The Brian Sullivan Blog
  • February 6, 2009 02:25 PM EST by Brian Sullivan

    Grading The Stimulus Advisory Board: Some Good Picks, Some Bad Picks and Some Clear Conflicts

    President Obama named the members of the Economic Recovery Advisory Board charged to oversee the $925 billion dollar spending package (interesting that the board was named even before the measure has passed Congress).   The list contains some known names, some new ones, some good picks and a few that are riddled with conflicts.   It also includes a few that gave or helped raise hundreds of thousands of dollars to the Obama campaign and two people who help run major television and media outlets, raising questions about conflicts of interest.

    Here are the members of the advisory board:

    Paul Volcker (Chairman), William H. Donaldson, Roger Ferguson., Robert Wolf , David Swensen, Mark  Gallogly, Penny Pritzker, John Doerr, Jim Owens, Monica Lozano, Charles Phillips., Anna Burger, Richard Trumka, Laura D'Andrea Tyson, Martin Feldstein, and Jeff Immelt.

    Here's how I break down the list, beginning with the appointments I view as positive:

    Martin Feldstein.   Solid selection.   He has openly (on Fox Business) criticized the current stimulus plan as not creating enough, well, stimulus.  He will be a voice of reason and dissent on the board.

    David Swensen.  Manager of Yale's endowment and considered one of the brightest fund managers in the world.   A small town and self made guy, he will add some original viewpoints to the stimulus.

    Roger Ferguson.   Alan Greenspan's right hand man on the Fed for years.   Now CEO of pension giant TIAA-Cref.   Should be sound voice that helps represent the interest of billions in retirement money.

    Jim Owens.  CEO of Caterpillar.   On the boards of IBM and Alcoa.  Also a director of the fiscally conservative Peterson Institute for International Economics.    Should bring some midwestern sensibility to the group.  One of the few non-Ivy leaguers on the board.

    William Donaldson.  Co-Founder of investment bank Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette.   Also served as CEO of insurance giant Aetna.    Potential controversy may be that he served as Chairman of the SEC from February 2003 to June 2005, a time that saw the growth of many of the seeds of the subprime and credit crisis.

    John Doerr.   Wealthy venture capitalist.   Start up investor in companies such as Google, Sun Microsystems, Compaq and others.   Also on the board of Google.    Spends much of this time working on and investing in 'green' projects so should help the push for alternative energy spending.

    Charles Phillips.   President of database company Oracle, former investment banker at Morgan Stanley and former United States Marine.   Very sharp and disciplined.   Not distracted by multiple other board memberships as with many others on this list.

    Laura Tyson.   Professor at Berkeley.   Former Dean of the London School of Business.    While her membership on the boards of Kodak, AT&T and Morgan Stanley may be viewed as distractions, she isn't beholden to a single industry and is a specialist in trade.   May help cool some of the recent dangerous anti-China rhetoric coming from the Obama camp.

    Now, to the names that should raise some eyebrows:

    Penny Pritzker.   One of America's richest people.   Heir to the billion dollar Hyatt Hotel chain Pritzker fortune.  She was also the finance chief of Obama's campaign and one of his biggest fundraisers.   Now she gets a seat.

    Anna Burger and Martin Trumka.   Big labor gets two seats on the board.   Representatives of the SEIU and AFL-CIO, respectively.   Sure to push the organized labor agenda with taxpayer billions.

    Jeff Immelt:  CEO of GE, owner of NBC and its family of media networks.    When Michael Bloomberg became Mayor of New York City he put his interest in the company into a blind trust, in part to avoid a conflict of interest with his company's radio and television operations and his political role.   Immelt will do his network a disservice by being both the CEO of a media company and serving in an official government advisory role.   It's simply too close for comfort.    Moreover, GE shares are at a 12 year low, wiped out in part by huge losses at GE Capital, a huge lender during the credit boom.   Shareholders cannot be too happy that their CEO is going to be taking time from running their company to serve on this board.   Immelt should have politely refused this post.   There are many other industrial companies such as United Technologies and Honeywell that represent similar interests but do not have a media operation.

    Robert Wolf.   President of investment bank UBS.   While Wall Street should like this appointment, it should open the eyes of those who have joined the President in criticizing massive banking bonuses.    Just this week it was reported UBS is offering "super size" bonuses to entice traders and bankers away from competing firms.   There has also been the PR problem of some UBS bankers being accused of helping wealthy clients avoid paying taxes.

    Mark Gallogly.   Not a household name.  Very wealthy.  Runs private investment firm Centerbridge Partners.    Smart and successful and considered another Wall Street advocate.   Former Senior Managing Director of private equity firm The Blackstone Group.   According to this website he donated more than $100,000 to the Democrats in 2008.  He has also spoken publicly about his support for the President, calling into question how much he will dissent on Democratic projects.

    Monica Lozano.   Another media conflict.   CEO of La Opinion, the largest Spanish-language newspaper in the U.S.    She is also on the boards of both Bank of America and Disney, the owner of the ABC television network.

Thomas J. Bednarczyk

That is great we can pick a board to manage these funds but how are we really going to measure the quality of the decisions they make?

February 9, 2009 at 2:25 pm

joanne

We must stop this stimulus bill before it is to later for ALL of us. They have already made off with the first stimulus and think they owe us no explanation for the distribution of the funds and now what?? We need help for all the people out of work not the VERY RICH so they can fatten there wallets more. Is there no help for us?? Someone must hear the calls for help. Joanne

February 9, 2009 at 11:58 am

jeff saturday

You mean Grading the PORKULUS advisory board.

February 9, 2009 at 11:43 am

earle

Jeff Immelt was the final pick of Jack Welsh top three managers, when Jack made his decision to let Jeff run GE, "into the ground"! Bob Nardelli,the infamous CEO of Home Depot was Jack's #2 pick who single-handedly came close to bankrupting(recieved approx. $250mn golden parachute package after three years)HD! Immelt is arrogant,and hubris,providing a,"big negative"!As you mentioned Brian,I personally see him,"Getting Shown the Front-Door at GE",sooner than most would imagine. Finally ,I don't like Robert Wolf ,period! Big part of the problem today. I feel that Obama is rubbing elbows with the Devil with these "Take no Prisoner's" mentality guys you mentioned! Fantastic Read Brian,Super Informative (:

February 8, 2009 at 7:58 pm

P. Nielsen

It is about time that somebody bring up the fact that we now have a Straw-Man in the White House. What we have is nothing more than the Organ Grinders Monkey and it is about time that we start remembering the old story about the Emporer’s New Clothes. The likes of Harry “Kickback” Reid and Nancy “The Mouth with Feet Attached” Pelosi, Liberal Socialist She-Males, have been pumping so much sunshine up Babooma’s ass that he can light up Times Square at midnight by just standing there with his eyes open. Problem is that he has started to believe that he is indeed the “Chosen One”, the “Saviour”. Earth to Babooma: You started out as the Organ Grinder’s Monkey and outside of all the hype, NOTHING has changed.

February 7, 2009 at 1:39 am

cupid85

An insult to our intelligence. Is UBs were a US compnay the gov't would have shut it won. Wolf paid his way onto this one

February 6, 2009 at 10:35 pm

Listening In Texas

Obama's ratings are dropping faster than the space shuttle in a landing! His approval rating according to FOX and rating the first 100 days; at just day 18 has him at basically a 67% DISAPPROVAL rating!! WOW, shouldn't it take at least a couple months to do that? 49% give him a failing grade!; only 6% believe he is doing an EXCELLENT job; that would probably be the 6% he is trying to hire! He doesn't have the ability to read when his policies are failing; BOY ARE WE IN A LOT OF TROUBLE!!! He sounds like a 3rd grader on the school yard; give me what I want or I am going to make your life miserable! PLEASE REPUBS in the SENATE PLEASE FILLABUSTER THIS DISASTER IN ACTION!! PLEASE MAKE THEM START OVER!!! NO BILL IS BETTER THAN ANY PART OF THIS BILL!!! KILL THE BILL!! KILL THE BILL !!! PLEASE!!! KILL THE BILL!!!!!!

February 6, 2009 at 5:05 pm

6ftRabbit

I think a whole lot of people are going to have to come to terms with the fact that their back is worth more than their brains, and that Manual Labor is not some fruit picker from Mexico.

February 6, 2009 at 4:34 pm

about this blog

  • Brian Sullivan joined FOX Business Network (FBN) in April 2008 as an anchor. He co-anchors the 10am-12pm ET hours of the FOX Business block. Prior to joining FBN, Sullivan served as an anchor for Bloomberg Television where he hosted the programs Morning Call and In Focus.