Dodd blames Obama administration for AIG bonuses

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Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd said the Obama administration asked him to insert a provision in last month’s $787 billion economic-stimulus legislation that had the effect of authorizing American International Group Inc.’s bonuses.


Dodd, a Connecticut Democrat, told Bloomberg News yesterday he agreed to modify restrictions on executive pay at companies receiving taxpayer assistance to exempt bonuses already agreed upon in contracts. He said he did so without realizing the change would benefit AIG, whose recent $165 million payment to employees has sparked a public furor.


Dodd said he had wanted to limit executive compensation at companies that got money from the government’s financial-rescue fund. AIG has received $173 billion in bailout money. His provision was changed as the stimulus legislation was negotiated between the House and Senate.


“I did not want to make any changes to my original Senate-passed amendment” to the stimulus bill, “but I did so at the request of administration officials, who gave us no indication that this was in any way related to AIG, Dodd said in a statement released last night. “Let me be clear — I was completely unaware of these AIG bonuses until I learned of them last week.”


He didn’t name the administration officials who made the request.


An administration official said last night that representatives of President Barack Obama didn’t insist on the change, though they did contend that the language in Dodd’s amendment could be legally challenged because it would apply retroactively to bonus agreements. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity.


That provision in the stimulus bill may undercut complaints by congressional Democrats about the AIG bonuses because most of them voted for the legislation. No Republicans in the House and only three in the Senate supported the stimulus measure.

“Taxpayers deserve better than this from their government, and this is just the latest reason why legislation must be transparent for all Americans to see before it is recklessly signed into law,” said Eric Cantor, the No. 2 Republican in the House.

The new law, approved by Congress Feb. 13 and signed into law by Obama the next week, effectively authorized bonus arrangements at companies receiving taxpayer bailouts as long as they were in place before Feb. 11. The AIG bonuses qualified under that provision.

Obama and many lawmakers who voted for the legislation, such as Senator Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat, and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, a Montana Democrat, are demanding AIG employees surrender their bonuses.

Republicans seized on the provision in the stimulus bill to paint Democrats as hypocrites.

“The fact is that the bill the president signed, which protected the AIG bonuses and others, was written behind closed doors by Democratic leaders of the House and Senate,” Iowa Senator Charles Grassley said in a statement.

AIG donated a total of $854,905 to political campaigns in 2008, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a Washington-based research group.

AIG employees as a group represent Dodd’s fourth-biggest donor during his career, the group’s research shows. The company’s political action committee, employees and immediate family members have given Dodd more than $280,000, the group said.

Dodd said the provision was written to give the Treasury Department enough discretion to reclaim bonuses as necessary.

“Fortunately, we wrote this amendment in a way that allows the Treasury Department to go back and review these bonus contracts and seek to recover the money for taxpayers,” he said.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told lawmakers in a letter this week that department lawyers believe it would be “legally difficult” to prevent AIG from paying bonuses.

Other Democrats who voted for the stimulus bill have ramped up criticism of AIG’s bonuses, including Massachusetts Representative Barney Frank, the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, who told reporters, “I think the time has come to exercise our ownership rights.”

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Flag Comment Posted by james on March 19, 2009 at 5:08 pm

That’s it, Dodd. Be a good politician. Throw Geithner under the bus.

This is all dodd’s fault. I don’t care if the Obamaphiles came on their knees. He could have said no, and he didn’t. Then he had the gall to lie to the American people about it. Make no mistake, this was not a “misspeak.“ Dodd lied.

Geithner has done an awful job so far, but you can’t lay this one on him or The Great Leader. This one’s all on Dodd.

Flag Comment Posted by DarnYankee on March 19, 2009 at 4:51 pm

MeToo: I don’t think that we have near enough information to make morale, or is that moral, judgments on this issue.  In the first place, I have yet to hear a description of the performance measures on which those bonuses were based…and quite frankly,
I’m not sure it’s any of my business.

It is entirely possible for a person to meet exceed the performance goals set up for him/her and earn a bonus, even while the company is failing.

Yes, the AIG employees were paid with taxpayer monies, as are a lot of people who do a lot less to earn them. Their compensation plans were set up at least a year ago, when virtually no one foresaw the potential that the federal government would bail this company out. I did not condone the bailout but it’s done.  The wise people who wrote that law didn’t set forth the conditions for which those funds were to be used, even though some key people knew that the money could be used for bonuses. It scares me to see our government setting one group of citizens against another (and through the government’s own ineptitude, at that). The Nazis and the Communists did that, I never thought I’d see it in America.

Flag Comment Posted by Cochese on March 19, 2009 at 4:16 pm

Wise up folks. The AIG Bonus information was included in their 10Q for the quarterly period ended March 31, 2008, page 76. Also included in subsequent filings. When the government nationalizes companies they better know what the heck they are doing. God help us when the government takes over the health care system.

Flag Comment Posted by MeToo on March 19, 2009 at 3:53 pm

Umm I believe AIG is to blame for giving out the bonuses.  That and the lack of morale and character of AIG employees for accepting them.

I still don’t understand the premise of giving bonuses to employees who ran the business in the ground!  If I royal screwed up at my job, my boss would show me the way out, not throw more money at me!

Flag Comment Posted by ross on March 19, 2009 at 3:49 pm

Yesterday Dodd told the media that he knew nothing about the exemption/date clause in the bill.  Today he has had to admit his misstatement.

He accused Fox of character assassination.  My thinking is that one must have character before there can be assassination.

This fat little toad inherited his senate seat from his father when he retired.  This guy has never had an honest job in his life.  He is a liar…he and his type needs to be gone from Congress.

Flag Comment Posted by itsme on March 19, 2009 at 2:29 pm

I guess this is what Obama meant about change. AIG can keep the change. Makes me sick and these people should be locked up.

They say the big money makers will leave.  Where will they go?

Flag Comment Posted by notwhoyouthinkitis on March 19, 2009 at 1:49 pm

The only hypocrisy is Eric Cantor’s comment.  Those comments coming from a man who voted for every Bush spending bill that came down Pennsylvania Avenue are the height of hypocrisy.  And an embarrassment to the Commonwealth.  As usual, the Repubs are trying to make a mountain out of a molehill, putting party before country.  What we know as fact is the Cantor’s party policies failed us miserably.  He has absolutely no grounds to stand on to complain.  We’ve already seen the stimulus package make results in a short time.  Cantor ought to be ashamed of himself.  And he *really* embarrassed himself yesterday by not being able to say whether he would vote to tax the payouts that AIG received.  Which means he will not.  And that will be the definition of hypocrisy.  Honestly, Embarrassing Eric could not get a job in the real world if he were not in Congress.

Flag Comment Posted by Dave on March 19, 2009 at 1:47 pm

I just recalled the old Thomas Nast political cartoon about Boss Tweed’s Ring in New York City. Tweed and his minions are standing in a circle pointing at one another as the one to blame. Well, Dodd’s not a one-man ring, but I suspect he’ll have company soon.

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