Needless to say, Visa and the others were adamantly opposed to the legislation. It was a very "bad bill," in the words of Visa's general counsel.4
One would think that this piece of legislation would appeal to Pelosi. She had been outspoken about antitrust problems posed by insurance, oil, and pharmaceutical companies. And she was vocal about the need for controlling the interest rates individual banks charged to use their credit cards. This particular bill had grown out of a House Judiciary Committee Antitrust Task Force Subcommittee study.5 Big lobbying groups like the National Retail Federation and the National Grocers Association were strongly in favor of it. Indeed, the Maplight Foundation looked at the campaign contributors pushing for this bill on both sides of the aisle and found that Pelosi received twice as many contributions from supporters than from opponents. On top of that, the bill was popular with the public, too. One survey revealed that a whopping 77% of voters were in favor of its passage.6
In fact, the bill did pass in the Judiciary Committee on a 19–16 vote, with yeas from 10 Democrats and 9 Republicans. Supporters of the bill were excited. "There is certainly time for the bill to reach a vote before the full House before the end of the year," said one. It was only mid-July.7
The National Association of Convenience Stores lobbied for a vote. "It is imperative to tell your Representative to request a vote on the House Floor from Nancy Pelosi," the association wrote to its members. Supporters of the bill waited. And waited. And waited. Speaker Pelosi made sure it never got a hearing on the House floor.
Around the same time, Congressman Peter Welch of Vermont introduced a second bill on interchange fees. Called the Credit Card Interchange Fee Act of 2008, it did not go as far as the Credit Card Fair Fee Act. Welch's bill was merely a call for transparency: it would require the credit card firms to let consumers know how much they were paying in interchange fees. Again, Visa was adamantly opposed. This second bill suffered the same fate as the first, never making it to the House floor.
The following year, both bills were reintroduced. Conyers's bill, now called the Credit Card Fair Fee Act of 2009, had even more support this time, including among conservative Republicans like Joe Barton of Texas and liberals like Zoe Lofgren of California. Welch reintroduced his bill as well. Yet again, neither made it to the House floor.
To be sure, Speaker Pelosi did champion a credit card reform bill, one that did become law, but it focused on interest rates charged by the banks. The Credit Card Reform Act provided consumers more information about credit card fees and prevented the issuers of credit cards from jacking up rates. Pelosi declared, on November 4, 2009, that the Credit Card Reform Act was a great victory. "Today, the House voted overwhelmingly to send a strong and clear message to credit card companies; we will hold you accountable for your anti-consumer practices," she said.8 None of this affected Visa, however, only its client banks. Interchange fees were not touched, though the bill contained a vague clause stating that the issue should be "studied." Little surprise, then, that Visa stock went up when the bill passed. Having squelched legislative action on interchange fees for more than two years, Speaker Pelosi and her husband saw their Visa stock climb in value. The IPO shares they had purchased soared by 203% from where they began, while the stock market as a whole was down 15% during the same period. Isn't crony capitalism beautiful?
Congress did eventually act to deal with credit card swipe fees. But Speaker of the House Pelosi had little to do with it. The Frank-Dodd Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act included a clause that required the Federal Reserve Bank to study and take action on the matter. Pelosi was pushed by her colleagues to support these efforts, but remained outside the fray.9
All too often we think of corporate interests in terms of campaign contributions or lobbyists. There is a more direct path for corporations and executives to advance their interests: help politicians get rich.
Companies recognize the importance of having friends in powerful places, and granting them access to an IPO is one way to reward them. Members of Congress often participate in IPOs that are difficult, if not close to impossible, for ordinary Americans to join. Pelosi and her husband have been involved in no less than ten lucrative IPOs during her congressional career. Not all IPOs, of course, are beyond the public's reach. And some are available by auction, theoretically making them accessible to everyone (assuming your broker is handling the auction). Still, the Pelosis' track record for IPO participation is impressive. These transactions have played a role in making the Pelosis wealthy.
PROTECTING OUR INVESTMENT
Often the Pelosis received stock in an IPO and then sold it days later for a huge profit. In 1993, they bought IPO shares in Gupta, a high-tech company. After the price soared 88%, they sold it the next day. They did the same when they participated in IPOs involving Netscape and UUNet, both of which doubled in value the same day. They also gained access to other oversubscribed IPOs, including those of Remedy Corporate, Opal, Legato Systems, and Act Networks. They sold all of them within a month or two for hefty profits.
The Pelosis may well have participated in even more IPOs, but Nancy Pelosi's financial disclosure forms often obscure dates on which they bought stocks. In December 1999, for example, they bought between $250,000 and $500,000 worth of stock in a high-tech company called OnDisplay. The Pelosis don't tell you exactly when they got the shares; they simply list "2X various dates" for the transactions on the congresswoman's disclosure form. OnDisplay went public in mid-December of that year, so the purchases must have happened in that month. And the investment worked out very well. Months later, OnDisplay was bought out by Vignette, and the Pelosis made up to $1 million in capital gains. Interestingly, Vignette's IPO was underwritten by William Hambrecht, an investment banker, a longtime friend of Nancy Pelosi's, and a major campaign contributor.
A few years later, the same Bill Hambrecht went before the House Finance Committee, chaired by Barney Frank, a Pelosi ally, to push for a change in the registration process for stock IPOs, an exemption called Regulation A. Under current law, a company that plans an IPO of less than $5 million in stock gets an exemption from detailed reporting. Hambrecht wanted the exemption raised to $30 million, which would greatly benefit his business, making IPOs easier, quicker, and far less expensive. As the hearings began, Congressman Frank said, "I should note also that it was Speaker Pelosi who first called this to our attention earlier in the year. It is something that the speaker has taken a great interest in because of her interest in job creation, so we have had to find a way to have this hearing."10 Indeed!
Pelosi is not alone in benefiting from IPOs. Other lawmakers have profited from public offerings issued by companies and entities interested in currying favor in Washington. Senator Robert Torricelli, for example, made $70,000 in one day, courtesy of a New Jersey bank's IPO. In 1997 alone, Torricelli was involved in no fewer than nine stock IPOs. Senator Jeff Bingaman enjoyed a 378% return on his investment in Avanex after just one day of trading. Senator Barbara Boxer reaped rich returns after she was given the chance to participate in IPOs involving Avenue A (up 200% the first day) and Interwave Communications (up 184%).11 There are no doubt many other lawmakers who have participated in IPOs, but they are not required to designate their stock transactions as such. And it is extremely difficult to track IPO transactions given to politicians.
Congressman Gary Ackerman was given access to stock in a private company—and he didn't even need to use his own money to make a large profit. Ackerman, who sits on the Financial Services Committee, had the opportunity in 2002 to buy private shares in a company called Xenonics, which makes military-related technologies. The investment didn't cost Ackerman one cent. The firm's biggest shareholder, Selig Zises, loaned the congressman $14,000 to buy the stock. "Gary is one of my closest friends," explained Mr. Zises. "I was only happy for Gary to make some money. If the thing succeeded, he paid me back."12
Ackerman used his position as a congressman, and as a fervent supporter of Israe
l, to arrange a meeting between Xenonics executives and Israeli officials to discuss a deal involving the company's night-vision systems. After the company went public in 2005, Ackerman was able to sell his shares for more than $100,000.13
Did Ackerman do anything wrong? Most of us would say yes! But experts say that based on current rules, the only thing he did wrong was not have a written agreement covering the loan. Otherwise, it was all aboveboard—at least according to House ethics rules. Think of it: you can get IPO shares in a company, buy them with money from a friend, make lots of money, and your only mistake is not writing the loan down on paper.14
Other members of Congress could be singled out too. But Nancy Pelosi stands out for two reasons: not only is she enormously wealthy, and thus (like John Kerry) able to invest in large amounts, she is also one of the highest-ranking members of the House. There are many companies that want to curry favor with the Speaker or majority leader of the House of Representatives.
One of the IPOs that the Pelosis participated in was Clean Energy Fuels, in which they landed up to $100,000 of stock. The company was founded by Texas billionaire T. Boone Pickens, who wanted to promote the use of liquid natural gas as a solution to America's dependence on foreign energy. In other words, the company was hoping to exploit America's vast natural gas reserves while reducing our dependence on petroleum. Arguably, that's a fine goal. As the Wall Street Journal noted at the time, expanding natural gas was a key plank of the Democratic Party's energy platform.15 What isn't so fine is that the Pelosis now had a financial stake in the issue. As Speaker, Nancy Pelosi pushed a series of bills that would benefit Clean Energy Fuels. The stock did well. The Pelosis got it at around $12 a share. By April 2010, it was trading at more than $20 a share.
The Pelosis' investment in natural gas did not end there. In November 2007, they participated in yet another IPO, this one involving Quest Energy Partners. They bought up to $500,000 in what was described by investment advisers as "a company that exploits and develops natural gas properties." (This IPO was handled by Wachovia Securities.)16
Pelosi became a champion of natural gas, pushing for tax benefits as well as aggressively backing global warming legislation that would tax carbon emissions. Natural gas would benefit enormously if any of these bills became law. Pelosi went so far as to state on Meet the Press, "I believe in natural gas as a clean, cheap alternative to fossil fuels." (Of course, natural gas is a fossil fuel.) There is nothing wrong with a policy decision to reduce our dependence on foreign oil. But there is something wrong when the policymaker has a financial stake in the game.
In 2008, Clean Energy Fuels also backed California Proposition 10, a ballot initiative that would require the state to float a $5 billion bond offering to subsidize the purchase of "alternative fuel" vehicles. Clean Energy Fuels donated at least $3.2 million to the ballot campaign. Nancy Pelosi endorsed the initiative.
In corporate America this would be a clear conflict of interest. Persuading a corporation to spend money on an initiative that you as an executive would personally profit from would raise huge questions. And if you were a middle-level employee in the executive branch of government, such a conflict of interest would trigger an investigation. Trying to help companies in which you have a large financial stake become more profitable through congressional legislation is the very definition of conflict of interest. But Pelosi tried to turn what was a vice for most everyone else into a virtue. "I'm investing in something I believe in," she told Meet the Press host Tom Brokaw. "I believe in natural gas as a clean, cheap alternative to fossil fuel." But, of course, she was also investing in something she could make more profitable by changing government policy. When Brokaw asked her that very question, she responded, "That's the marketplace."17
But it's a marketplace where politicians get to set the terms and the rules and influence the outcome. Accumulating wealth or growing the wealth you already have is much easier when you have a piece of the action.
4. THIS LAND IS MY LAND
RECALL THE STORY that opened this book, of Dennis Hastert's $10 million gain during his speakership. Unlike many of his colleagues, Hastert was never much of a stock trader. So how exactly did he do it?
By following George Washington Plunkitt's lead, in the form of a land deal. For Plunkitt, this entailed buying up land that he knew the government would need to purchase in the not too distant future and then selling it to the government for a healthy profit. Today, such a blatant move would appear too crude. Yet the land deal survives in disguised form. The Permanent Political Class has become more sophisticated in how it enriches itself by mixing real estate investments with taxpayer money. It is completely legal. Indeed, congressional ethics committees have even deemed it "ethical." And land deals are easier to camouflage than stock transactions. You can be fuzzy about the location of the property, and since there is no set price for the land, as there is for shares of stock, you can mask your profits more easily.
In 2002, Hastert bought a 195-acre farm on Little Rock Creek, in Kendall County, Illinois. He purchased it in July, just before the state's transportation secretary, Kirk Brown, approved the design of a land corridor for a road called the Prairie Parkway, on July 31. The farm was just 2.4 miles from the parkway corridor and 5 miles from the nearest proposed highway interchange. In February 2004, Hastert and two partners made a second land purchase. They formed a trust and bought another 69 acres right by the interchange in Plano, Illinois. They paid $15,000 an acre. Hastert reported this on his financial disclosure form, but his name does not appear on real estate records. Instead, Kendall County public records show that a Little Rock Trust #225 acquired the property. On his disclosure form, Hastert listed the investment simply as "¼ share in 69 acres (Plano, IL.)," giving no address or parcel number, as he is required to do by House rules.
Plano is smack dab in the middle of farm country. It is the birthplace of the mechanical reaper. It boasts a population of about 5,000. It's also the town where Hastert has maintained his residence. As farmland those 69 acres were of some value. But as a possible residential site, where the land could be split up and developed, the sky was the limit. And that's what was intended: the Robert Arthur Land Company, through an entity called RALC Plano, was developing a residential community called North County, which would include more than 1,600 acres of land (including Hastert's acreage) as well as 33 acres of commercial enterprises and retail shops. In addition, 18 acres were set aside for a public school.
To create such a large residential community in a rural area, you need roads. Wide roads. The Kendall County Board had already approved the construction of an interchange on nearby Glena Road. But someone had to pay for it.
WE BUILD THE SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE A ROAD
Two months after Speaker Hastert purchased his share in the land, the most powerful man in Congress inserted a $207 million earmark into the federal highway bill to begin building on the Prairie Parkway. An earmark is a way for members of Congress to get money for specific, often local projects. In the words of the White House Office of Management and Budget, it's a way that "circumvents otherwise applicable merit-based or competitive allocation processes" to make favored projects happen.1
Apparently not content with just a quarter share of 69 acres, a few months later (May 2, 2005) Hastert and his wife transferred an additional 69 acres of land to the Little Rock Trust. Seven months after that (December 7, 2005), a little more than a year after he made the first Plano land purchase, and with the Prairie Parkway in the works, the land was sold for $4.9 million. Land that had been purchased for $15,000 per acre was now sold for $36,000 a acre—a 140% profit.
According to Hastert's personal financial disclosure, these sales amounted to transactions of between $2 million and $10 million for his personal stake. Not a bad return for a short-term investment.2
You and I as taxpayers helped Hastert become wealthy. Involuntarily, of course.
Imagine for a moment that Hastert was not a member of the political class
but instead was a corporate executive or a school superintendent. What would happen if he used corporate or county assets in a way that would personally benefit his real estate holdings? If discovered, he would at a minimum get fired. He might even be sued, or charged with criminal fraud. But what Hastert did as a politician is common among the political class.
Members of Congress have used federal earmarks to enhance the value of their own real estate holdings in several ways: by extending a light rail mass transit line near their property, by expanding an airport, or by cleaning up a nearby shoreline. Federal funds have been used to build roads, beautify land, and upgrade neighborhoods near commercial and residential real estate owned by legislators, substantially increasing values and the net worth of our elected officials, courtesy of taxpayer money. Not only is this legal—by the bizarre standards of the Permanent Political Class—it's also deemed "ethical." Congressional ethics rules simply say that as long as a member can demonstrate that at least one other person will benefit from an earmark, that earmark is in the "public interest." Try out that ethical standard at your job and see how it works for you.
Dennis Hastert represented a rural district in Illinois. The Speaker of the House who followed him, Nancy Pelosi, represents urban San Francisco. Unlike Hastert, Pelosi and her husband have a large stock portfolio. But they also have extensive commercial real estate holdings. And like Hastert, Nancy Pelosi has used federal taxpayer money through earmarks to substantially increase the value of those investments.
For years, Nancy Pelosi has pushed for earmarks to construct and ultimately extend San Francisco's so-called Third Street Light Rail Project. In 2004, she boasted to her constituents that she had secured more than $120 million in federal money for the project. Third Street is one of the most expensive light rail projects ever, costing $660 million for just a six-mile route. The light rail system includes distinctive marquee poles with sculptures and mobiles, and new street lighting. The rail line is designed to generate a green light at every intersection so trains can travel smoothly from station to station, stopping traffic along the way.
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