UAW FILES CHARGES AGAINST ROMNEY ON HIS AUTO BAIL-OUT PROFITEERING
Broke ethics law hiding millions, say good government groups
by Greg Palast
Toledo, Ohio - Wednesday October 31, 2012
For Mitt Romney, it's one scary Halloween. The Presidential candidate has just learned that
tomorrow afternoon he will charged with violating the federal Ethics in Government law by
improperly concealing his multi-million dollar windfall from the auto industry bail-out.
At a press conference in Toledo, Bob King, President of the United Automobile Workers, will
announce that his union and Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) have filed
a formal complaint with the US Office of Government Ethics in Washington stating that Gov. Romney
improperly hid a profit of $15.3 million to $115.0 million in Ann Romney's so-called "blind" trust.
The union chief says, "The American people have a right to know about Gov. Romney’s potential
conflicts of interest, such as the profits his family made from the auto rescue,” “It’s time for Gov.
Romney to disclose or divest.”
“While Romney was opposing the rescue of one of the nation’s most important manufacturing
sectors, he was building his fortunes with his Delphi investor group, making his fortunes off the
misfortunes of others,” King added.
The Romneys' gigantic windfall was hidden inside an offshore corporation inside a Limited
Partnership inside a trust which both concealed the gain and reduces taxes on it.
The Romneys' windfall was originally exposed in Nation Magazine, Mitt Romney's Bail-out Bonanza
after a worldwide investigation by our crew at The Guardian, the Nation Institute and the Palast
Investigative Fund. [Ed. - The full story of Romney and his "vulture fund" partners is in Palast's New
York Times bestseller, Billionaires & Ballot Bandits.]
According to ethics law expert Dan Curry who drafted the ethics complaint, Ann Romney does not
have a federally-approved blind trust. An approved "blind" trust may not be used to hide a major
investment which could be affected by Romney if he were to be elected President. Other groups
joining the UAW and CREW include Public Citizen, the Service Employees International Union, Public
Campaign, People for the American Way and The Social Equity Group.
President Obama's approved trust, for example, contains only highly-diversified mutual funds on
which Presidential action can have little effect. By contrast, the auto bail-out provided a windfall of
over 4,000% on one single Romney investment.
In 2009, Ann Romney partnered with her husband's key donor, billionaire Paul Singer, who secretly
bought a controlling interest in Delphi Auto, the former GM auto parts division. Singer's hedge
fund, Elliott Management, threatened to cut off GM's supply of steering columns unless GM and the
government's TARP auto bail-out fund provided Delphi with huge payments. While the US treasury
complained this was "extortion," the hedge funds received, ultimately, $12.9 billion in taxpayer
subsidies.
As a result, the shares Singer and Romney bought for just 67 cents are today worth over $30, a
4,000% gain. Singer's hedge fund made a profit of $1.27 billion and the Romney's tens of millions.
The UAW complaint calls for Romney to reveal exactly how much he made off Delphi -- and
continues to make. The Singer syndicate, once in control of Delphi, eliminated every single UAW job
--25,000-- and moved almost all auto parts production to Mexico and China where Delphi now
employs 25,000 auto parts workers.
Forensic Economist Greg Palast's investigative reports can be seen on BBC Television. His latest
bestseller, Billionaires & Ballot Bandits: How to Steal an Election in 9 Easy Steps contains a comic
book by Ted Rall and chapters by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. http://www.BallotBandits.org
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UAW FILES CHARGES AGAINST ROMNEY ON HIS AUTO BAIL-OUT PROFITEERING
Broke ethics law hiding millions, say good government groups
by Greg Palast
Toledo, Ohio - Wednesday October 31, 2012
For Mitt Romney, it's one scary Halloween. The Presidential candidate has just learned that
tomorrow afternoon he will charged with violating the federal Ethics in Government law by
improperly concealing his multi-million dollar windfall from the auto industry bail-out.
At a press conference in Toledo, Bob King, President of the United Automobile Workers, will
announce that his union and Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) have filed
a formal complaint with the US Office of Government Ethics in Washington stating that Gov. Romney
improperly hid a profit of $15.3 million to $115.0 million in Ann Romney's so-called "blind" trust.
The union chief says, "The American people have a right to know about Gov. Romney’s potential
conflicts of interest, such as the profits his family made from the auto rescue,” “It’s time for Gov.
Romney to disclose or divest.”
“While Romney was opposing the rescue of one of the nation’s most important manufacturing
sectors, he was building his fortunes with his Delphi investor group, making his fortunes off the
misfortunes of others,” King added.
The Romneys' gigantic windfall was hidden inside an offshore corporation inside a Limited
Partnership inside a trust which both concealed the gain and reduces taxes on it.
The Romneys' windfall was originally exposed in Nation Magazine, Mitt Romney's Bail-out Bonanza
after a worldwide investigation by our crew at The Guardian, the Nation Institute and the Palast
Investigative Fund. [Ed. - The full story of Romney and his "vulture fund" partners is in Palast's New
York Times bestseller, Billionaires & Ballot Bandits.]
According to ethics law expert Dan Curry who drafted the ethics complaint, Ann Romney does not
have a federally-approved blind trust. An approved "blind" trust may not be used to hide a major
investment which could be affected by Romney if he were to be elected President. Other groups
joining the UAW and CREW include Public Citizen, the Service Employees International Union, Public
Campaign, People for the American Way and The Social Equity Group.
President Obama's approved trust, for example, contains only highly-diversified mutual funds on
which Presidential action can have little effect. By contrast, the auto bail-out provided a windfall of
over 4,000% on one single Romney investment.
In 2009, Ann Romney partnered with her husband's key donor, billionaire Paul Singer, who secretly
bought a controlling interest in Delphi Auto, the former GM auto parts division. Singer's hedge
fund, Elliott Management, threatened to cut off GM's supply of steering columns unless GM and the
government's TARP auto bail-out fund provided Delphi with huge payments. While the US treasury
complained this was "extortion," the hedge funds received, ultimately, $12.9 billion in taxpayer
subsidies.
As a result, the shares Singer and Romney bought for just 67 cents are today worth over $30, a
4,000% gain. Singer's hedge fund made a profit of $1.27 billion and the Romney's tens of millions.
The UAW complaint calls for Romney to reveal exactly how much he made off Delphi -- and
continues to make. The Singer syndicate, once in control of Delphi, eliminated every single UAW job
--25,000-- and moved almost all auto parts production to Mexico and China where Delphi now
employs 25,000 auto parts workers.
Forensic Economist Greg Palast's investigative reports can be seen on BBC Television. His latest
bestseller, Billionaires & Ballot Bandits: How to Steal an Election in 9 Easy Steps contains a comic
book by Ted Rall and chapters by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. http://www.BallotBandits.org
