boneyard bill
Veteran Member
Democrats constantly want to paint the Republican Party as the party of the rich, but when it comes to raising money, they don't have a lot of reservations about accepting Wall Street money.
Now we have this report from Politico that suggests that Wall Street money, as well as money from other big businesses would head heavily toward Hillary Clinton if it came down to a choice between her and Rand Paul.
So it turns out that the two candidates most overtly in support of free market "capitalism" are anathema to the capitalists. Indeed, they are viewed as being just as big a threat as the leftist choice of Elizabeth Warren who has expressed her disdain for the free market.
Of course, it isn't the first time that Wall Street abandoned the Republicans.
Of course, it's a little difficult to see why Wall Street didn't like McCain since he rolled over for them every bit as much as Obama did, but Obama did play a big role in turning the House around on its TARP bail-out vote whereas McCain was pretty helpless. So maybe the Wall Street dough was the appropriate pay-off.
At any rate, it seems a strange irony that candidates promoting "free market capitalism" would be viewed to be as threatening to the Wall Street as an overt anti-business candidate. But is it really so ironic? Is it not simply more evidence that a free market is the last thing the modern crony capitalist really wants? Big business doesn't want competition. They want protection.
So here's the what these radical right-wingers are saying:
Radical stuff there. The government should not do business favors. What demagogues?
But the really important point is that these guys DO favor Hillary? So what does that mean? It means that they expect that Hillary WILL do favors for business. And these are many of the same people who lined up behind Obama.
A Cruz nomination, of course, is unlikely because he has veered too far to the right and adopted too uncompromising a position. But Rand Paul has positioned himself in the center-right and just might create a base broad enough to win it. And that scares the hell out of Wall Street.
But it should also be obvious that all that anti-business rhetoric that the Democrats hurl at Republicans is rhetoric and nothing more, and it is clear that Wall Street understands that a whole lot better than Main Street does.
http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=9A8719BC-0553-4D46-926E-893AD6698616
Now we have this report from Politico that suggests that Wall Street money, as well as money from other big businesses would head heavily toward Hillary Clinton if it came down to a choice between her and Rand Paul.
The darkest secret in the big money world of the Republican coastal elite is that the most palatable alternative to a nominee such as Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas or Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky would be Clinton, a familiar face on Wall Street following her tenure as a New York senator with relatively moderate views on taxation and financial regulation.
“If it turns out to be Jeb versus Hillary we would love that and either outcome would be fine,” one top Republican-leaning Wall Street lawyer said over lunch in midtown Manhattan last week. “We could live with either one. Jeb versus Joe Biden would also be fine. It’s Rand Paul or Ted Cruz versus someone like Elizabeth Warren that would be everybody’s worst nightmare.”
So it turns out that the two candidates most overtly in support of free market "capitalism" are anathema to the capitalists. Indeed, they are viewed as being just as big a threat as the leftist choice of Elizabeth Warren who has expressed her disdain for the free market.
Of course, it isn't the first time that Wall Street abandoned the Republicans.
That kind of talk leaves some rich people contemplating the notion of supporting Clinton in what would amount to a reversion to 2008, when Wall Street money went nearly 2 to 1 for then-Sen. Barack Obama over Sen. John McCain. Even those who could never back her don’t see her as a huge threat to the business community.
Of course, it's a little difficult to see why Wall Street didn't like McCain since he rolled over for them every bit as much as Obama did, but Obama did play a big role in turning the House around on its TARP bail-out vote whereas McCain was pretty helpless. So maybe the Wall Street dough was the appropriate pay-off.
At any rate, it seems a strange irony that candidates promoting "free market capitalism" would be viewed to be as threatening to the Wall Street as an overt anti-business candidate. But is it really so ironic? Is it not simply more evidence that a free market is the last thing the modern crony capitalist really wants? Big business doesn't want competition. They want protection.
So here's the what these radical right-wingers are saying:
This line of thinking is a direct response to fiery rhetoric from people like Rand Paul, who used the 2013 CPAC conference in Washington to rip the financial industry, saying “there is nothing conservative about bailing out Wall Street.”
Cruz fired up an activist gathering in New Hampshire earlier this month with the kind of provocative populist message that makes bankers very nervous. “The rich and powerful, those who walk the corridors of power, are getting fat and happy,” Cruz thundered. At the same event, Paul argued that the GOP “cannot be the party of fat cats, rich people and Wall Street.”
Radical stuff there. The government should not do business favors. What demagogues?
But the really important point is that these guys DO favor Hillary? So what does that mean? It means that they expect that Hillary WILL do favors for business. And these are many of the same people who lined up behind Obama.
A Cruz nomination, of course, is unlikely because he has veered too far to the right and adopted too uncompromising a position. But Rand Paul has positioned himself in the center-right and just might create a base broad enough to win it. And that scares the hell out of Wall Street.
But it should also be obvious that all that anti-business rhetoric that the Democrats hurl at Republicans is rhetoric and nothing more, and it is clear that Wall Street understands that a whole lot better than Main Street does.
http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=9A8719BC-0553-4D46-926E-893AD6698616