Author: muckety

  • Socialite Marylou Whitney makes grand gesture – at Eliot Spitzer’s expense

    Eliot Spitzer got another lesson in political humility from one of New York’s wealthiest and most-connected society mavens this week.

    The disgraced former governor of New York was recalled – or more accurately, mocked – at Saratoga Racetrack, when a pair of colts named “Luv Gov” and “Ninth Client,” made their debut at the races. The colts’ owners are Marylou Whitney, the so-called Queen of Saratoga, and her third husband, John Hendrickson.

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    “We just wanted to have a horse named after a big part of New York history,” Hendrickson told the Albany Times-Union. “Don’t you think a dead heat with Skipadate and Ninth Client is a classic?”

    Ouch.

    “Luv Gov” was part of the headline splashed across the cover of the New York Daily News after Spitzer was caught on a federal wiretap arranging a visit with a high-priced prostitute. The wiretap captured the voice of a man identified in court papers as Client 9, arranging to have a prostitute travel from New York to Washington to meet him. After Spitzer was identified as Client 9, the governor was engulfed in a political furor, and resigned a few days later.

    So why would would an 82-year-old socialite, famous for her philanthropy and her parties, seek to rub Spitzer’s face in that?

    Whitney, as it turns out, had a history with the former governor. The grand dame of racing had been the honorary chairwoman of Empire Racing Associates, a consortium of companies bidding to take over the racing franchise in New York State from the not-for-profit New York Racing Association. Whitney was a powerful advocate of the take-over, arguing that a for-profit company would “protect Saratoga’s historic traditions and put horse racing first.”

    Spitzer, however, nixed the deal, suggesting antitrust and other concerns involving Empire’s partners, Magna Entertainment and Churchill Downs.

    If that wasn’t enough, Whitney was reportedly outraged by Spitzer’s efforts to sink the fortunes of her longtime friend, Joseph Bruno, until recently, the leader of the state Senate and a longtime advocate of horse racing.

    When news broke that Spitzer’s aides had tracked Bruno’s use of state aircraft for personal travel, and then leaked their findings to the press, Whitney told the New York Times, “It made me very unhappy.”

    The Times described her reaction this way: “Squinting ever so slightly, vowels stiffening, she added: ‘I stand by him. We all do.’”

    When Bruno resigned last month, Whitney broke down during an interview with an Albany television station. She described him as a longtime advocate of horse racing, as well as of Saratoga County, which he had represented for more than three decades.

    Whitney first came to Saratoga 50 years ago, on the arm of her late husband, Cornelius Vanderbilt “Sonny” Whitney, the scion of both the Vanderbilt and Whitney fortunes. When he died at 93 in 1992, he reportedly left his widow $100 million.

    She has used that money, among other things, to carry on her late husband’s passion for horse breeding and racing., as well as for Saratoga Springs. Her colt Birdstone, a product of Marylou Whitney Stables in Lexington, Ky., defeated Smarty Jones in the 2004 Belmont Stakes.

    The socialite famous for grand gestures – arriving at charity balls by balloon, in carriages shaped like pumpkins, or towed by horses disguised as unicorns – has also given millions of dollars to the Saratoga Performing Arts Center, the national museum of dance in Saratoga, Saratoga Hospital, and a thoroughbred retirement fund.

    About 10 years ago, she married Hendrickson, a former aide to Gov. Walter J. Hickel of Alaska. Hendrickson, who is 39 years her junior, has run many of her business affairs, among other things, negotiating the sale of a large tract of Whitney family property in the Adirondacks to the state of New York for a hefty price.

    Whitney remains active despite suffering a stroke in 2006, hosting her traditional opening day luncheon in Saratoga’s Carousel Restaurant late last month.

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  • Anne Korin’s profile is rising with the price of crude oil

    Anne Korin is accustomed to writing for policy wonks who read Foreign Affairs and testifying about global security before politicians in Congress, but with the rising price of oil her message may soon be reaching a wider audience.

    Korin’s recent speech at the National Conservative Student Conference on reducing U.S. dependence on foreign oil seems to have touched the nerves of audience members and viewers of CSPAN who saw her speech. She is the co-director of the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security and was one of the keynote speakers during Monday’s opening session of the weeklong conference, hosted by the Young America’s Foundation in Washington.

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    Pervious conference speakers have included conservative heavyweights such as Ronald Reagan, Milton Friedman, Ann Coulter, Sean Hannity and John Ashcroft.

    Korin’s talk addressed the power of the OPEC cartel and its ability to control supply of a strategic commodity on the global market – oil. In many ways her statistics-laden speech was an expansion on her testimony in May before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.

    Anne Korin
    Anne Korin

    “In 2006, the United States spent about $260 billion on foreign crude oil and refined petroleum products,” Korin told the committee. “This year, with oil hovering over $125 a barrel, the figure could surpass $500 billion, the equivalent of our defense budget. At today’s prices, foreign oil producers are extracting a tax of more than $1,600 a year from every American man, woman and child.”

    During the past 30 years non-OPEC production of oil has doubled while OPEC production has stayed nearly the same, at the same time global demand has grown, according the Korin’s testimony.

    Although Korin favors increased domestic production of oil, she does not see this as a solution our increasing dependence on foreign sources. The United States has just 3% of the world’s oil reserves while consuming 25% of the world’s production.

    Korin argues that if the U.S. increases production of domestic sources through offshore drilling or exploration in Alaska, OPEC will decrease production by a corresponding amount. “What happens every time non-OPEC drills more?” Korin asked in her speech. “OPEC drills less. It is a precise mirror image.”

    Despite efforts to increase supplies and decrease demand domestically, Korin predicted world oil supplies will remain constant because OPEC will adjust supplies to create an equilibrium. Because of this, and the increased demand for oil from developing nations, global oil prices have risen quickly, according to Korin.

    Another example of OPEC deliberately constraining supply was the 2007 addition of two new countries to the cartel. “In 2007, OPEC expanded its member roster to include Ecuador and Angola – together the two had accounted for nearly 2.4 mbd (million barrels a day) of non-OPEC oil, Korin testified to Congress. “Yet, total OPEC production remained constant, allowing existing members to reduce production, This translates into a net reduction in non-OPEC supply with no equivalent increase in OPEC supply. This is equivalent to the production of Norway disappearing off the market.”

    Choice and competition in the transportation sector

    One of the solutions to U.S. dependence on foreign supplies, she said, is “choice and competition in the transportation sector.” Korin would like to see auto manufacturers be required to make every new car a flex fuel vehicle, capable of running on any combination of gasoline, ethanol or methanol.

    Automakers could add this capability to the 17 million new cars that hit the roads each year for just $100 more per car, according to Korin.

    One problem, she said, is that the U.S. places a 54-cent-per-gallon tariff on imported ethanol, yet there is no tariff on imported oil. Korin traces this to the farm lobby protecting ethanol made domestically from corn.

    Another transportation fuel choice cited by Korin is electricity. She believes that plug-in hybrid vehicles are a major component of creating energy independence because electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles would be able to run on hydroelectric power, solar power, wind power, nuclear power and other types of electric power.

    Korin maintains that a combination of plug-in hybrids and standard flex fuel vehicles will allow the U.S. to eliminate the use of foreign oil and achieve domestic energy independence.

    “Let’s say you are Kentucky, then most of the electricity you are driving on is coal, and the alcohol you’re driving on is also probably methanol from coal,” she said. “If you happen to be in Iowa then that ethanol is from corn. If you happen to be in New York then it’s ethanol from sugar cane barged in from Latin America.”

    “This is how we strip oil of its strategic value,” she said. “This is choice and competition. If we do not do this then we are guaranteed to be in a situation in which, in the words of the International Energy Agency, the economic well being of the world is in the hands of five or six countries in the Middle East. We are guaranteed to keep bleeding wealth and we are guaranteed to see our economic sovereignty being weakened.”

    Korin concluded her speech with this:

    “We talked about some things we can do. We have a responsibility to make them happen. These are very straight forward non-interventionist policies. Requiring new cars to be flex fuel vehicles. Repeal the tariff on ethanol imports. And if we want to encourage more rapid commercialization of plug-in hybrids…a consumer tax credit…to drop the cost for early adopters and push this technology into the market quicker. If we do this we change the situation. If we don’t do this we are all responsible for the diminishment of this country and our inability to prevail in the long war of the 21st century.”

    Quick statistics from Anne Korin’s speech

    • The U.S. has about 3% of the world’s conventional oil reserves
    • The U.S. accounts for about 25% of the world’s oil demand
    • During the oil embargo on the 1970’s the U.S. imported about 30% of its oil
    • Today we import over 60% of our oil and the number continues to grow
    • The transportation sector is 98% petroleum dependent
    • 66% of our oil consumption is in the transportation sector
    • 2% of our electricity generation comes from oil
    • 35 years ago the countries of OPEC produced 30 million barrels of oil per day
    • Today the countries of OPEC produce 32 million barrels of oil per day
    • In the same 35 years non OPEC production of oil has doubled
    • OPEC countries have 75% of the world’s oil reserves
    • The global oil market is currently about 85 million barrels of oil per day
    • Flex fuel vehicles can run on any combination of gasoline, ethanol or methanol
    • 90% of cars sold in Brazil in 2008 are flex fuel vehicles
    • The U.S. produces its ethanol from corn
    • Brazil produces its ethanol from sugar cane
    • It is much cheaper and more efficient to produce ethanol from sugar can than from corn
    • There are 100 countries in the world with a suitable climate for producing sugar cane
    • All cars that General Motors will sell in Brazil in 2008 will be flex fuel vehicles
    • There is no tariff on imported oil in the U.S.
    • There is a 54 cent per gallon tariff on imported ethanol in the U.S.
    • It cost an automaker $100 more to make a flex fuel vehicle than one that runs only on gas
    • 17 million cars are sold in the U.S. each year
    • The average lifespan of a vehicle in the U.S. is about 17 years

    Watch the speech on YouTube (part 1 of 7)

    Part 2 of video

    Part 3 of video

    Part 4 of video
    Part 5 of video
    Part 6 of video
    Part 7 of video

    Other related materials by Anne Korin
    Terrorism goes to sea – By Anne Korin – Foreign Affairs
    Turning Oil into Salt – By R. James Woolsey & Anne Korin – National Review Online

  • Golf and cards consumed too much of Cayne’s final days at Bear Stearns

    Recent history has not been kind to James E. Cayne, the CEO who has been blamed for the collapse of Bear Stearns, the investment bank that was sold at a bargain basement price to JP Morgan Chase earlier this year.

    “Perhaps unfairly, he will probably go down in the annals of finance as the Nero of the credit crisis,” writes William D. Cohan, in story to be published in the Aug. 18 edition of Fortune magazine.

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    “Instead of fiddling while Bear Stearns burned, his detractors say he was golfing too regularly at the Hollywood Golf Club in Deal, N.J., and playing championship-level bridge in Nashville, San Francisco and Detroit.”

    Cohan’s profile is based on a series of interviews with Cayne, the first he has granted since Bear Stearns was sold.

    Among other details, the story reveals that Cayne battled a life-threatening illness last September as his company’s troubles began to mount.

    On Sept. 11, 2007, Cayne was hospitalized with what turned out to be sepsis. In his case, the blood infection had begun with an infected prostate.

    Cayne lost 30 pounds during his 10-day stay in the hospital.

    His illness was not made public for fear the news hurt his firm’s stock price.

    The story also expands upon earlier reports that Cayne was literally out-of-touch during parts of the Bear Stearns crisis, away from the home office and playing bridge.

    “When playing tournaments, Cayne, who only recently got his first cell phone and has no BlackBerry, was hard to reach,” Cohan writes.

    Consequently, Cayne, 74, seems to always be getting bad news late and arriving at key meetings after they have started.

    And by his own admission, he wasn’t aware of how much Bear Stearns had borrowed to invest in two of its mortgage-based hedge funds.

    “I didn’t stop it. I didn’t rein in the leverage,” Cayne says.

    When the value of the funds dropped, lenders started pounding on Bear Stearns’ door and the company couldn’t meet its obligations.

    At this point, Cayne, who was in the past a confident, instinctive decision-maker, describes himself as confused and hesitant.

    “It was not knowing what to do,” he says. “It’s not being able to make a definitive decision one way or the other, because I just couldn’t tell you what was going to happen.”

    Under Cayne’s leadership prior to the crisis, the value of Bear Stearns’ stock had risen to as much as $143 a share, making Cayne and many other employees very rich.

    The sale of the firm cost Cayne $1 billion, leaving him with a net worth of $600 million.

    After the sale, Cayne did not receive “a face-saving senior-level job at JP Morgan Chase,” Cohan writes.

    Alan “Ace” Greenberg, the Bear Stearns CEO before Cayne, was named vice chairman emeritus at JP Morgan. Alan Schwartz, who took over as CEO at Bear Stearns after Cayne, was also offered a position at JP Morgan, though he’s leaving at the end of the month.

    In the profile, Cayne takes a few shots at Greenberg, the man who hired him at Bear Stearns in part because he and Cayne both played bridge.

    And Cayne recalls that during his job interview Greenberg asked him how well he played.

    “‘Mr. Greenberg,’” Cayne responded. “‘If you study bridge the rest of your life, if you play with the best partners and you achieve your potential, you will never play bridge like I play bridge.’”

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  • Columnist Robert Novak retires after ‘dire’ prognosis

    Conservative columnist Robert Novak announced his immediate retirement Monday after being told his prognosis for a malignant brain tumor was “dire.”

    Novak, 77, said he plans to focus all his energies on his treatment and recovery, according to a story in the Chicago Sun-Times, his home paper. “The details are being worked out with the doctors this week, but the tentative plan is for radiation and chemotherapy,” he told the paper.

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    One of the nation’s most influential and widely read syndicated columnists, Novak revealed several days ago that he had a brain tumor and was undergoing testing at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

    That diagnosis came less than a week after he struck an elderly pedestrian with his Corvette in downtown Washington and drove away. At the time, he said he was not aware he hit anyone, and received a $50 citation for the accident. The pedestrian was treated for a dislocated shoulder.

    Novak is perhaps best known for outing Valerie Plame as a covert operative of the Central Intelligence Agency in a July, 2003 column, several months after Plame’s husband, Joseph Wilson, had written an op-ed piece questioning the factual justification for the invasion of Iraq.

    The outing created a political furor about the source of Novak’s information, and an investigation that resulted in the conviction of I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, then chief of staff to Vice President Cheney, on charges of perjury and obstruction of justice. President Bush subsequently commuted Libby’s sentence.

    Novak himself avoided any legal entanglement, although Judith Miller, then of the New York Times, was sent to jail for refusing to reveal her sources to a grand jury, even though she had never written about Plame. Novak’s source was eventually revealed to be Richard Armitage, former deputy secretary of state. Novak later acknowledged that he got confirmation of that information from then-White House Political Director Karl Rove.

    Novak launched his career as a political columnist in 1963 as a sidekick to Rowland Evans, and continued writing it even after his partner retired in 1993. Novak was also a longtime co-host of CNN’s Crossfire, and appeared frequently on MSNBC’s Meet the Press and on Fox News, where his scowling presence became almost a caricature of a right-wing pundit.

    Last year, he published a memoir of his life called The Prince of Darkness, using a nickname bestowed by another journalist for his unrelentingly negative view of the world and which he seemed proud to claim.

    In his memoir, he described how he began life as a political centrist and once turned down a job writing editorials for the Wall Street Journal because he didn’t think he was conservative enough.

    Born into a secular Jewish family in Joliet, Ill., Novak converted to Catholicism in the 1990s. His baptism was attended by a bevy of Washington insiders, including journalists Al Hunt and his wife, Judy Woodruff, the late Rep. Henry Hyde and the late Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan. Novak himself liked to quote Moynihan’s quip: “Well, we’ve now made Bob a Catholic. The question is, can we make him a Christian?”

    Novak has been diagnosed with cancer at least three times. He underwent surgery in 2003 to remove a cancerous growth on his kidney and was under medical observation for a possible recurrence.

    He and his wife, Geraldine, who worked for the late Lyndon Baines Johnson, have two children: Alex Novak is the marketing director of Regnery, the conservative publishing house; his daughter, Zelda Caldwell, is a Republican activist who has worked for Dan Quayle and Jack Kemp, among others.

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