Pensioners pay more taxes than hedge fund managers


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Taibbi cartoonRegardless of whether you worship at the church of Rolling Stone or the Manhattan Institute, Matt Taibbi brings up a very good point about transferring wealth from local public sector retirees to hedge fund managers in his second critique of Rhode Island pension cuts.

Not only are states like Rhode Island paying millions in fees to outrageously expensive money managers, but those millions will be taxed at a rate far below what the teachers and police and sanitation workers who are being forced to swallow cuts in those states pay on their dwindling incomes. This is thanks in large part to a tax loophole preserved for years by cowardly Wall Street-supplicating politicians hailing, as Henn correctly notes, from both parties, Republican and Democrat.

Sam Bell, of the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats, tackles the part about Taibbi going soft on Democrats here:

Most out of state pundits forget this, but the legislature that so gleefully passed the pension cuts is the same legislature that passed a voter ID law.  These are the people who gave us a D+ rating from NARAL Pro-Choice America–the worst of any solid blue state.  It was these so-called Democrats who pushed through the steep 2006 tax cuts for the rich that blew up the budget in the first place.  The top four leaders of the Democratic caucus in our state legislature–House Speaker Gordon Fox, Senate President Teresa Paiva-Weed, House Majority Leader Nick Mattiello, and Senate Majority Leader Dominick Ruggerio–have each taken thousands of dollars from the NRA.  And I believe those contributions were illegal.  (The Board of Elections is still deliberating on my complaint.)

Taibbi is still missing the real story


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taibbi democracy nowI want to thank Matt Taibbi.  Unlike many national journalists, he admits when he goes far too easy on Rhode Island Democrats.  On Friday, he published a new article acknowledging Raimondo’s party affiliation and tying her to the national trend of conservative Democrats in the Wall St. camp.  If you ignore a glaring and egregious spelling error, it’s a great piece.  Taibbi ends with my favorite line, “Readers, if I’m missing something, please let me know.”

That’s an invitation I can’t turn down.

There is still much that bothers me about Taibbi’s approach of going soft on Rhode Island Democrats.  I wish, for instance, that he wouldn’t use the deceptive right-wing phrasing “pension reform” to describe the pension cuts.  But I have a much more foundational critique.  He is missing the bigger story–what has happened to the General Assembly.

Raimondo, as Taibbi rightly notes, is very similar to a number of conservative Democrats around the country with strong ties to the finance industry.  But this sort of pro-finance attitude is a fairly common feature of the modern Democratic party.  Sadly, the conservatism of General Assembly Democrats takes on an entirely different character.

Most out of state pundits forget this, but the legislature that so gleefully passed the pension cuts is the same legislature that passed a voter ID law.  These are the people who gave us a D+ rating from NARAL Pro-Choice America–the worst of any solid blue state.  It was these so-called Democrats who pushed through the steep 2006 tax cuts for the rich that blew up the budget in the first place.  The top four leaders of the Democratic caucus in our state legislature–House Speaker Gordon Fox, Senate President Teresa Paiva-Weed, House Majority Leader Nick Mattiello, and Senate Majority Leader Dominick Ruggerio–have each taken thousands of dollars from the NRA.  And I believe those contributions were illegal.  (The Board of Elections is still deliberating on my complaint.)

Down the line, the policies the General Assembly’s leadership has enacted have not been the policies of ordinary Wall St. conservative Democrats.  They have been the policies of Republicans.

As Ann Clanton famously put it when she was Executive Director if the Rhode Island Republican Party, “We have a lot of Democrats who we know are Republican but run as a Democrat–basically so they can win.”

Raimondo is not as extreme.  When leadership wanted to skip a pension payment during the recent budget battle, Raimondo and some of the more moderate conservatives in the House balked.  I don’t know how true this is, but she does claim that she opposed one of the more odious components of the pension cuts.

On social issues, Raimondo makes a cleaner break from the extremists in the General Assembly.  She is pro-choice.  Unlike the leaders of the General Assembly, she is not an NRA Democrat.  Although she never issued a full divestment statement, she did pressure a distributor to stop distributing assault weapons, and she did send out a press release saying she would look into divestment.  (Full disclosure: I led an unsuccessful calling campaign to try to get her to issue a formal divestment statement.)

Let me be clear.  I am no fan of Raimondo.  I plan on voting against her in the primary.  But I understand that she is not as conservative as the nominally Democratic leadership in the General Assembly.

I trust Rhode Islanders to stand firm against the money tsunami and vote Raimondo out of politics this September.  In a gubernatorial race, there is enough press scrutiny that it is very hard for this sort of conservative to win.  But in tiny, low-turnout Democratic primaries for General Assembly seats, where politics has more to do with personal connections and money than issues, candidates far more conservative than Raimondo routinely win easily.  That’s the core problem Rhode Island faces.  And that’s the story I wish Matt Taibbi would cover.

Renn: ‘Innuendo not evidence’ for me but not for thee


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renn’ll admit it. I love Urbanophile blogger Aaron Renn. He never fails to entertain and often makes some good points. But his hit job on Rolling Stone writer Matt Taibbi was profoundly deceptive.

If you clicked on the link or pay close attention to the local news cycle, you probably know I wrote my lede in a way to tease Renn. (Welcome to RI, Aaron!) But also to prove a point. My lede is virtually identical to the lede Wrenn wrote when he tried to discredit Taibbi’s blockbuster Rolling Stone article in GoLocalProv yesterday, I just switched Taibbi for Renn and Raimondo for Taibbi! Now, I will systematically discredit Renn’s reasoning in the same way he tried to do to Taibbi’s.

But before I do, like Renn, I will disclose that I too have worked for an entity with a profound stake in pension politics. While Renn has done some freelance work for the Manhattan Institute and I’ve done some work for the union-backed cable access show Labor Vision and organized labor sometimes (though not as often as it should!) advertises with RI Future. If you think my previous relationships somehow matter more than Renn’s, then either you are trying to influence politics yourself – as me and Renn are clearly doing! – or I would like to invite you to invest in the hedge fund I am starting later this afternoon (full disclosure, you may lose your money)

Here goes:

  • Renn says Taibbi blames Wall Street for Rhode Island pension cuts and lets Dems off the hook, including Providence Mayor Angel Taveras because he never worked on Wall Street.As a factual matter, this is not why Mayor Taveras does not reap the same treatment as does Raimondo. It’s well-known that Taveras cut pensions by sitting down and negotiating with labor while Raimondo fist-pumped at rallies and pushed through severe cuts that union leaders vociferously and publicly opposed. He’s just wrong on this point.As far as blaming Wall Street rather than Rhode Island Democrats. Yes, local liberals deserve much fault, and I would love to see a Rolling Stone article or MSNBC segment about how often Ocean State Democrats side with Wall Street interests over local retirees. (I believe we are still the only state in the nation to have a law that guarantees bondholders get paid before retirees.) But again Renn is wrong when he asserts that Taibbi says Wall Street and/or its shibboleths are “responsible” for pension cuts in Rhode Island. Rather Taibbi says they helped fund a campaign to do so and that they benefited from it.
  • “Where’s the evidence,” writes Renn. Taibbi “only makes two actual attempts to link Raimondo to a hedge fund plot.” There it is, the evidence! Oh wait, only two pieces of evidence. Nevermind. Does journalism critical of Wall Street require at least three? Or just at least one more than the author can dig up?What’s even more rich is that Renn does absolutely nothing to discredit the evidence!!First, he offers the ridiculous false equivalent of noting that labor supported Raimondo too, so they must be in on the scam as well. I don’t believe Renn believes that. Labor bet that Raimndo could do less damage to their interests than Kerry King – a bet they lost in spectacular fashion, I might add. I’m sure most union members wish they backed Tom Sgouros rather than Raimondo to run for treasurer. Wall Street, on the other hand, I would guess is pretty happy with how it worked out.Secondly, he says Taibbi’s evidence falls flat because he “quotes a third party.” Not only is quoting a third party more commonly referred to as “sourcing” information in the act of journalism, but Renn doesn’t even try to discredit Taibbi’s source.
  • Renn’s big picture isn’t all that big. In fact, it read like what one might call “innuendo, not evidence.””Taibbi seems to think if the government is spending money on anything he doesn’t like, from hedge fund fees to the bone-headed state investment in video game company 38 Studios, then the state cut the pensions specifically to fund those bogus expenditures,” he wrote.
  • My favorite part is when claims that smaller risks are illogical. Vegas should hire Renn as a consultant for roulette players. Though maybe the Manhattan Institute pays better to convince taxpayers to bet big on Wall Street.

Taibbi on TV: pension deform is wealth transfer to Wall St


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taibbi democracy nowIn October of 2011, when Rhode Island’s ruling class was drooling all over Gina Raimondo’s efforts to deform public sector retirement plans, a group of outcasts were occupying Burnside Park to call attention to Wall Street greed.

Two years later, Rolling Stone has a blockbuster story focusing on Raimondo and Rhode Island’s pension deform called: “Looting the Pension Funds: All across America, Wall Street is grabbing money meant for public workers.” If you haven’t read it yet, you should. Or, at least watch Matt Taibbi talk about it on Democracy Now!.

He calls the COLA freeze “wealth transfer from teachers, cops and firemen to billionaire hedge fund managers” and calls John Arnold, the moneyman behind EngageRI, to “the new Koch brothers figure.”

He also says, “Pension funds are sort of the last great big unguarded piles of money in this country and there are going to be all sort of operators who try to get their hands on that money.”

The solution that a lot of Wall Street-funded think tanks are coming up with is to get higher returns by putting these funds into alt investments like hedge funds and in a lot of cases what i;m funding is that tee fees that states are paying for these hedge finds and new type of alt investments are actually roughly equal to cuts they are taking from workers.

In the state of Rhode Island, for instance, they’ve froze the cost of living adjustment and frozen COLA roughly equals the fees they are paying to hedge funds in that state. So essentially it’s a wealth transfer from teachers, cops and firemen to billionaire hedge fund managers.