Message 658 of 1495

THE OBAMA BUS.....ONE MORE UNDER?

Obama vetter draws unwanted scrutiny
by Lisa Lerer
Tue Jun 10, 5:37 AM ET

Jim Johnson, the disciplined, discreet and obsessively meticulous vice presidential vetter for Barack Obama, is a stalwart of the Washington establishment.

In the mid-1990s, he headed up a power trifecta: mortgage giant Fannie Mae, the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the Brookings Institution, one of the
city’s most prominent think tanks. At various times, political insiders have floated his name in Democratic administrations for White House chief of staff, Treasury secretary and president of the World Bank.

His circumspect ways – rare in a town known for its shameless attention seekers – have helped make the reserved Minnesotan one of Washington’s most influential powerbrokers and an early pick by the Obama campaign to handle the sensitive search for a running mate.

Now for the rest of the story....see 1st Reply....just saying
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The rest of the story....

Yet despite Johnson’s legendary fastidiousness, his high-profile campaign role has suddenly exposed him to questions about his financial dealings. The questions range from his relationship with the embattled CEO of mortgage lender Countrywide Financial to his more recent oversight roles on various corporate compensation committees that approved hefty executive pay packages.

In a presidential campaign where the subprime mortgage crisis and high corporate salaries figure to be staples of debate, Johnson is now at risk of becoming a political liability for Obama, who’s trying to sell anxious voters on an economic message that calls for stricter financial industry regulation and ridding Washington of special favors and tax breaks for wealthy CEOs.

On Saturday, the Wall Street Journal reported that Johnson received at least $7 million worth of home loans from Countrywide through an informal program for friends of company CEO Angelo Mozilo that offered rates below the market average. At least four of the loans were issued while Johnson was employed either as the CEO or an outside consultant for Fannie Mae.

In 2006, five companies where Johnson served on compensation committees came under fire from Institutional Shareholders Services and The Corporate Library, two corporate compensation research companies, for accounting errors and failing to sufficiently tie executive payment to performance.

On Monday, presumptive Republican nominee John McCain referred to Johnson’s ties to Countrywide in an interview with Fox News.

“I think it suggests a bit of a contradiction talking about how his campaign is gonna be not associated with people like that. Clearly he is very much associated with that,” McCain said.

Countrywide, one of the nation’s biggest lenders, has come under significant scrutiny for its role in the current housing crisis by issuing risky, subprime loans. Obama has criticized the firm’s executives for taking millions in compensation, as consumers struggle to stay in their homes.

For the Obama campaign, the flap emerged as an unwelcome distraction as he kicked off a two-week economic tour in North Carolina—one which threatened to seriously undermine his message.

“It’s the height of hypocrisy for the McCain campaign to try and make (the loans) an issue when John Green, one of John McCain’s top advisors, lobbied for Ameriquest, which was one of the nation’s largest subprime lenders and a key player in the mortgage crisis,” responded the Obama campaign, which described the media scrutiny of the loans as “overblown and irrelevant.”

Signaling the campaign’s intention to fan the flames over Johnson’s ties to Countrywide, McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds issued the following statement in response.

"There is nothing 'overblown and irrelevant' about millions of Americans facing foreclosure and Barack Obama entrusting his most important decision as a presidential candidate to a man who has accepted millions in special loans from a subprime mortgage lender.”

Johnson, who is a vice chairman of the private banking firm Perseus LLC, did not return calls for comment.

Despite the controversy, Democratic insiders maintain that Johnson is highly-skilled at the vetting process, having handled the responsibilities for Walter Mondale in 1984 and John Kerry in 2004.

“He’s been around for a long time and I think he learned from his various experiences,” said former Rep. Martin Frost (D-Texas), now a partner at law firm Polsinelli Shalton Flanigan and Suelthaus. “He’s a very respected person in the Democratic Party. People look to him as having good judgment.”
In 2004, Johnson eventually pared down a wide range of candidates to about 25 serious contenders. A team of about 100 aides poured through their public documents, school transcripts, videos, legislation, and health and military records.

“There was an understanding that first of all the information that is being disclosed is highly confidential,” recalled political consultant Tad Devine, an adviser on the Kerry campaign. “He’s known some of these people for years and years. He has a relationship with them, and they know they could trust him and he would be straight with them.”

For all the work put into the search, the pairing between Kerry and then-North Carolina Sen. John Edwards wasn’t a perfect match. During the campaign, the candidates struggled to warm to each other and eventually failed to mend a frosty relationship.

But the disappointing outcome doesn’t diminish Johnson’s scrutinizing skills, say Democratic insiders, who argue he is an ideal vetter for Obama’s campaign.

“Sen. Obama wants to send the message to the media and the political community that this is going to be a very strong process and it’s going to make a serious decision,” said Democratic political strategist Bill Carrick. “You don’t want to reinvent the wheel.”

Sharkey's question: Is the wheel on BHO's Bus.....damn, its getting crowded under the Bus?

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3 months ago
One more possible Bus-Boy.......the second man on the BHO's VP vetting team.....former Deputy Attorney General Eric Holder.

Holder has also come under Republican criticism for his role in helping fugitive financier Marc Rich get a pardon from President Clinton. Does every Democrat have a skelton.....BHO may have to go outside the party to find someone that he doesn't have to discard.......

This begs the question.....Is Caroline Kennedy safe?.......just saying.....
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SHARKEY

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3 months ago
Considering McCain's own ties to the Keating 5 scandal, and Republican support of the legislation that made the current loan scandal possible, I'd be very careful if I were him of casting stones at this man.

I for one hate overinflated CEO compensation and perk packages, but just about every company and CEO have them. Even CEOs who have driven a company into the ground walk away with millions, while the employees and shareholders are left in ruins.

IMO, with what is known thus far, it's much ado about nothing.
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3 months ago
I can agree that BHO = Nothing.......just saying
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3 months ago
OMG...it's going to be a long 5 months!!!!

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3 months ago
J8....lets just hope that it doesnt usher in the longest 4 years in the history of the USA.....just saying.....lol
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3 months ago
The OBAMA BUS is having a bumpy ride......and another one get thrown under it.....

Johnson resigns from team vetting Obama veep
By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press Writer
36 minutes ago


WASHINGTON - Jim Johnson, a manager of Democrat Barack Obama's vice presidential search team, resigned Wednesday amid criticism over his personal loan deals.

"Jim did not want to distract in any way from the very important task of gathering information about my vice presidential nominee, so he has made a decision to step aside that I accept," Obama said in a statement. "We have a very good selection process under way, and I am confident that it will produce a number of highly qualified candidates for me to choose from in the weeks ahead. I remain grateful to Jim for his service and his efforts in this process."

Johnson, the former chairman of mortgage lender Fannie Mae, received loans with the help of the CEO of Countrywide Financial Corp., which is part of a federal investigation in the midst of the subprime mortgage crisis. The story was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

Republican presidential candidate John McCain had accused Obama of hypocrisy for speaking out against Countrywide's tactics while his vetter got favorable rates on three home mortgages totaling $1.7 million.

Johnson served on Obama's vetting team with two prominent Democratic attorneys — former Deputy Attorney General Eric Holder and Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of the late President John F. Kennedy.

Johnson brought the most experience to the vetting team, having filled the same role for Democratic nominees John Kerry in 2004 and Walter Mondale in 1984. He and Holder had been holding meetings this week with lawmakers on Capitol Hill to seek their input on possible running mate candidates.

The campaign declined to answer questions about whether Johnson would be replaced or the vetting process will be left to Holder and Kennedy, who have not been involved in a vice presidential search before.

On Tuesday, Obama said Johnson had a "discrete task" and was performing it well. He suggested the Countrywide connection was not a problem since Johnson was an unpaid volunteer and hadn't been assigned to work in a future administration.

"I am not vetting my V.P. search committee for their mortgages," Obama said at the time.

just saying.....where will it end.....I said.....there may not be a Democrat that can stand up to the scrutiny....
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3 months ago
Here's the next question...Can a candidate lose the election before the campaign gets underway????

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3 months ago
I am about ready to throw McCain under the Obama Bus today.....

Another day with no let up on oil and gas prices--and with Obama and McCain both indicating that they would be in favor of a windfall tax on 'obscene' profits. Why dont they just reduce the US Tax on gasoline by 50% which should take about $0.40 to $0.50 a gallon off the price......thats where the damn windfall profits are .....in US Treasury.....where do the two dumbshits think a windfall tax on the Oil Companies is gonna come from.....besides.....there are other companies out there that have higher profit margins than oil companies.....are they next.....and this is the slate we have to look forward to in November....I sure hope McCain gets a running mate that understands Economics......just saying......can anyone tell I am pissed at the idiots in DC...
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SHARKEY

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3 months ago
I want a price war...

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3 months ago
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