Category: Obama

  • High-powered group, most from Chicago, plans Obama inaugural

    The group overseeing Barack Obama’s Jan. 20 inaugural boasts a bipartisan roster of go-getters, most with deep Chicago roots.

    In addition to Democrats William Daley, Penny Pritzker, John W. Rogers Jr. and Julianna Smoot, Republican Patrick G. Ryan, the businessman who heads Chicago’s bid for the 2016 Olympics, is a co-chair.

    By drawing big names from both parties, Obama is clearly hoping to emphasize his commitment to a bipartisan governing style.

    Ryan’s participation particularly helps boost the image of collegiality. The chairman of Chicago-based Aon Corporation has been a major donor to George W. Bush and the Illinois Republican Party. On the other hand, he is spearheading Chicago’s Olympic bid, and it can’t have hurt that Obama made a video last week extolling the Windy City to the International Olympic Committee.

    The other co-chairs of the inaugural committee are longtime Obama pals, as well as fund-raisers.

    Pritzker, the hotel heiress, and Smoot, a professional Democratic fund-raiser, are credited with Obama’s record-setting campaign war chest.

    Daley, a former Commerce secretary and the brother of Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, is a Chicago bank executive. Rogers, a longtime friend, is the founder of Ariel Capital Management. (His ex-wife, Desirée Rogers, is set to become White House social secretary.)

    The committee will go to some lengths to honor another Obama pledge – to reduce the influence of money on government – by limiting donations to $50,000. George W. Bush’s inaugural committees accepted contributions as high as $250,000, according to the New York Times.

    It will also bar any contributions from corporations, political action committees, lobbyists who are currently registered with the federal government, people who are not citizens of the United States and from registered foreign agents.

    No pricetag has been put on this inaugural, which is expected to draw a record number of people to the Capitol, perhaps in the millions. To get some perspective, Bush spent around $40 million on his inaugural events in 2005, much of which was raised from corporations and lobbyists.

    Committee spokeswoman Linda Douglass said higher costs than usual are expected as a result of the president-elect’s intention to open as many events as possible to the public.

    “This inauguration is more than just a celebration of an election,” she said. “This is an event that can be used to inspire and galvanize the public to act. That is what we’re aiming for.”

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    • New owners take charge of Houston Astros

      November 23, 2011 at 7:38am

      After a long vetting process by Major League Baseball, ownership of the Houston Astros passed Tuesday to businessman Jim Crane and his partners.

    • Brent Scowcroft is Back in the Tent

      This post was archived from createpositivechange.org/. View the original on the Wayback Machine.

    • Malia and Sasha to join elite student body at Sidwell Friends

      Hillary Clinton to State; Timothy F. Geithner to Treasury; Malia and Sasha to Sidwell Friends School.

      Washington got some answers to its transition questions last week, not the least of which was where Barack and Michelle Obama would send their two daughters to school.

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      It was announced Friday that they had chosen Sidwell, a school accustomed to educating the sons and daughters of presidents and other luminaries.

      Sasha, 7, a second-grader, will attend Sidwell’s lower school in Bethesda, Md. Annual tuition for the lower school is $28,442

      Her sister Malia, 10, a fifth-grader, will enroll in Sidwell’s middle school on the campus in Northwest Washington where the annual tuition is $29,442.

      “A number of great schools were considered,” a spokesman for Michelle Obama said, as reported in The Washington Post. “In the end, the Obamas selected the school that was the best fit for what their daughters need right now.”

      The Obamas had also looked at Georgetown Country Day, the Post reported. And they considered Maret School, but did not visit there, according to reports.

      Michelle Rhee, the superintendent of Washington’s public schools, as well as Washington Mayor Adrian Fenty, also talked to the Obamas about their school choice, the Post reported.

      The Obama girls are currently attending the private University of Chicago Laboratory Schools.

      The Post suggested that the Obamas may have selected Sidwell, which has about 1,100 students, because it has experience with the security and privacy issues that surround the presence of children of high-profile parents at the school.

      In addition, three granddaughters of Sen. Joe Biden, the vice-president-elect, attend Sidwell. Malia Obama is friends with at least one of these girls, the Post reported.

      The Biden grandchildren, Maisy, 8, Finnegan, 10, and Naomi, 14, are the children of Biden’s son, Hunter Biden.

      The last presidential offspring to attend Sidwell was Chelsea Clinton, the daughter of Bill and Hillary Clinton who graduated in 1997.

      Both of Richard Nixon’s daughters attended Sidwell before he became president. Tricia Nixon Cox, graduated in 1964. Her sister, now Julie Nixon Eisenhower, attended Sidwell but graduated elsewhere.

      Former Vice President Al Gore’s son, Albert Gore III, graduated from Sidwell in 2001.

      The Quaker school’s other notable alumni include ABC-News anchor Charles Gibson, Ana Gasteyer, a former “Saturday Night Live” regular, and Hanna Holborn Gray, former University of Chicago president.

      The list of people who attended Sidwell but did not graduate from the school includes former First Lady Nancy Reagan, authors Gore Vidal and John Dos Passos, and aviator Charles Lindbergh.

      The Obamas are likely to bump into a wide variety of Washington’s elite at Sidwell open houses.

      Mark Penn, Hillary Clinton’s controversial pollster and a person not liked by the Obama campaign during for the Democratic primaries, has children at Sidwell.

      Daniel H. Mudd, the former CEO and president of Fannie Mae, is a Sidwell graduate and member of the school’s board of trustees.

      Maxine Isaacs, a former aide to Walter Mondale when he was a senator and when he was vice president, is also on the Sidwell board.

      She’s married to James Johnson, another former Fannie Mae chairman who briefly served as one of the leaders of Obama’s vice-presidential search team. He left the post after his former connection to Fannie Mae became controversial.

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      • Carol Bartz may bring new direction to Yahoo

        January 18, 2009 at 12:56pm

        The selection last week of Carol A. Bartz to be CEO of Yahoo Inc. is receiving generally favorable reviews.

      • Robert Rubin’s disciples dominate Obama economic team

        No team of rivals, this.

        If anything, Barack Obama’s economic team is stunning for its homogeneity. Timothy Geithner, Lawrence Summers and Peter Orszag are all proteges of former Treasury Secretary Robert E. Rubin, a centrist economist who was one of the key Democratic architects of the financial deregulation undertaken in the Clinton years.

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        Other Rubin proteges are sprinkled through the president-elect’s economic advisory team, including Michael Froman, his chief of staff at Treasury who followed him to Citigroup, Jason Furman, an economist at the Brookings Institution, and also, James P. Rubin, the former secretary’s son.

        Liberal economist Robert Kuttner, editor of The American Prospect, expresses bafflement at Obama’s decision to pack his team with disciples of Rubin, an advocate of balanced budgets, free trade and financial deregulation – especially given Rubin’s central role at Citigroup, now on the brink of financial disaster.

        “What kind of magic does this man Rubin have?” Kuttner asked in a recent Huffington Post column:

        He was one of the key Democratic architects of the extreme financial deregulation that brought the economy to this pass. At Citi, he was one of the grand strategists of the speculation in securitized loans and off-balance-sheet gimmicks that has brought Citi to the edge of bankruptcy. Yet he continues to fall upwards. Surely Barack Obama must have noticed that Rubin is a false prophet. So why is his entire senior economic group a Team of Rubinistas?

        . . .In fairness, adults are not merely tools of their patrons. In recent months, Larry Summers has disagreed with Rubin on the scale of the needed stimulus. Tim Geithner is for far more regulation than Rubin. Jason Furman, though suggested by Rubin for his campaign post of economic policy director, actually spent more of his career working for Joseph Stiglitz than for Robert Rubin. Peter Orszag has done a fine job as director of the Congressional Budget Office, and is not averse to large scale public spending.

        Kuttner urges Obama to pick at least one senior economic adviser from outside Rubin’s centrist circle who would reflect the more muscular view of the government’s role favored by liberals.

        But New York Times columnist David Leonhardt suggests the old, ideological battles of the Clinton years – known as the “Battle of the Bobs, Rubin versus Reich” – are now irrelevant.

        Explaining the old divide, Leonhardt wrote: “On one side was Clinton’s labor secretary and longtime friend, who argued that the government should invest in roads, bridges, worker training and the like to stimulate the economy and help the middle class. On the other side was Bob Rubin, a former Goldman Sachs executive turned White House aide, who favored reducing the deficit to soothe the bond market, bring down interest rates and get the economy moving again.”

        But today, against the backdrop of the most severe economic downturn since the Great Depression, Leonhardt suggests the “Battle of the Bobs” has given way to a consensus on the need for a vigorous government intervention in the economy.

        Certainly, Geithner is on record in support of regulating financial instruments and Obama himself has pledged to ushering in a period of re-regulation.

        Both the president-elect and his team have also agreed on a massive stimulus plan that if passed by Congress would pump hundreds of billions into an economic jumpstart – hardly Rubin’s old recipe of balanced budgets, deficit reduction and deregulation.

        “Everyone recognizes that we’re looking at deficits of considerable magnitude,” liberal economist Jared Bernstein told the New York Times. “Whether it’s Bob Rubin, Larry Summers or the most conservative economist, that’s a widely shared recognition.”

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        • College presidents may be wearing too many hats

          January 30, 2009 at 9:42am

          Should university presidents sit on corporate boards? Sen. Chuck Grassley doesn’t think so.

        • Muck Tracker Obama Economic Team

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        • Waxman’s coup likely to boost Obama energy agenda

          He has been called the “scariest guy in town” and the Democrats’ Eliot Ness.

          Rep. Henry Waxman, the 69-year-old Californian who wrested control of the powerful Energy and Commerce Committee from Congress’ longest-serving chairman yesterday, is expected to usher in far more activist approach to global warming and energy independence than his predecessor, Michigan Rep. John Dingell.

          And with his longtime chief of staff Phil Schiliro just tapped by President-elect Barack Obama as his liaison with Congress, Waxman is likely to work closely with the new administration, speeding passage of Obama’s health and energy agenda, which includes spending $150 billion on renewable fuel research and one million new hybrid cars.

          “We are at a unique moment in history,” Waxman told reporters after the secret-ballot vote. “Seniority is important, but it should not be a grant of property rights to be chairman for three decades or more.”

          Waxman developed a reputation as a tough and tenacious inquisitor as chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, where he churned out an endless series of reports on issues ranging from Halliburton’s excessive billing on contracts in Iraq to the ineffectiveness of abstinence-only education programs.

          Though he represents one of the most liberal and affluent districts in Congress – an area that includes Beverly Hills, West Hollywood and Santa Monica – there is nothing slick about the man.

          He grew up in an apartment over a Watts grocery store owned by his father, the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants. After a stint in the California assembly, he came to Congress as part of the group of post-Watergate reformers known as the Class of 1974.

          “Doing reports, conducting oversight – it’s what he has always done,” Schiliro told the Nation.

          Although both Dingell and Waxman support universal health care, they have fought over the best methods of curbing global warming.

          Dingell, 82, has worked on some environmental legislation, helping pass the Clean Air Act of 1990 and the raising of fuel-efficiency standards on the auto industry last year. But he has resisted previous efforts to raise fuel-efficiency standards, and environmentalists view him as an impediment.

          House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who was officially neutral in the Waxman-Dingell contest, circumvented Dingell last year by creating a temporary global warming committee chaired by Rep. Edward J. Markey of MA., a close ally.

          While Dingell’s biggest contributors have been Detroit’s automakers and telecommunications giants – hardly surprising for a Michigan lawmaker and commerce chairman – Waxman’s are health-care players and unions.

          The Center for Responsive Politics lists Dingell’s top donors as General Motors, Ford, BellSouth and DaimlerChrysler, AT&T and Comcast, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

          Waxman’s biggest contributors are the American Association for Justice, a lawyers’ trade group, the National Association of Letter Carriers, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the American Hospital Association, the Service Employees International Union and the American Medical Association, according to the watchdog group.

          The leadership change is a blow to the already-reeling auto industry, another confirmation of their diminished power on Capitol Hill. Republicans, meanwhile, expressed concern that the Democratic party is shifting leftward.

          “This decision sends a troubling signal from a Majority that has promised to govern from the center,” House Minority Leader John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) said in a statement. “They moved away from Chairman Dingell because he is committed to approaching energy and environmental issues in a manner that protects American jobs.”

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