidate's victory will save America from destruction. I'd bet even Osama bin Laden is surprised at how viciously we tear at each other.

Madness.

Posted by Steve Jones | 22.07.08, 00:20 GMT

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I couldn't read the rest of this article. It is sooo full of inflammatory sentences meant to scare people. 80 year old woman being terrified of McCain...give me a break! That kind of scare tactic was used in the early 90s by the democrats. The Republicans were actually trying to balance the budget and they impossed a 3 dollar tax on Social Security checks. I mean they were actually trying to do something right! The Democrats got on the airwaves and said the Republicans were trying to throw the old people out into the streets with the 3 dollar tax. Like Republicans didn't have old people in their own families.

That's the tactic being used by this writer. Talk about hyperbole! Talk about ridiculous! Talk about scare tactics! This writer is trying to make McCain to be sub human. It's people like this writer that feeds the minds of people with nonsense so that nothing can get done. This writer doesn't want you to disagree with McCain he wants you to hate him.

Posted by turkey | 21.07.08, 23:45 GMT

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McCain opposes corn-based ethanol, Obama is all for it because of the votes. Are you studying the problem or just begging the question?

Posted by Are You Nuts | 20.07.08, 16:15 GMT

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Ed...to think they say Americans have no sense of irony.

Posted by The French liberated America | 20.07.08, 11:55 GMT

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In my quick reading of the 114 report from Sen Carl Levin and his committee, it is reported that the current abuses by UBS and the Bank of Liechtenstein on tax evasion schemes as its beginning in the US with a change in IRS compliance procedures by establishing the Qualified Intermediary (IP) Program where the IRS accepted the statement of a third party that the foreign bank was correctly withholding and submitting the required 30% of funds. It was with this QI Program that the fox entered the hen house.
I have seen that this change took place in 2000 or early 2001. I have yet to see that it was in the Gramm insertion in the massive bill of December, 2000. Can you confirm for me that this was when it was legally established? It is possible that the language of this bill authorized the Treasury Department to have the IRS establish this program. Any help on this to nail Gramm and McCain would be most helpful to the future of the US.

Posted by Larry Matthews | 20.07.08, 02:09 GMT

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Very good article. McCain is hoping to ascend to Bush's role of figurehead for the rich in America. His disinterest in economics should scare the wits out of those of you living outside the US (as well as those of us who are American citizens). Here is Texas, out nickname for Gramm is 'Turtlehead.'

Posted by Wiliam | 19.07.08, 14:58 GMT

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Posted by Ed | 19.07.08, 03:43 GMT

^^^

Ed, as an American I am disgusted by your comments.

Posted by JG | 19.07.08, 12:18 GMT

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"America is greatest nation the world has ever seen. Period. We protect all of your sorry, unworthy asses." - ED

America was at the apex of her power shortly before the Korean war. Since then she has never been able to project power without the use of allies. These are slowly drawing away from her, and as Bjimmer points out, positioning themselves to develop relationships with the new world economy and power centre aligned on North East Asia, which is developing with the rise of China.

The danger for us all, of course, is what badly led and deluded Americans will do in reaction to their decline, (in addition to their flailings around in Iraq and Afghanistan and their worrying, unthinking alliance with false friends who will lead them astray, like the Israelis). That is why the Obama/McCain race is important, not that either of them will make good leaders.

Posted by JF | 19.07.08, 10:34 GMT

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64 Comments

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