The War being Waged on the
TARP Watchdog's Independence
Glenn Greenwald
Sunday
July 26, 2009 08:27 EDT
Audio Interview
found at:
http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2009/07/26/barofsky/index.html
Neil Barofsky,
the chief watchdog over the $700 billion TARP bank bailout
program, is one of those rare creatures in Washington: he
takes very seriously his responsibilities of independent
oversight and accountability. A career prosecutor,
Barofsky is a life-long Democrat who donated money to Obama's
presidential campaign. But ever since he was appointed to
head the oversight office created by Congress when it enacted
TARP -- an office designed to ensure transparency and
accountability at the Treasury Department and in the banking
industry -- he has repeatedly clashed with Obama's Treasury
officials over their lack of transparency in how the trillions
of dollars in TARP-related funds are being sent to and used by
the banking industry. So seriously does Barofsky take
his oversight duties that, as a
Washington Post profile
noted in March, "he refuses to eat with senior administration
officials in the [Treasury] building's executive dining room
to maintain his independence."
Barofksy's clashes with administration
officials have intensified of late. Last week, he
issued a report documenting that the actual amount of
taxpayer money
theoretically put at risk in the bank bailout -- once
Federal Reserve, FDIC and other programs are counted -- is
$23.7 trillion, not the widely cited figure
of $700 billion, a report that prompted attacks from the White
House and Treasury on his credibility. Separately,
Barofsky has continuously disputed White House claims that
it's impossible to account for what has been done by banks
with the TARP funds. Barofsky wants to compel banks to
account for those funds and then publicize that information,
while the administration opposes such efforts, claiming that
accounting for TARP monies is impossible due to the "fungibility" of
those funds. To disprove that claim, Barofsky sent out
voluntary surveys to the bank
which proved that those funds could be tracked (and he
found TARP funds were being used by receiving banks largely to
acquire other institutions and/or create "capital
cushions" rather than increase lending activity, the principal
justification for TARP).
Most significant of all, and obviously due
to Barofsky's truly independent oversight efforts, the Obama
administration is now
attempting to induce the Justice Department to issue a
ruling that
Barofsky's office is not independent at all -- but rather,
is subject to, and under the supervision of, the authority of
Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner. By design, such a
ruling would completely gut Barofsky's ability to compel
transparency and exercise real oversight over how Treasury is
administering TARP, since it would make him subordinate to one
of the very officials whose actions Congress wanted him to
oversee: the Treasury Secretary's. Barofsky has, quite
rightly, protested the administration's efforts to destroy his
independence, and has done so with increasing assertiveness as
the administration's war on his oversight activities has
increased. Why would an administration vowing a New Era
of Transparency wage war on a watchdog whose only mission is
to ensure transparency and accountability in these massive
financial programs?
It should take little
effort to explain the significance of these clashes. The
amount of taxpayer money transferred to the banking industry
or otherwise put at risk for its benefit is astronomical.
Professor Nouriel Roubini argues
in a New York Times Op-Ed
today that actions by the Federal Reserve over the last nine
months helped avert a Depression, while former Governor Eliot
Spitzer
said this week that the Fed has turned into a "Ponzi
scheme" that relies on insider dealing and requires vastly
increased scrutiny. Those claims aren't mutually exclusive.
It's not surprising that transferring extraordinary sums of
taxpayer money to a particular industry will help that
industry avoid collapse, but it is still the case that the
potential for extreme corruption and even theft in such
transactions is enormous (indeed, even Roubini argues that Fed
Chairman Ben Bernake played an important role in enabling the
crisis in the first place). No matter one's views of the
wisdom of the bailout and related programs, transparency,
accountability and independent oversight are absolutely vital,
and that is what Barosksy's office was created to
ensure (though it's unlikely -- given how Washington works --
that Congress actually expected that the person in charge of
that office would take those duties seriously and be willing
to fight with senior administration officials to protect his
independence).
Earlier this week, ABC News'
Jake Tapper conducted a 20-minute podcast interview with
Barofsky, and I really recommend that everyone listen to it
(it can be heard by clicking PLAY on the recorder below or can
be downloaded
here). Barofsky details the war being waged by the
Obama administration -- especially the Treasury Department --
on his independence, as well as their constant and
multi-faceted campaign to impede his efforts to bring
transparency to what is being done with these vast amounts of
money (those obstructionist actions are consistent with the
efforts of Senate leaders to
block a vote on Ron Paul's bill to audit the Fed, a bill
which now has truly bi-partisan and trans-ideological support
among a majority of House members). As a hard-core Obama
supporter, Barofsky is quite obviously dismayed at what he
describes as the failure to adhere to transparency pledges in
these areas. Barofsky is particularly worth listening to
because his integrity, apolitical independence, and
prosecutorial tenacity in imposing accountability are exactly
what our political culture so woefully lacks.