Obsess all youâd like about President Obamaâs nomination of Mary Jo White to head the Securities and Exchange Commission. Who heads the agency is vital, but important fights in Washington are happening in quiet rooms, away from the media gaze.
After a widely praised stint as a tough United States attorney, Ms. White spent the last decade serving so many large banks and investment houses that by the time she finishes recusing herself from regulatory matters, she may be down to overseeing First Wauwatosa Securities.
Now, Ms. White maintains she can run the S.E.C., without fear or favor. Bu the focus shouldnât be limited to whether she can be effective. For lobbyists, the real targets are regulators and staff members for lawmakers.
Ms. White, at least, will have to sit for Congressional testimony, answer occasional questions from the media and fill out disclosure forms. Staff members, however, work in untroubled anonymity for the most part. So, while everyone knows thereâs a revolving door â" so naïve to even bring it up! â" few realize just how fluidly it spins.
Take what happened late last month as Washington geared up for more fights about the taxing, spending and the deficit. The Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, Democrat of Nevada, decided to bolster his staffâs expertise on taxes.
So on Jan. 25, Mr. Reidâs office announced that he had appointed Cathy Koch as chief adviser to the majority leader for tax and economic policy. The news release lists Ms. Kochâs admirable and formidable experience in the public sector. âPrior to joining Senator Reidâs office,â the release says, âKoch served as tax chief at the Senate Finance Committee.â
Itâs funny, though. The notice left something out. Because immediately before joining Mr. Reidâs office, Ms. Koch wasnât in government. She was working for a large corporation.
Not just any corporation, but quite possibly the most influential company in America, and one that arguably stands to lose the most if there were any serious tax reform that closed corporate loopholes. Ms. Koch arrives at the senatorâs office by way of General Electric.
Yes, General Electric, the company that paid almost no taxes in 2010. Just as the tax reform debate is heating up, Mr. Reid has put in place a person who is extraordinarily positioned to torpedo any tax reform that might draw a dollar out of G.E. â" and, by extension, any big corporation.
Omitting her last job from the announcement must have merely been an oversight. By the way, no rules prevent Ms. Koch from meeting with G.E. or working on issues that would affect the company.
The senatorâs office, which declined to make Ms. Koch available for an interview, says that she will support the majority leader in his efforts to close corporate tax loopholes. His office said in a statement that the senator considers her knowledge of the private sector to be an asset and that she complies with âall relevant Senate ethics rules and disclos! ures.â
In a statement, the senatorâs spokesman said, âThe impulse in some quarters to reflexively cast suspicion on private-sector experience is part of what makes qualified individuals reluctant to enter public service.â
Over in bank regulatory land, meanwhile, January was playing out like a Beltway remake of âFreaky Friday.â
Julie Williams, chief counsel for the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and a major friend of the banks for years, had been recently shown the door by Thomas J. Curry, the new head of the regulator. Banking reform advocates took that to be an omen that a new era might be dawning at the agency, which has often been a handmaiden to large banks.
Ms. Williams, of course, landed on her feet. Sheâs now at the Promontory Financial Group, a classic Wshington creature that is a private-sector mirror image of a regulatory body. Promontory is the Shadow O.C.C. The firm was founded by a former head of the agency, Eugene A. Ludwig, and if you were to walk down the halls swinging a copy of the Volcker Rule, you would be sure to hit a former O.C.C. official. Promontory says only about 5 percent of its employees comes from the O.C.C., but concedes about more than a quarter are former regulators.
Promontory, as the firm explains on its Web site, âexcels at helping financial companies grapple with and resolve critical issues, particularly those with a regulatory dimension.â But i! t plays f! or the other team, too, by helping the O.C.C. put into effect regulatory reviews. The dreary normality of this is a Washington scandal in the Michael Kinsley sense: a perfectly legal one.
Promontory, which demurred on a request to talk with Ms. Williams, has a different view. The firm doesnât lobby or help in litigation. It argues that after banks stop fighting regulators and lobbying against rules, then they come to Promontory to figure out how to fix their problems and comply.
âWe are known in the industry as the tough-love doctors,â said Mr. Ludwig, the chief executive of Promontory. âI am deeply committed to financial stability, and the only way to have stability is to do the right thing in both the spirit and letter of the law.â
Hmm. Remember the Independent Foreclosure Review, the program that theO.C.C. and other federal bank regulators trumpeted as the largest effort to compensate victims of big banksâ foreclosure abuses As my colleague at ProPublica, Paul Kiel, detailed last year, that review involved consultants like Promontory essentially letting banks decide who was victimized. How well did that work So well that the regulators had to scuttle the program because it hadnât given one red cent to homeowners but somehow, I donât know how, managed to send more than $1.5 billion to consultants â" including Promontory.
Promontory maintains that it complied with the conditions set out by the O.C.C. And the review was replaced by a settlement, which the regulators say will compensate victi! ms â" th! ough the average payout is small beer.
Who, exactly, makes the rules at the O.C.C. I mentioned âFreaky Friday.â Thatâs because at the agency, Ms. Williams is being replaced by Amy Friend. And where is Ms. Friend coming from Wait for it ⦠Promontory. In March, maybe theyâll do the switcheroo back.
The O.C.C. didnât make Ms. Friend available but said that her âtalent, integrity and commitment to public service are beyond reproachâ and would be subject to the rule requiring her to recuse herself for a year on matters specifically relating to her former employer.
I spoke with people who said she was a smart and dedicated public servant, an expert on the Dodd-Frank Act who can help finalize the scandalously long list of unfinished rules and expedite its implementation.
âAmy Friend is absolutely rowing in the right direction,â said a Senate staff member ho worked on efforts to push for stronger financial regulation.
Letâs hope so.
But people also described Ms. Friend as pragmatic. In Washington, thatâs the ultimate compliment. Sadly, that has come to mean someone who seeks compromise and never pushes for an overhaul when a quarter-measure will do.
Washington today resembles something like the end of âAnimal Farm.â People move from one side of the table to the other and up and down the Acela corridor with ease. An outsider looking at a negotiating table would glance from lobbyist to staff member, from colleague to former colleague, from pig to man and from man to pig and find it impossible to say which is which.