Last
Sunday Erskine Bowles of “Simpson-Bowles” fame told
CNN’s Fareed Zakaria that President Obama had not
asked him to take over as Treasury Secretary when
Timothy Geithner leaves the job and further, that
he wouldn’t take the post if it were offered.
Whew.
To
paraphrase columnist George Will’s comment on George
Romney seeking Donald Trump’s support, why would the
President even consider such a bad idea?
Reuters
says speculation about who might take the post in
the event Obama returns to the White House after November
has engaged in by “economists, investors and veterans
of past administrations.”
Bowles
was President Bill Clinton’s chief of staff.
He came to the job straight from Wall Street. He’s
a partner at private equity firm Forstmann Little
& Co, a founding partner Carousel Capital, and
was among the brass at Morgan Stanley, North Carolina
Mutual Life Insurance Co., General Motors, Belk stores,
real estate developer Cousins Properties and Norfolk
Southern railway. Last September, he became a member
of the Board of Directors at (stay seated) Facebook.
“Erskine
has held important roles in government, academia and
business, which have given him insight into how to
build organizations and navigate complex issues,”
said Facebook honcho Mark Zuckerberg.
In
2010, Bowles was appointed by Obama to co-chair the
National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform
with Alan K. Simpson. The commission labored
for months and, alas, was unable to come up with a
report that its 18 members could agree upon. In the
end, Bowles and Simpson issued a report in their own
name, and since that time has been promoted as the
“Simpson-Bowles report” issued by “the President’s
own deficit reduction commission” which it was not.
Like Dracula in the moonlight it pops up with each
news cycle.
Last
Sunday, just so we wouldn’t forget it, New York Times
columnist Thomas Friedman inserted the term “Simpson-Bowles”
five times in one column. He wrote that enacting its
provisions would fix the country’s ailing economy
by “trimming future growth in Medicare and Social
Security and reforming taxes.” (Advocates of this
scheme usually avoid indicating how taxes would be
reformed, whether it would mean more revenue, and
whose taxes would be affected).
A
central feature of “Simpson-Bowles” is it would reduce
resources available to seniors and people with disabilities
and would raise the retirement age. For this it has
earned the sobriquet “Catfood Commission,” a reference
to the practice of elderly turning to pet food when
their meager incomes are depleted by the cost of things
like heating oil and housing.
Back
in August 2012, Bowles’ partner in all this, Sen.
Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.), sent out an email that described
Social Security as a "milk cow with 310 million
tits" that prompted calls for his removal as
commission co-chair. However, after he was said to
have apologized for the remark, a White House spokesperson
said that while the Administration regretted the remark,
Simpson would nonetheless remain in the position.
Simpson
and Bowles were in California in April to rally support
for their joint report before an audience at Oakland’s
Paramount Theater where they were met by picketers
from a number of Bay Area senior and disability advocacy
organizations. Simpson was not amused. He later sent
a letter, on Senate stationary, to the California
Alliance for Retired Americans saying “What a wretched
group of seniors you must be to use the faces of the
very people we are trying to save while the ‘greedy
geezers’ like you use them as a tool and a front for
your nefarious bunch of crap. You must feel some sense
of shame for shoveling out this bullshit.”
The
diatribe concluded, “If you can’t understand all of
this you need a pane of glass in your naval [or, perhaps,
navel] so you can see out during the day!”
"The
American people deserve and expect a true dialogue
in which retirees are more than 'greedy geezers' and
those with opposing world views aren’t treated with
the total disrespect you hand out so freely,” Max
Richman, chief executive of the National Committee
to Preserve Social Security and Medicare, and a former
staff director of the Senate Committee on Aging, shot
back in a letter to the former senator asking, “isn’t
it long past time to elevate the conversation beyond
personal and profane attacks on those you simply disagree
with?" He called upon Simpson to "cease
and desist with the mean-spirited...and hate-filled
personal attacks on America's seniors."
And
to think one of this dynamic duo might have been poised
to be put in charge of our country’s finances. It
causes one to shudder.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member
Carl Bloice is a writer in San Francisco, a member of the National Coordinating Committee of
the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and
Socialism and formerly worked for
a healthcare union. Click here to contact Mr. Bloice.
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