Monday, May 31, 2010

A Slick Takeover

Former Clinton Treasury man Robert Reich argues it's time for the government to take over BP's operations until the geyser is capped.
It's time for the federal government to put BP under temporary receivership, which gives the government authority to take over BP's operations in the Gulf of Mexico until the gusher is stopped. This is the only way the public will know what's going on, be confident enough resources are being put to stopping the gusher, ensure BP's strategy is correct, know the government has enough clout to force BP to use a different one if necessary, and be sure the president is ultimately in charge.

If the government can take over giant global insurer AIG and the auto giant General Motors and replace their CEOs, in order to keep them financially solvent, it should be able to put BP's north American operations into temporary receivership in order to stop one of the worst environmental disasters in U.S. history.

The Obama administration keeps saying BP is in charge because BP has the equipment and expertise necessary to do what's necessary. But under temporary receivership, BP would continue to have the equipment and expertise. The only difference: the firm would unambiguously be working in the public's interest. As it is now, BP continues to be responsible primarily to its shareholders, not to the American public. As a result, the public continues to worry that a private for-profit corporation is responsible for stopping a public tragedy.
He goes on to list five reasons:
  1. BP continues to lie.
  2. BP has no accountability.
  3. The plans from here on out get riskier and riskier.
  4. The government has no authority to force BP to use other strategies.
  5. The President has no legal authority otherwise.
Probably worth looking into, I would think...

1 comment:

In Ur Blog Eatin Waffles (Accept no fail imitations) said...

Actually I don't care how public BP is with this, quite frankly no one wants this mess over with more than them. It's hurting their stock, their company image and their prospects for future drilling. They have the most to lose from this.

Related Posts with Thumbnails