Several media outlets have asserted that AIG's payment of controversial employee-retention bonus packages could squelch or impede President Obama's ability to promote his policy agenda. Most of those reporting the claim failed to elaborate on how disclosure of the bonuses could impede Obama's ability to pass aspects of his agenda such as health-care reform and climate change policy.
In March 17 reports,
several media outlets said that the American
International Group's payment of employee-retention bonus packages
could squelch
or impede President
Obama's ability to promote his policy agenda. For instance, in a March 17
Washington Post article -- headlined "Anger Over Firm
Depletes Obama's Political Capital" -- staff writers Michael D. Shear and Paul
Kane asserted as
fact that the bonuses
"dealt a sharp blow to his young administration and is threatening to derail
both public and congressional support for his ambitious political agenda" and
suggested that "the fate of the new president's sweeping agendas on health care,
climate change and education" might be affected.
Other examples of the
media stating or suggesting that the AIG bonus payments could impede Obama's agenda
include:
- A March 17 USA Today article reported that "skepticism" over
the AIG bonuses "could spill over onto Obama's agenda." The article continued:
"Next month, he is expected to propose a detailed budget that will propose
spending that will lead to a $1.75 trillion deficit in the name of ending the
recession. He also wants to overhaul the nation's health care system. Those
ambitious goals could be threatened if Congress rejects more heavy
spending."
- In a March 17 Los Angeles Times article,
staff writers Peter
Nicholas and Janet Hook
reported that Obama has returned to "campaign-style tactics" in order to
"pressure lawmakers to back Obama's plans in Congress,
particularly his $3.6-trillion budget. That would be a tough sell in any
environment, with lawmakers and industry lobbyists skeptical of sweeping and
costly plans to revamp healthcare, convert to alternative
fuel and stabilize the financial sector." The article then asserted that
"[c]omplicating the president's
job were revelations over the weekend that insurance giant American
International Group Inc. was paying $165 million in executive bonuses even though it had accepted a huge federal
bailout."
- In a March 17 post on ABCNews.com's The Note, ABC's
Rick Klein postulated: "In this environment -- until or unless the bonuses are
canceled -- is it possible to imagine the president getting another set of cash
set aside to bail out big banks? How about another stimulus package? How about
his budget? And healthcare and cap-and-trade and education
reform?"
- In a March 17 post on the
New York magazine
blog Daily Intel -- headlined
"Are AIG Bonuses Ruining Obama's Big Plans?" -- Dan Amira wrote that the bonuses
"could potentially tie Obama's hands going forward as he continues to try to
salvage the financial system and push his vast agenda." Amira then linked to and
summarized Shear and Kane's Post
article and Klein's The Note post.
- In a March
18 Bloomberg News article -- headlined "Obama May Find Anger Over Bonuses
Backfires on Agenda" -- Hans Nichols reported that "The public furor over the $165 million in
bonuses AIG handed out to employees gives administration critics a new weapon to
thwart Obama's agenda, from his budget to plans for financial-market
regulation."
Nichols later
elaborated: "Scott Reed, a Republican strategist, said the party will try to
take advantage of the bonus issue to weaken the president. 'The real target for
the Republicans is to bring Obama back down to earth,' Reed said. 'The AIG issue
over bonuses lies at his feet.' "
As Media Matters for America
has noted, in their reporting on AIG's
bonuses, in several cases, media failed to
note that it was
then-President Bush's Treasury Department that worked with the Federal Reserve
in carrying out last year's bailouts and bought AIG stock, notwithstanding the
existence of these bonus contracts.
&mdash L.K.A., T.A., & M.W.
Copyright © 2012 Media Matters for America. All rights reserved.