Political Hotsheet
By

Brian Montopoli /

CBS News/ June 29, 2011, 3:00 AM

Charles Schumer's Wall Street dance

Sen. Chuck Schumer Getty

It was the fall of 2008 - the thick of the financial crisis - and Sen. Charles Schumer had a problem.

During his rise to become the powerful third-ranking Democrat in the Senate, the New Yorker had aggressively cultivated an image as a true liberal Democrat, someone who put hardworking middle-class Americans ahead of special interests. It was a characterization he pushed in his frequent television appearances; In his book "Positively American," Schumer alluded to a fictional middle-class couple, the Baileys, whom he dubbed "the reason I had entered public service."

Yet outside the public eye, Schumer was one of the biggest beneficiaries of Wall Street money that Congress had ever seen.

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Over the course of his career, Schumer has raised half a million dollars from Goldman Sachs - and nearly as much from Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase. Between 1989 and 2010, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics, Schumer took in nearly $9 million from the entire securities and investment industry, a haul that helped him become one of the most powerful politicians in America, a deep-pocketed kingmaker with unrivalled connections among the wealthiest players on Wall Street.

The seeming contradiction between Schumer's public posture and his closed-door fundraising efforts had gone little-noticed by the general public before the financial crisis. But when the securities and investment industry was thrust into chaos - and the spotlight - in 2008, Schumer's Wall Street ties suddenly became a political liability.

After all, Schumer's biggest donors were the very folks who President Obama would later, in response to public anger, deem "fat cat bankers." In the years leading up to the crisis, Schumer had been pushed hard to deregulate the financial industry; as the New York Times documented in the wake of the crisis, he had repeatedly protected the industry from oversight and helped companies avoid billions of dollars in taxes and fees.

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Schumer didn't turn his back on his allies. He was one of the major drivers behind passage of the $700 billion bank bailout approved by Congress in the midst of the crisis. The bailout, which spawned the conservative Tea Party movement and was hugely unpopular with the left, was a literal lifesaver for the financial services industry.

But in his public comments, Schumer sought to align himself with the outraged, notably signaling support for tougher regulation, controversial "clawback" provisions that would recover excessive compensation from top executives and the temporary "good nationalization" of some banks, which would have wiped out shareholders and cost top managers their jobs. He hoped at the time that members of the industry would understand that he had little choice but to acknowledge the political landscape. But many didn't see it that way.

"It pissed off a lot of people in the financial industry who thought he had gone overboard, or gone back on his word to them," said New York Magazine political columnist Chris Smith.

Schumer's post-financial crisis posture prompted closed-door complaints from New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, who believed Schumer was not doing enough to help the industry beat back new regulation. According to Smith, the sudden, surprising emergence of Wall Street-aligned former Rep. Harold Ford Jr. as a potential Democratic primary challenger to Schumer's close ally Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand in the 2008 New York Senate race was driven largely by the frustration of Schumer's donors.

It's a frustration that to some extent speaks to Wall Street's insularity. Schumer is a blue-state Democrat who has close ties to a major home state industry that just happens to be disdained by many of the voters he needs for reelection; he has no choice but to walk a careful line when it comes to Wall Street issues, particularly when events thrust them into the public eye.

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"In part because he's the senator from New York - there's no question that there are times when he carries the securities industry's water," said Barbara Roper, director of investor protection for the Consumer Federation of America, a left-leaning consumer advocacy organization. "On the other hand, in a crisis he tends to be the investor's friend."

"He can be a swinging pendulum," adds Roper. "But at least his pendulum swings. There are plenty of members of Congress who are bad all the time."

To understand the way Schumer operates, consider his influence with the Securities and Exchange Commission - the agency that is supposed to regulate the largest public companies in the United States. The senator, a member of both the Senate Finance and Banking committees, has been influential in deciding who does and doesn't become an SEC commissioner.

Schumer "got Annette Nazareth her job as commissioner at the SEC," says Lynn Turner, who was the SEC's chief accountant from 1998 to 2001. Nazareth had come from the industry - she had been senior vice president and senior counsel of Lehman Brothers and a managing director of Smith Barney. And while consumer advocates don't view Nazareth as a disaster by any means - Turner says she has done "some good things and some not so good" - they say she is typical of the relatively business-friendly commissioners who tend to be nominated by the White House and approved by the Senate.

With rare exception, "you cannot be named to the SEC if you're an investor advocate," said Roper, who stresses she is not singling out Nazareth specifically. "I mean, it's not even a remote possibility. There is a process that you go through and the industry gets essentially a sign off on who can be considered as an SEC nominee." (The SEC declined comment for this story.)

"Where someone might think that in a Democratic administration you would get appointments of investor advocate types, it doesn't happen," adds Roper. "And you still have this process where industry has in essence veto power over those appointments, and Schumer's part of that."

Yet Schumer has also fought to keep Republicans from cutting funding for the SEC, and he has pushed the SEC to curb high-frequency trading, which experts say has a destabilizing effect. Former longtime Rep. Paul E. Kanjorski, a Pennsylvania Democrat who lost his seat in the 2010 elections, argues that Schumer's industry ties have their upside. Kanjorski, a significant player in the Wall Street reform effort, said that "without his aide and a few others, we never would have gotten as far as to put [a financial reform bill] together."

"You have to understand - somebody's got to speak for New York City and New York State," Kanjorski said. "He's always there to remind us of that. But he's no patsy for them. He doesn't lay down for them. I think he makes a fight on the hard stuff but he doesn't get all disturbed on the small stuff."

After rebelling against Schumer in the wake of the financial crisis, Wall Street appears to have made peace with its longtime ally. That's, in part, a simple acknowledgement of reality. A tireless retail politician, expert distributor of money and canny publicity hound - his outspoken, progressive positions on social issues tend to push his Wall Street ties out of the headlines - the two-term senator and former representative seems unlikely to drop off the political map anytime soon. (He consolidated power during his extraordinarily successful tenure as chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, where he raised a record amount, with the help of Wall Street.) And Schumer's position as an influential member of two Senate committees important to the financial industry gives Wall Street ample reason to stand by him.

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"They might try [to replace Schumer], but it would be shortsighted," said Smith, the New York magazine political columnist. "Schumer has been far more friendly than not to the financial industry over the years."

Consider this year's fight over the swipe fees charged to merchants for credit and debit card transactions, which are often passed on to consumers. Wall Street banks lobbied hard to keep Washington from capping such fees, which make them billions in profits every year; on the other side, the retail lobby lobbied on behalf of the effort. (The latter won in a recent, contentious Senate vote, though the banks are taking their argument to the courts.)

Even though he publicly maintained a low profile in that battle, it was clear which side Schumer was on. Bank lobbyists told the Huffington Post that Schumer worked behind the scenes to undermine the effort to cap the swipe fees. Earlier this year, he publicly expressed support for an effort "to at least delay" the legislation. He then voted to do just that.

Asked about that comment, Sen. Dick Durbin, who drove the effort to cap swipe fees, told Huffington Post: "Listen, I know the zip code for Wall Street and I know what state it's in."

Schumer's office declined multiple requests for interviews for this article. In 2009, the senator told Bloomberg News: "When Wall Street comes in conflict with Main Street, I tend to side with Main Street."

According to former SEC chief accountant Lynn Turner, Schumer can be summed up in two words: "Strange duck."

"There are days you love him," said Turner, "and days you want to take him out and throw him in the Potomac."

More from the "United States of Influence" series:

Alienated nation: Americans complain of government disconnect
Do corporate interests rule Washington?

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
31 Comments Add a Comment
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namibald says:
Chucky Schmucky Schumer -- man of the people. LMAO.
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Plumbline89 says:
"The bailout, which spawned the conservative Tea Party movement and was hugely unpopular with the left, was a literal lifesaver for the financial services industry."
Wait...what? You mean the bailout Obama takes credit for? I'm a democrat, and the problem my party has right now is it's old thinking and old clowns running the show, or in Obama's administration, old clowns behind the scenes. Course, it's not like they're any reasonable Republicans to challenge him. Better to spare Medicare, health reform and Social security form the Tea Party/GOP clowns. Don't you love the American political class? One party screws up, and the other clowns focus on issues totally unrelated to the issue(s) just screwed up. Canada is looking better by the day, especially WHEN the USA defaults and becomes like Greece, who is currently trying to squirm it's way out of total bankruptcy. Speaking of which, not many people know that the credit "default" swap(oh the irony)market, which yes is still vary much alive and kicking, is betting the US has about an equal chance as Russia of defaulting in the next year. Now, let's think, who is making those bets and who would therefore stand to gain if the USA did indeed default? Oh, that's right, some guys on a major street in New York.
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simpleconservative replies:
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More likely George Sorros !
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fxr60 says:
He's a hypocrite like most of the Liberal Democrats are!!! They talk like they don't like money or people with money. Look at Nancy Pelosi-filthy rich, Charlie Rangel crook and money in every pocket and still got off scot free! Ried and Obama are not poor! Yet, they are spending and printing money like there is no tomorrow. They have driven us more in debt and done less to fix it than any other Administration!! Econimic report: food prices up 57% since Obama took office, Shovel Ready-didn't happen, Clunkers-dud!, gas prices up 34%. Obama and Bernake have waged a hidden inflation war on the middleclass that has fleeced more wealth from folks on Main St. than the PREVIOUS 20 YRS, COMBINED! reported one analyist.
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noloyalisti says:
by StopSocialism June 29, 2011 12:52 PM EDT
Charles Schumer, (D-imwhit-NY/Wall Street) = the nitwit who thinks the three branches of the US Government are "the House, the Senate, and the president" Chucky is, without doubt, a SENATOR 100% OWNED AND CONTROLLED BY WALL STREET.

BUT THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT THE REPUBLICONS AND CONSERVATIVE WANT!!!! I guess they don't like that he is a Democrat (although a very right wing corporate one).
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noloyalisti says:
It was all the giant corporations including the Wall Street Banksters. They have seized the government (including the Supreme Court) for maximum profit. So the entire system has been corrupted by big money.

Nothing will change until we all face up to this.
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hamiltongrad says:
Everyone knows not to trust anything that comes out of his mouth.

Worse the whole housing crisis is on his shoulders, along with Barny Frank. Everyone with any brains has to ask - Where are the congressional hearings ? These guys pull the strings, but when things go wrong get a pass, like they were just standing around with their thumbs up their ... while in reality they forced the banks to make terrible RISKY loans.

Do you recall how Shumer was on the phone to Pelosi, and did not know that reporters were recording his vile, vomitous plan to "blame the Republicans for everything ..." instead of doing what was right for the nation ?

These kinds of Senators, are best voted out of office. They are in it for themselves. makes me want to barf.
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hamiltongrad says:
WE CAN DO BETTER WITHOU HIM

Anything coming out of his mouth is straight out of the "Talking points" of the Democratic Committee, he said it himself when he was giving PElosi the run down, and did not know he was being heard by reporters. Wow.

// Recently he brazenly said that the Republicans were sabataguing the so called recovery and the economy..... ARE YOU KIDDING US WITH A BIG LIE TACTIC. MAKES WE WANT TO BARF.


Like his Weiner friend, he is not too big to fall, and should go as a main CULPRIT in all the ecnomic mess we are in.WHERE are the hearings on the double dealing and the housing fiasco he got us into ??

What a snivving embassassment to the nation, and to my nome state of New York.

Can't we do better than this vomitous man ?

To all those outraged CBS readers, that one of theirs is put up for scrutiny , all I have to say , is it is about time, and watch FOX to get the same information months before, if you want to be informed. And good job CBS !
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hamiltongrad says:
THANK you CBS for finally telling us what is really happening, without a Democratic Committee spin.
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noloyalisti says:
I mean when are we going to admit that the filthy rich have seized the government? And they do nothing positive for society with their failed globalization economic policies.

I myself think America would be a lot better off if it was not a fascist state.
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RatPackSixGun says:
Wha?!? Schumer sucking face with The Street and then patting the Liberal Proletariat on the head with his fingers crossed behind his back?

Say it isn't so!

I just love watching Liberals defending corporate prostitutes and Wall Street political hitmen when they have a (D) behind their name.
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