Kabuki Theater of Outrage, Act III. Unscrupulous borrower Sen. Chris Dodd
struts on stage. Fox Business reporter Rich Edson turns on the spotlight:
Senator Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) on Monday night floated the idea of taxing
American International Group (AIG: 0.9768, 0.1967, 25.21%) bonus recipients
so the government could recoup the $450 million the company is paying to
employees in its financial products unit. Within hours, the idea spread to
both houses of Congress, with lawmakers proposing an AIG bonus tax.
While the Senate constructed the $787 billion stimulus last month, Dodd
unexpectedly added an executive-compensation restriction to the bill. That
amendment provides an “exception for contractually obligated bonuses agreed
on before Feb. 11, 2009,” which exempts the very AIG bonuses Dodd
and others are seeking to tax. The amendment is in the final
version and is law.
Also, Sen. Dodd was AIG’s largest single recipient of campaign donations
during the 2008 election cycle with $103,100, according to opensecrets.org.
Need to make my airsickness bag triple-strength this morning.
Update: David Freddoso has more…
Here is the loophole, from the section of the stimulus package that deals
with compensation rules for TARP recipients:
The prohibition required under clause (i) shall not be construed to
prohibit any bonus payment required to be paid pursuant to a written
employment contract executed on or before February 11, 2009, as such valid
employment contracts are determined by the Secretary or the designee of the
Secretary.
Frankly, it’s hard to imagine how the government could prevent such
contracts from being honored. But the presence of this loophole, in black
and white, certainly gives the lie to all of this phony outrage — by the
senator who created the loophole, by the president who signed it into law,
and by everyone else who voted for the stimulus package.