Fannie May A $40 Billion Democratic Scandal

Thanks to Newsbusters for pointing out the $40 billion Fannie Mae fiasco, presided over by Clinton alumni like Franklin Raines and Jamie Gorelick.

When most people hear the word “Enron,” they mentally complete the phrase by adding the word “scandal.” As reporter Lester Holt of NBC’s “Today” put it in a Jan. 1 story, “Enron has been the poster child, if you will, of corporate scandals.”

It isn’t the only one, though. There’s $40-billion scandal with most of the same elements — even connection to prominent politicians. Just don’t expect to see much about it on TV. After all, the top people involved here are Democrats.

Welcome to Fannie Mae, the government-sponsored mortgage giant. As part of a scandal that’s been running nearly two years, Fannie Mae has “misstated earnings” to the tune of $10.8 billion. That’s some tune.

So far, the Fannie fiasco has cost Chief Executive Officer Franklin Raines and several other top executives their jobs. The stock has dropped from nearly $80 a share to around $50 — roughly $30 billion in lost value. And the company recently settled with the federal government and agreed to pay $400 million in fines, stemming from allegations the firm fiddled with the books to ensure bigwigs got performance bonuses.

To top it off, the Fannie Mae leadership was quite well-connected in D.C., especially to the Democratic Party. The Washington Post on May 23 made this all clear in black and white. The front page of that day’s Business section showed how James A. Johnson, a former campaign manager for Walter Mondale’s presidential run, had created “a political powerhouse.”

3 Comments.

  1. Sounds like there was a Democrite “Culture of Incompetency and Corruption” ongoing then. Today we can add “Culture of Treason” to that.

    What a great party!

  2. Just how much did the demacrats have invested in ENRON?:shock:

    ?