What's the difference between a barbarian, a corporate raider, and a political raider? Read on and you'll learn: not much. |
Now comes the next question. Is the raider really a
Democrat? Or is he a Republican or a Tea Party vandal in sheep’s clothing?
In the beginning, there were the barbarians. Not the Wall
Street kind. I’m talking about the good old-fashioned kind, the ones with the
swords, and the maces, and the spears, and the battering rams, and the flaming
torches.
They found a target. They attacked. They burned. They raped.
They killed. They pillaged. They took what they wanted and then moved on,
leaving another hapless corner of civilization in ruins as they went.
Their destructive, merciless, and ultimately unredeeming
method of filling theirs pockets – and passing along barbarian DNA by getting
to rape women as a fringe benefit – was so unforgettable and so reviled for its
anti-social brutality that it its perpetrators have lent their name to other
forms of anti-social behavior ever since. These have ranged from a moniker for litterbugs
in a 1960s public service advertising campaign, to the perpetrators of hostile
corporate takeovers.
Wall Street barbarians:
equally barbaric for their time
You know the quintessential impression of a corporate
takeover: the raider grabs a company by making its stockholders an offer they
can’t refuse. Then the barbarian rapes the company, breaks it up into little
pieces, ships jobs overseas, throws loyal workers with years of experience out
into the street, sells off the corporate pieces like a barbarian selling off
prisoners at a slave market, pockets his profits, and then moves on.
Now a Wall Street investment banker has brought almost the
same technique, and certainly the same lack of conscience, to Manhattan
politics.
The victim in this instance is a middle-of-the-road
Democratic Party political organization called the Lenox Hill Democratic Club, in
Manhattan’s chic “silk stocking district” on the Upper East Side. And the
perpetrator of an entirely new variety of political travesty, according to
press reports in two different newspapers, is a Wall Street investment banker
named Gus Christensen.
The man who bought the votes
A story in the New York Daily News, reports that Christensen
wrote a lots of small checks “to cover the dues of his pals who joined the
Lenox Hill Democratic Club.”
Incidentally, it’s probably the cheapest political putsch in history. He bought control of the club for
$2,600, says the Daily News. A similar report appeared in a chain of Manhattan
neighborhood newspapers called The New York Press.
The new voting club “members” evidently had little or no
interest in strengthening the future of the Democratic Party. In fact, says the
Daily News, among them are “some who neither live on the East Side nor belong
to the Democratic Party.”
By packing the membership rolls and outnumbering the
legitimate and mostly long-term club members, Christensen, newly married for the second time, got himself elected to the presidency of the club.
This is important because in New York, the local political
clubs supply the manpower to solicit signatures for nominating petitions of
candidates for office. The Daily News reports “Christensen has aspirations to
run for State Asssembly in the 76th district, and presumably will
use Lenox Hill as a springboard for his campaign.”
Christensen’s former firm
aids corporate raiders
Where does this political barbarian get his bright ideas?
Well, a quick check of his former investment banking firm, Evercore Partners, reveals
that Evercore is no stranger to the corporate raiding business. While it has
worked both sides of the street, advising some raiders and some defenders
against raids, in the last few years it’s worth nothing that it has “advised”
on a number of high profile attacks.
Specifically, Evercore advised International Paper Company
in its hostile takeover of Temple Inland, a large manufacturer of
containerboard. It also advised NASDAQ on a hostile takeover bid for The New York Stock Exchange and Euronext.
One wonders, given his Wall Street associations and his
roundup of paid non-Democrats to overwhelm the vote in a Democratic club,
whether Christensen is even a Democrat himself.
A secret Tea Party operative?
Christensen’s evidently total lack of regard for his fellow
Democrats causes me to wonder. Could Christensen actually be another kind of
character from the not-always-mythical past, a wolf in sheep’s clothing? A Trojan Horse? How do
we know his private agenda isn’t that of an ultra-conservative Republican? Or a
Tea Party stalwart? Of an abortion rights buster, or an NRA gun nut, or a Club
For Growther? We can’t, because even if he ever denies it, who can trust the
word of a smash-and-grab political raider?
However, Christensen evently doesn’t even trust himself to
say where he stands. He’s simply not talking.
3 comments:
We know them by their actions.
And should take action in kind?
If it walks like a duck, talks like a duck.....new rule, whoever has the most money, don't vote for him/////her.
Apparently its now confirmed that he was a Republican until 2008.
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