Friday, November 27, 2009

Opinion

John Aloysius Farrell

In Dealing With the GOP on the Financial Crisis and Bailout, Nancy Pelosi Should Take a Page From J. P. Morgan

September 30, 2008 11:39 AM ET | John Aloysius Farrell | Permanent Link | Print

Somewhere in heaven, or that other place, J. P. Morgan is chuckling in appreciation at the spectacle of a Republican administration, literally on bended knee, asking Nancy Pelosi to bail out Wall Street.

And at the Republican House members, who are whining that she hurt their feelings with a well-deserved tongue-lashing yesterday.

Pelosi is a fool, Morgan would say, if she doesn't hold Bush up for all he's worth.

Morgan did, a little more than a century ago, when the roles were reversed. Then it was a Democratic president, Grover Cleveland, who was trying to shore up a crumbling U.S. economy and an almost-bankrupt government.

Morgan braved a February snowstorm in 1895, showed up at the White House, and announced that he would put together a syndicate of international financiers to sell Cleveland the gold that the Treasury desperately needed.

The great robber baron drove a hard bargain. Morgan got government bonds from the Cleveland administration for $104.50 each; he then sold them on the open market for $112.25.

Cleveland was ridiculed for causing the crisis, and for letting Morgan pick his pocket. William McKinley won the White House in 1896, starting a Republican era that lasted, with but slight interruption, until the Great Depression.

There's your Wall Street patriotism. We are a country built on gold, tobacco, slavery, and sweatshops. Now, as then, we will muddle through this setback like all the others, on avarice and initiative.

And if Pelosi's price for rescuing the Republicans from this, their latest catastrophic misjudgment, is a good scolding—they should learn to like it. It's cheap at twice the price.

Tags: Congress | House of Representatives | politics | Republicans | Nancy Pelosi | JPMorgan Chase

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John Aloysius Farrell is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report. An award-winning Washington reporter, he has written for The Boston Globe and The Denver Post and is the author of Tip O’Neill and the Democratic Century and an upcoming biography of the great American defense attorney, Clarence Darrow.

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