From David Dayen, The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject First 100: A Crossroads for Biden on Corporate Power | Congress Looks at Failed Arts Venue Grant Program
Date April 20, 2021 4:33 PM
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April 20, 2021

A Crossroads for Biden on Corporate Power

Also, Congress focuses in on the failed arts venue grant program

 

Franklin Roosevelt didn't just leverage government's spending capacity;
he confronted corporate dominance. (FDR Library)

On a Personal Note

**** I woke up this morning, as I do every morning, around 6:00am (a
dog who has no ability to tell time is partially responsible) and began
to write this chronicle of an early presidency. I've been doing this
since last March, waking up on deadline, since the early stirrings of
the coronavirus crisis. I felt it was important to have a real-time,
rolling conversation about the most impactful crisis of our time,
something that was going to impact health, economics, and politics, and
the way we associate with one another. I felt like a daily report that
contextualized and contributed to the story would add value.

With vaccinations rolling and the first 100 days coming to a close, by
next week I won't be doing this crazy schedule anymore. But I'm
honored to say that we made a difference. Unsanitized, the precursor to
First 100, has been selected for the Hillman Foundation Award for
magazine journalism
.

I couldn't have done this without the knowledge that my incredibly
capable and talented staff would be able to provide great coverage day
after day, allowing me to focus on the crisis, and then the
administration. The support from our production staff is first-rate, as
is the mentorship and encouragement of our senior leadership and
editorial board. Just read the masthead and
imagine me thanking all of them.

I'm very pleased that this style of journalism, a true first draft of
history, has been recognized. I have interests in other topics and other
types of reporting, but this daily report is a throwback to my roots as
a blogger, and with the pandemic I don't think there was a better way
to report it out. Thanks to the Hillman Foundation and finally to you,
the readers, who have hung in there for this experiment and gotten
something out of it. This is your award too.

**Read all of our First 100 reports here**

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The Chief

**** "The economic royalists complain that we seek to overthrow the
institutions of America," Franklin Roosevelt said

in1936. "What they really complain of is that we seek to take away
their power." Challenging corporate power was at the heart of FDR's
project. Joe Biden keeps getting compared to FDR and seems to be pleased
with the comparison. But the Biden administration's record on
corporate power is a big incomplete.

The administration has made a couple noteworthy hires, like Lina Khan
and Tim Wu. Khan isn't installed at the Federal Trade Commission yet;
her confirmation hearing is this week. And even once she gets seated,
Democrats won't have a majority on the commission once Rohit Chopra
shifts to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

In the meantime, what's happening on that Commission? Acting chair
Rebecca Kelly Slaughter announced in March
,
to much fanfare
,
an interagency "rethink" of pharmaceutical mergers, after a decade
of dealmaking. The expectation was for much more rigorous scrutiny of
pharma mergers. But the first one that came up, a $39 billion
acquisition of Alexion by AstraZeneca, went through within four months,
without a "second request." That means that the FTC didn't ask for
more time to consider the merger. No conditions were added. It was just
waved through.

Another merger, creating a giant in the market for salt, was approved by
the Justice Department

yesterday with a divestiture. Conditions-based mergers have fared quite
badly in recent years. This would have brought us from three evaporated
salt manufacturers to two, and instead there will be two big ones and
one newfangled rival jury-rigged by DOJ to manufacture competition.

Support Independent, Fact-Checked Journalism

Elsewhere, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen named her "climate czar"
yesterday. The initial assumption was that progressive regulator Sarah
Bloom Raskin would get this position; instead it went to John Morton
,
a green venture capitalist and former private equity baron with no
regulatory experience at all. If banks are going to be held to a
standard of protecting against climate risk, you need someone who
actually knows how to do that, rather than a financier who primarily
sees climate risk in terms of moneymaking.

These data points are alarming on their own; together they send a
business-as-usual message. And that's not all: the protection of
pharmaceutical IP on COVID vaccines even as mutations rip through

the rest of the world, the willingness to bend on corporate taxation.
This isn't universal-an anti-debt collector effort

at CFPB looks solid-but there's a sense that the administration is
coasting on good press about fiscal policy while corporations continue
to grow in size and power. At a time when the business community is
nervous about social dysfunction

and shying away from right-wing populism, they seem to be receiving aid
and comfort from the opposition party.

Congress is getting antsy. Yesterday, several House members, including
two committee chairs, demanded

that the antitrust agencies' investigate Live Nation's
anti-competitive conduct, which has been documented for years. Democrats
on the relevant banking committees are asking why there hasn't been a
challenge to a bank merger

in 35 years.

The fear is that the administration's incomplete grade turns to a
failing one, and it's already starting to happen. You cannot solve all
the challenges we face as a nation without confronting the forces who
profit from the status quo. An accommodation with capital will not be
successful. Whether Wall Street, Silicon Valley, and Big Business will
have influence in this presidency, contrary to popular belief
,
remains to be seen. The administration has a choice to make.

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SVOG Update

There's been more attention paid to the inability to deliver relief to
music club and other venue operators after our story last Thursday
.
The big boys at the Washington Post

and the New York Times

got involved; the Times even managed to snag, well, the exact same quote
from the exact
same person that we ran four days earlier. Good on the Gray Lady.

Meanwhile, the Small Business Administration has promised to reopen
the application
portal for Shuttered Venue Operators Grants by this Friday, April 23.
And Congress will be watching. I've obtained a draft letter signed by
a whopping 57 Senators (including 20 Republicans) and 116 House members
(19 Republicans) urging the SBA to "make every effort" to meet the
Friday goal. The letter also asks that guidance be finalized on
requirements for eligibility without delay, and to implement a
"technical corrections" process so any application errors can be
fixed without a denial of the grant. Having that many members, on a
bipartisan basis, scrutinizing the SBA is a good sign.

Hopefully all this attention means that the administration makes this a
priority, and venue operators who have been running on fumes for over a
year can get the funding to which they're entitled.

We Depend on Your Donations

What Day of Biden's Presidency Is It?

Day 91.

We Can't Do This Without You

Today I Learned

* Biden might get something else to sign: a modest anti-Asian hate
crimes bill
.
(Politico)

* The president has asked for a counter-offer

to his infrastructure package by mid-May. (Washington Post)

* Considering that Republicans are united against a corporate tax
increase
,
I'm thinking there will be no counter-offer. (Axios)

* Meanwhile the second half of the package, the $1.5 trillion American
Families Plan, is going to be announced

soon. It's mostly care funding and free community college. (Washington
Post)

* The overwhelming majority of Americans supports the decision

on the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. I really don't think there was a
good option. (Axios)

* Interesting that the message is that green energy can counter China.
(Financial Times)

* Trump appointee overseeing the National Climate Assessment has been
removed by the White House
.
(Yahoo News)

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