Charles Grassley on AIG Bonuses | 03/18/2009 10:45 am
Grassley: Corporations Shouldn't Get Bonuses When 'Sucking the Tit of the Taxpayer' (Video)

Sen. Charles Grassley just keeps digging himself deeper. And it seems some people are loving it.
The Iowa Republican came under fire this week for suggesting AIG executives receiving $165 million in bonuses should apologize for their actions or commit suicide.
He later said he was referring more to the practice of Japanese business leaders taking responsibility for failing companies.
"What I’m expressing here obviously is not that I want people to commit suicide, that’s not my notion," Grassley also told reporters Tuesday. "I do feel very strongly that we have not had statements of apology, statements of remorse, statements of contrition on the part of C.E.O.s of manufacturing companies or banks or financial services or insurance companies that are asking for bailouts."
Then, another shocker: "From my standpoint, it’s irresponsible for corporations to give bonuses at this time when they’re sucking the tit of the taxpayer."
Whoa! Though his language may be feisty, and some were offended, it appears he’s simply saying what many Americans are thinking. Reuters reports the Iowan received tons of praise on his Facebook page, and there’s further evidence that people welcomed Grassley’s no-holds-barred verbiage.
"Iowans love this sort of thing, and that’s why it sticks to the walls of the halls of Congress," writes The Des Moines Register. "It’s one of the reasons Grassley has clout and people in Washington, DC, pay attention when he speaks."
Click here to listen to Grassley explaining his comments, courtesy of The Des Moines Register. And watch video of Grassley’s "tit" comment below:























21 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
Yep!
Labor unions were treated differently than wall street. Their contracts went out the window. They were accused of being greedy. Running their companies into the ground due to labor costs. Wall street rules look at the markets today down down down until we quit picking on them.
Congress and the media are being such hypocrits. The media is stoking the fires of public outrage rage. The point is everyone is to blame. Some in the media said they knew in January about AIG’s plan to give out bonuses. Why did they not show their outrage in January. Why did the Congress not attach strings to the bailout to prevent pay out of bonuses? I think it is because corparate america rules this country. Captialism demands that they be free no matter what. No government intervention.
The fact of the matter we must have a Rescue Plan. Not a Democrat or Republican but a rescue to plan for America.
People are now beginning to realize that Barack Obama is a classic politician.
Will an MSM reporter ask this question? By Michelle Malkin • March 18, 2009 12:59 PMEd Morrissey: If AIG’s retention bonuses are a problem, why aren’t Freddie Mac’s?
Barney Frank was unavailable for comment…
You know, Libra, this is all very sad. It’s sad for all of those Obama followers who never questioned where he came from, who he associated with, and who didn’t blink an eye at his inexperience.
If John McCain had won he would’ve done one thing first and foremost….cut taxes immediately to all small businesses….no stimulus package and no mamby pamby attempt at being BFF’s with the Middle East.
WASHINGTON (AP) — For the first time since last fall’s election, Democrats and the Obama administration are backpedaling furiously on an issue easily understood by financially strapped taxpayers: $165 million in bonuses paid out at bailed-out AIG.
Republicans, struggling to regain their political footing, are content to let Democrats try to dig their way out of this mess on their own.
Professing shock at the bonus payments, Democrats have embarked on a hurry-up effort to impose what amounts to confiscatory taxes on the bonuses, a maneuver that almost surely will be tested in the courts.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner enjoys President Barack Obama’s confidence, according to the White House.
But the mood is less charitable among congressional Democrats. Republicans have made Geithner their top target, not surprising given Obama’s continued high approval ratings.
"It’s shocking that they would — the administration would come to us now and act surprised about these contracts," said Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., the Senate GOP leader. "This administration could have and should have … prevented this from happening. They had a lot of leverage two weeks ago."
Gone are the days when they could merely bludgeon the Bush administration and promise to seek bipartisan solutions to the nation’s economic problems.
Now, in control of the White House and Congress, they are struggling to come up with an explanation for what no one in either party seems moved to defend.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said AIG stands as a symbol of "greed and perhaps corruption."
Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., scoffed at AIG’s claim that the money represents retention pay. "There are enough bright people in this country that would do the job for an honest salary, and enough honest taxpayers demanding that we put an end to this stuff. You can bet I’ll make sure justice is served," he said
But the bonus payments occurred on the Democrats’ watch, and for Republicans, AIG seems politically providential.
Their overwhelming opposition to last month’s stimulus bill appeared to be gaining little traction as Democrats showcase every shovelful of dirt that is turned — all in the name of economic recovery.
Criticism that Obama and Democrats are embarking on a new era of tax-and-spend is undercut by the lack of a budget alternative from Republicans — the party that presided over a historic run-up in the federal debt earlier this decade when it controlled both the White House and Congress.
Less than 100 days into the Obama administration, polls have brought little good news to Republicans.
While a recent Pew survey found some slippage in Obama’s support, it also registered only 28 percent approval for the job being done by GOP congressional leaders, the lowest in nearly 14 years. And a separate survey by CNN and Opinion research Corp. put support for the president’s handling of the economy at nearly 60 percent.
Against this backdrop, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs sought to explain AIG.
He told reporters that Geithner "last week engaged with the CEO of AIG to communicate what we thought were outrageous and unacceptable bonuses," and "received a commitment to lessen some of the bonuses for senior executives…."
Asked directly Obama is satisfied that he found out about the bonuses in a timely fashion, Gibbs said: "Yes, the president is satisfied."
The president "has complete confidence" in his Treasury secretary, Gibbs added, although Geithner’s early tenure has been anything but smooth. The Cabinet official’s introduction of a new plan to bail out the financial industry was widely panned, and his confirmation was held up earlier when it was disclosed he had paid $34,000 in back taxes.
Obama himself has been vocal on the need to do everything possible to recoup the money paid out in bonuses, and so far, no Democrats in Congress have tried to hold him to account.
But the Treasury Department isn’t immune, even from Democrats.
"I’m outraged by this," said Baucus in a statement. "At one point the Treasury was in a position to stop these bonuses. Those were the terms of TARP, terms that I helped draft."
But talk of legislation only leads to more uncomfortable questions for Democrats.
Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, and Ron Wyden, D-Ore., won passage of a provision earlier this year that they said would have prevented the type of payments now at the center of a storm.
It was dropped without explanation in the final compromise on the economic stimulus measure, replaced by a less restrictive set of conditions backed by Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., and accepted by the White House.
"The president goes out and says this is not acceptable and then some backroom deal gets cut to let these things get paid out anyway," said Wyden.
EDITOR’S NOTE: David Espo is AP’s chief congressional correspondent.
Libra: "The president goes out and says this is not acceptable and then some backroom deal gets cut to let these things get paid out anyway," said Wyden.
Exactly. This is what Ed Lasky (American Thinker) said about the Dodd switch:
The provision was stripped out during the closed-door conference negotiations involving House and Senate leaders and the White House. A measure by Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., to limit executive compensation replaced it. But Dodd’s measure explicitly exempted bonuses agreed to prior to the passage of the stimulus bill.
The ball is in the Democrats’ court now.