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  • Encore: America's Gilded Capital

    Encore: America's Gilded Capital

    Bill talks with New York Times journalist Mark Leibovich about This Town, his book on how money rules Washington, DC.

    Moyers & Company
    December 6, 2013

    BILL MOYERS: This week on Moyers & Company...

    MARK LEIBOVICH: If you can sell yourself as someone who knows how
    Washington works, someone who has these relationships, someone who can
    get on the phone and get the president of the United States to pardon,
    you know, your fugitive client, that's a very, very marketable
    commodity. I mean, if you see-- if you are seen as someone who knows
    how this town works, someone who is a usual suspect in this town, you
    can dine out for years. That's why no one leaves.

    ANNOUNCER: Funding is provided by: Carnegie Corporation of New York,
    celebrating 100 years of philanthropy, and committed to doing real and
    permanent good in the world.
    The Kohlberg Foundation. Independent Production Fund, with support
    from The Partridge Foundation, a John and Polly Guth Charitable Fund.
    The Clements Foundation.
    Park Foundation, dedicated to heightening public awareness of critical
    issues. The Herb Alpert Foundation, supporting organizations whose
    mission is to promote compassion and creativity in our society.
    The Bernard and Audre Rapoport Foundation.
    The John D. And Catherine T. Macarthur Foundation, committed to
    building a more just, verdant, and peaceful world. More information at
    Macfound.Org.' Anne Gumowitz.
    The Betsy And Jesse Fink Foundation.
    The HKH Foundation.
    Barbara G. Fleischman.
    And by our sole corporate sponsor, Mutual of America, designing
    customized individual and group retirement products. That's why we're
    your retirement company.

    BILL MOYERS: Welcome. I want to tell you about a book you simply have
    to read. I promise, you will laugh and cry and by the end, I think
    you'll be ready for the revolution. The title is `This Town,' an
    up-close look at how our nation's capital really works. I can tell
    you, it's not a pretty picture -- the story of a city's bipartisan
    lust for power, cash and notoriety so overpowering that everyone and
    everything else gets sucked into its undertow. Government becomes no
    longer the servant of the people but in the thrall of big money,
    lobbyists and a media happy to live off its fancy leftovers in a
    feeding frenzy of gossip and shallow speculation. How appropriate that
    a capital built on a swamp has sunk so low into the stinking mud.
    Mark Leibovich is the chief national correspondent for The New York
    Times Magazine and is the author of This Town, which has everyone
    who's anyone in Washington talking and whispering. What a tale it
    is. Mark Leibovich is with me now. Welcome.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Hi Bill. Good to be here.

    BILL MOYERS: I've read your book twice. It's fun to read. It's eye
    opening. I learned a lot from it. And yet, at the core of it, there's
    a tragic story. Do you see that?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Absolutely. I didn't see it fully as I was writing it,
    but I see it in how people outside of Washington have reacted to
    it. The tragic story is that what has grown up in this city that was
    supposedly built on public service is this permanent feudal class of
    insiders, of people who are not term limited. Of people who never
    leave and never die, figuratively never die. And who are there and who
    are doing very, very well for themselves, very, very well for
    Washington, and not very, very well for the United States.

    BILL MOYERS: Can you frame the historical moment in which you're
    writing?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: I would frame it really over the last ten, 15, maybe
    20 years you've had this explosion of money in politics.

    BILL MOYERS: Gold rush, you call it.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: It's a gold rush. People now come to Washington to get
    rich. That was never the defining ethic of the town, certainly 30
    years ago. There is now so much money. It is now the wealthiest
    community in the United States. It is home to seven of the wealthiest
    ten counties in the United States. And frankly-- it is-- I mean, the
    power is obviously going to be very alluring.
    There are going to be some idealists who's going to be the
    make-a-difference types. But ultimately this has more in common with
    Silicon Valley, with Hollywood, than with Wall Street. Which is a rush
    to cash in. It is a rush to somehow take from this big entity, this
    big marketplace, some kind of reward, as opposed to doing something
    that will reward the country.

    BILL MOYERS: What's stunning is how disconnected Washington is, the
    political Washington that you write about, from the lives of everyday
    people. Is it because of this gold rush?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: When you look at the disconnect between Washington and
    the rest of the country, which people talk about. I mean, there's a
    shorthand, "Well, Washington is out of touch," right? People don't
    fully know what that is made of. I mean, I think you see intuitively
    on TV or when you visit Washington, that people don't talk and deal
    with people the way most Americans talk and deal with each other. I
    mean, there's a language of obsequiousness, a language of selling, a
    language of spin. But most-- but look-- it is a wealth culture. These
    are people who are doing very, very well. It's true in the
    demographics, it's true in the sensibility.

    BILL MOYERS: The people you write about in here seem very comfortable
    with this town.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: They do. I mean, it's been very, very good for them. I
    mean, it's-- look, this town has worked for a lot of people, a lot of
    very good people, a lot of very bad people, and a lot of very mediocre
    people. But these are-- a lot of this book is filled with profiles of
    people who have made this town work for them.

    BILL MOYERS: What do the readers out across the country tell you about
    the picture you have reported?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Well the disconnect, it's interesting, Bill, has been
    very much displayed in the reaction of the book. I mean, I think in
    Washington you have had a very carnival like reaction to the
    book. It's, like, "Oh, who wins? Who loses? What are the nuggets? Will
    Leibovich be cast out? Will he not be invited to lunch with party X or
    Y again?" So you have a very silly and shallow read inside the bell
    way, which is titillating I guess in its own way. Outside of
    Washington you have a truer sense of the outrage. You have a sense of
    an education. You have a sense of, "Oh my goodness. I've known
    Washington has been something I've been disappointed in. But I didn't
    know it looked like this. I didn't know it had come to all of this
    just this-- incredible contempt for what they are supposed to be there
    for." Contempt for what their constituents are, i.e., us.

    BILL MOYERS: You say political Washington is `an inbred company town
    where party differences are easily subsumed by membership in the
    club.' And you talked about the club. "The club swells for the night
    into the ultimate bubble world. They become part of a system that
    rewards, more than anything a system of self-perpetuation."

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Self-perpetuation is a key point in all of this. It is
    what you're going to-- how you're going to continue. I mean, the
    original notion of the founders is that a president or a public
    servant would serve a term, couple years, return to their communities,
    return to their farm. Now the organizing principle of life in
    Washington is how are you going to keep it going? Whether it's how
    you're going to stay in office, you know, by pleasing your leadership
    so that you get money, by raising enough money so that you can get
    reelected by getting a gig after you're done with Congress, after
    you're done in the White House, by getting the next gig.

    BILL MOYERS: `Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,' it ain't.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: No, it isn't. And look, I tried to find a Mr. Smith
    character. I wanted to, and I had some back and forth with the first
    publisher of this book, which is not the ultimate publisher of this
    book, about finding someone to root for. They wanted someone to feel
    good about to sort of run through the narrative. And there are people
    I think I could root for, the people I like in Washington, I think
    people who are there for the right reasons. But I couldn't find him or
    her. And ultimately, I gave up trying. And I tried to sort of create a
    cumulative picture over a five year period.

    BILL MOYERS: What does that say to you?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: I think ultimately it says that this is not-- well,
    first of all, it's a very cautious culture. And I think cowardice is
    rewarded at every step of the way.

    BILL MOYERS: How so?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: It's rewarded in Congress. You everything about the
    Congressional system, whether it's leadership, whether it's how money
    is raised, is going to reward cowardice. The true mavericks are going
    to be punished in some ways. If you are going-- if you want to build a
    career outside of office when you're done, when you're voted out as a
    lobbyist, as a consultant, as many of them do, you are absolutely in--
    you are absolutely encouraged not anger too many people. Not--

    BILL MOYERS: Not take a big stand?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Not take a big stand, right. No truth is going to be
    told here by-- based on any sort of cowardly go along, get along
    way. And I think that there are many ways in which the money, the
    system is financed-- the politics are financed the way the media
    works, that will not under any circumstances reward someone who takes
    a stand.

    BILL MOYERS: As you and I both know, many Americans see Washington
    today as a polarized, dysfunctional city. One that is not sufficiently
    bipartisan. But you describe it as a place that `becomes a
    determinedly bipartisan team when there is money to be made.'

    MARK LEIBOVICH: That is absolutely true. I mean, ultimately, the
    business of Washington relies on things not getting done. And this is
    a bipartisan imperative. If a tax reform bill passed tomorrow, if an
    immigration bill passed tomorrow, that's tens of billions of dollars
    in consulting, lobbying, messaging fees that are not going to be paid
    out.

    BILL MOYERS: Let's take one example. April 20th, 2010, the Deepwater
    Horizon oil well, oil rig, explodes in the Gulf of Mexico. Eleven
    people killed, the largest marine spill in the history of the
    industry. Oil gushes onto the seafloor for at least 84 days. You,
    Leibovich, look at that crude oil flowing into the gulf, and you see
    an equally large flow of cash spreading across Washington, covering
    our nation's capital to, as you say, "manage the crisis." Now, tell us
    how they set about to manage that crisis.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: So BP is in this whole heap of trouble, okay? They
    have this disaster that they are pegged with. The president looks
    powerless. I mean, what are you going to do? You have this awful
    calamity taking place. Systematically BP is spending tens of millions
    of dollars to basically tie up the most prominent Washington
    Democratic and Republican lobbyists, media consultants, ad people, to
    where you had an all-star roster. And all of a sudden, everyone is
    working together. I mean, you had rhetoric of President Obama, you
    know, criticizing BP. You had BP saying, "Oh no, we're going to make
    this right." You had Republicans saying, "Oh, the president should be
    doing more." So you had this TV sort of debate, the same noise you
    would see in any other story juxtaposed with these terrible oil soaked
    pelican pictures from the gulf, which in fact the city is just reaping
    this bounty.

    BILL MOYERS: You say BP, British Petroleum, put together a beltway
    dream team that included Republican super lobbyists like Ken
    Duberstein, Democratic super lobbyist Tony Podesta, former vice
    president Cheney's one time spokeswoman Anne Womack-Kolton, Republican
    flacks like John Feehery and Democratic flacks like Steve McMahon and
    McMahon's business partner, the Republican media guru Alex
    Castellanos, who's a contributor to CNN.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Yes. McMahon is on MSNBC so it's very bipartisan that
    way too.

    BILL MOYERS: And McMahon, the Democrat and Castellanos the Republican
    are partners in a firm called Purple Strategies. BP hires them to
    spearhead this $50 million television campaign you talk about.

    TONY HAYWARD: To those affected and your families, I am deeply sorry.

    BILL MOYERS: They were brought, you say, into the fold by the
    Democratic operative, Hilary Rosen, who was working for a London-based
    firm that was also working for BP. And she was also a pundit for
    CNN. I mean, what a web.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: And again, I think the other piece of this is that a
    year later Geoff Morrell, who is the head spokesman for the Pentagon
    under, you know, President Obama's Pentagon, has become the chief
    Washington spokesman for BP.

    BILL MOYERS: Former White House correspondent for ABC News.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: ABC News. He followed Bob Gates to the Pentagon first
    with President Bush then with President Obama. Sort of a classic
    revolving door figure, Geoff is. But no, so-- that was-- I mean, it's
    a classic two step. I mean, I also think BP has done very, very well
    rehabilitating itself. I mean, thanks largely to flooding the media
    with all kinds of goodies and a lot of advertising money. And we're
    supposed to feel good about BP again.

    COMMERCIAL NARRATOR: Two years ago, the people of BP made a commitment
    to the gulf and every day since we've worked hard to keep it. BP has
    paid over twenty three billion dollars to help people and businesses
    who were affected, and to cover cleanup costs. Today the beaches and
    gulf are open for everyone to enjoy.

    BILL MOYERS: And what's the moral that you-- we draw from that story?
    About this town?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: About this town, is-- well, first of all, when there's
    a problem, there is a lot of money to be made in this town. And, look,
    it's another example of Washington doing very, very, very well.

    BILL MOYERS Let's look at Jack Quinn and Ed Gillespie

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Jack Quinn is the White House counsel under Bill
    Clinton. He went onto cable a lot and defended the president during a
    lot of his campaign finance problems during his two terms. He met Ed
    Gillespie, who was then a Republican operative in green rooms. They
    had this green room friendship. People become friends. And in Ed and
    Jack's case, they went into business together. They started Quinn
    Gillespie, the first real major sort of bipartisan lobbying firm.

    BILL MOYERS: One stop lobbying.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: One stop lobbying. You want to deal with Republicans,
    you want to get to Republicans, you go here. You want to get to
    Democrats, you go here. They founded them so they-- their firm's
    founded in 2000. Jack Quinn got into some trouble in 2001 after he
    successfully lobbied Bill Clinton to pardon his law client, Marc Rich.

    BILL MOYERS: Fugitive.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Fugitive Marc Rich. There was a big to-do then. Jack
    was big time in the barrel. He's hauled before Congress. He feels like
    he's being looked at in restaurants. And Ed Gillespie said, "Look,
    Jack, in a few months everyone's going to forget about this and all
    they're going to remember about you and this incident is that you got
    something big done." And sure enough-- you know, Jack did a good job
    for his client. The outrage dissipated. And the firm-- the lobbying
    firm thrived with the rest of the industry.

    BILL MOYERS: Four years later, they sold out for $40 million. Now how
    do they make that much money in four years and the talent they bring
    is that they're creatures of Washington?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: That's a very, very, very valuable commodity. I mean,
    if you can sell yourself as someone who knows how Washington works,
    someone who has these relationships, someone who can get on the phone
    and get the president of the United States to pardon, you know, your
    fugitive client, that's a very, very marketable commodity. I mean, if
    you see-- if you are seen as someone who knows how this town works,
    someone who is a usual suspect in this town, you can dine out for
    years. That's why no one leaves.

    BILL MOYERS You once asked the Democrat Jack Quinn what appealed to
    him about the Republican Ed Gillespie, who became his partner when
    they first started bonding. And he answered?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Well, =80=9CEd got the joke.'

    BILL MOYERS: What's the joke?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: That's what I said. I said, "Jack, what's the joke?'
    And he said, "The joke is that, well, we're all patriots." And I
    thought that that was both-- it was some mix of sarcasm, contempt,
    glibness-- I don't know. It was a fascinating answer.

    BILL MOYERS: You reported here, that `over the last dozen years
    corporate America, much of it Wall Street, has triple the amount of
    money it spent on lobbying and public affairs in DC,' because, and I'm
    quoting you, =80=9Chave figured out that despite the exorbitant calls
    to hiring lobbyists, the ability to shape or tweak or kill even the
    tiniest legislative loophole can be worth tens of millions of
    dollars."

    MARK LEIBOVICH: First of all, there's extravagant waste in the private
    sector of Washington if you go to some of these lobbying offices and
    parties and what they're billing people. I mean, it looks like an
    incredible racket. In fact, these companies are getting what they pay
    for. I mean, Tony Podesta we talked about before, a Democratic
    lobbyist, talked about how great it is that laws are so complicated
    now. The context was I think it was Dodd-Frank or it might have been
    in health care, there are these tiny little loopholes. They go on for
    thousands of pages. And if you can be a lobbyist or a lawyer at a firm
    who can understand this much and you're getting paid, you know, tens
    of millions of dollars, but you're probably saving your clients, you
    know, hundreds of millions of dollars, sometimes more. So it's very
    cost effective. I mean, the complete arcaneness of this world is
    again, very, very good for business.

    BILL MOYERS: Let's quickly run through some of the roll call of
    influence peddlers that you write about. Billy Tauzin.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Billy Tauzin was a former Democrat, became a
    Republican congressman. Went on to become the head of the-- one of the
    top pharmaceutical lobbies in the country

    BILL MOYERS: After, in the House, overseeing the drug industry,
    chairing the committee that oversaw the drug industry. And he was
    crucial in passing the Medicare prescription bill, which has meant
    billions in profits for the drug companies. Then he resigned, as you
    say, ran the pharmaceuticals lobbying arm in Washington. And in 2010,
    according to you, made $11.6 million. Steve Kroft and `60 Minutes' did
    an exposé of him.

    STEVE KROFT on 60 minutes: I mean, this doesn't look good. When you
    push this bill through that produces a windfall for the drug
    companies, and then a short time later you go to work for the drug
    lobby at a salary of $2 million.

    BILLY TAUZIN on 60 minutes: There's nothing I could have done in my
    life after leaving Congress that I didn't have some impact on after 25
    years in Congress. If that looks bad to you, have at it. That's the
    truth.

    STEVE KROFT on 60 minutes: In fairness to Billy Tauzin and former
    Medicare chief Tom Scully, they weren't the only public officials
    involved with the prescription drug bill who later went to work for
    the pharmaceutical industry. Just before the vote, Tauzin cited the
    people who had been most helpful in getting in passed.

    BILLY TAUZIN on 60 minutes: I specifically want to thank the staffs
    and committees from Ways and Means. John McManus that did such a great
    job.

    STEVE KROFT on 60 minutes: Within a few months McManus left Congress
    and started his own lobbying firm. Among his new clients were PhRMA,
    Pfizer, Lilly and Merck.

    BILLY TAUZIN on 60 minutes: From a majority side of the finance
    committee, Linda Fishman-

    STEVE KROFT on 60 minutes: Fishman left to become a lobbyist with the
    drug manufacturer Amgen.

    BILLY TAUZIN on 60 minutes: Not the least of all but the energy and
    commerce committee staff who toiled so hard for us - chief of staff
    Pat Morrissey.

    STEVE KROFT on 60 minutes: Morrissey took a job lobbying for drug
    companies Novartis and Hoffman-LaRoche.

    BILLY TAUZIN on 60 minutes: And Jeremy Allen.

    STEVE KROFT on 60 minutes: He went to Johnson and Johnson.

    BILLY TAUZIN on 60 minutes: Kathleen Weldon and Jim Barnett.

    STEVE KROFT on 60 minutes: She went to lobby for Biogen, a biotech
    company. He left to lobby for Hoffman-LaRoche.

    BILLY TAUZIN on 60 minutes: They did a marvelous job for this house
    and we owe them a debt. Thank you all.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: We owe them all right. Wow. Yeah, I mean, this
    happens-- it happens with every bill. I mean, I think-- what was
    striking about that is Congressman Tauzin actually sort of-- if we
    sent a resume out on all of their behalf, by sort of doing a roll call
    in his remarks. But look, I mean, that-- the Steve Kroft piece was
    stunning in that I think he caught Tauzin just, oddly flat-footed. I
    mean, I think we've seen in reading his face, he seemed almost
    flat-footed that the question would be asked.
    I mean, no one is really going to burn any bridges. I mean, it's like
    one big bridge, in some ways. And look Jack Abramoff is a name that
    actually has not come up here. He's the picture of modern disgrace in
    Washington, right? The disgraced lobbyist.
    One of the many books I read in preparing this book was his memoir,
    which he wrote, I think, largely I don't know if he wrote it in
    prison. But I think a lot of it was probably derived from his
    ruminations in prison. He told about how he knew as a lobbyists, he
    would have all these relationships with people on the Hill, people in
    the White House, people-elected officials.
    And at a certain point, they would say, "Hey, you know what
    Congressman X? Or you know what, Staffer X? You're really good at
    this. When you're done-- have you thought about what you're going to
    do when you leave the Hill?" And they'd say, "Well, not really." Or
    they would just sort of leave the question open. And Jack Abramoff
    said, "I knew that when I could ask that question, I owned him."
    Because there's a preemptive bribe there.
    It's-- you know, "You're going to be making maybe a million dollars at
    my lobbying firm, if you answer this question correctly and you act
    correctly." I mean, in your office, if you can help us. If you can
    maintain this friendship for as long as you're in power. I mean-- when
    you see Peter Orszag going to Citigroup, when you see Jake Seiwert
    going to Goldman, when you see Geoff Morrell going to BP, it does sort
    of beg the question, "Who were they working for when they were at the
    Pentagon, at the OMB, at the Treasury Department?" I mean, you just
    sort of wonder where their mind is.

    BILL MOYERS Trent Lott. You say he's the he's the archetype of the age
    of the former. What's a former?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: A former is a former office holder, a former senator,
    a former congressman, a former White House deputy chief of staff, or
    whatever. I mean, the line I have in the book is that, "Formers stick
    to Washington like melted cheese on a gold plated toaster." They don't
    go home anymore. They talk about how much they hate Washington, but
    they settle in here-- quite comfortably. And Trent Lott was the Senate
    majority leader-- you know, very powerful Republican. He kind of
    abruptly retired in 2007 I think, went into business with John Breaux,
    a Democratic senator. He was a long time senator from Louisiana. As a
    member of Congress, Breaux said that his vote-- someone called him a
    cheap whore and he said, "I'm not that cheap." And he also said, "My
    vote cannot be bought. It can be rented." Anyway, Trent Lott--

    BILL MOYERS: So you've got the Republican Lott and the Democratic
    Breaux--

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Demo-another--

    BILL MOYERS: --creating a boutique lobby firm.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Yeah, although they eventually were absorbed into
    Patton Boggs which is, you know, one of the bigger lobbying firms in
    town--

    BILL MOYERS: Tommy Boggs, son of the former speaker, Democratic
    majority leader, Hale Boggs, who's--

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Exactly.

    BILL MOYERS: --one of the most-- well, arguably the most powerful
    lobbyist firm in Washington.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Or it has been for many, many years. But anyway, so
    Trent Lott and John Breaux have been very, very successful in the last
    five, six years as lobbyists. Trent Lott, a pretty candid guy. He
    talked about how much he hates Washington. I said, "So why do you
    stay?" and he looked at me like I was crazy, and he said, "Well,
    because this is where all the problems are, but this is where all the
    money is.' I mean, this is what keeps people here. And it's true. No
    one leaves anymore.

    BILL MOYERS: Richard Gephardt.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Richard Gephardt, former House majority
    leader. Two-time presidential candidate. A hero to organized labor.

    BILL MOYERS: Son of a teamster.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Son of a teamster, milk truck driver. Gave some of the
    most impassioned campaign rallies I've ever seen in places like Iowa
    and--

    BILL MOYERS: For working people.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: For working people. I mean, he seemed like the real
    deal. He became a lobbyist, like a lot of members of Congress do. And
    he since has worked for a lot of corporations.

    BILL MOYERS: Goldman Sachs, Boeing, Visa, I get from your book.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Yeah. I mean, again, many of them not terribly
    friendly to organized labor.

    BILL MOYERS: In Congress, as you say, he fought for labor. But then he
    went to work for Spirit Aero Systems, overseeing a tough anti-union
    campaign. And then in the House he had supported a resolution
    condemning the Armenian genocide of 1915. When he left Congress he was
    paid about $70,000 a month by the Turkish government to oppose the
    resolution?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Yeah. I mean, I guess the word, "genocide" goes down a
    little easier at those rates, right I mean, I don't see any shame
    there. I don't-- again, he's allowed to change his mind for money. I'm
    allowed to be outraged.

    BILL MOYERS: Evan Bayh, Democrat from Indiana.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Yeah, Evan Bayh was this, you know, two term
    senator. He retired very, very extravagantly in the pages of "The New
    York Times" about how Washington is broke and how he was tired of all
    the yelling matches and partisanship and how nothing gets done. And he
    wanted to get into an honorable line of work. And a lot of his
    colleagues were not happy with this description, but also were rolling
    his eyes because they were, like, "Where was that outrage when you
    were in office?"
    And one of his colleagues said, "Well, that's the most effective
    speech he's given, you know, in eight years here, or in 12 years
    here." He immediately joined Fox News, he joined the Chamber of
    Commerce. I mean, this is someone who was a runner up to be President
    Obama's running mate.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: He and Andy Card, the White House chief of staff under
    President Bush, they sort of did a dog and pony act in which they
    would go out in the country on behalf of the Chamber of Commerce and--

    BILL MOYERS: Which is the biggest business lobby--

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Biggest business lobby in Washington absolutely.

    BILL MOYERS: In Washington.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: A big thorn in the side of this White House. And have,
    you know, been giving a lot of speeches sort of-- in support of that
    agenda.

    BILL MOYERS: In your book you quote one journalist calling Bayh, `the
    perfectly representative face for the rotted Washington
    establishment." Another of your colleagues said he was "Acting to
    entrench the culture of narcissism and hypocrisy that's killing the
    United States Congress." Another describes him `practically a
    caricature of what a sell-out looks like.' I would take from your book
    that you don't think those depictions are too harsh.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: No, not at all. I think it's true. Look, I mean, you
    don't have to-- I mean, I just sort of lay out the examples. I lay out
    his words. I mean, again, he was so sanctimonious in his departure.

    EVAN BAYH: Can we not remember we are "one nation under God" with a
    common heritage and a common destiny? Let us no longer be divided into
    "red" states and "blue" states but reunite once more as fifty red,
    white, and blue states. As the civil rights leader once reminded us:
    "we may have arrived on these shores in different ships, but we are
    all in the same boat now."[...]
    So my friends, the time has come for the sons and daughters of Lincoln
    and the heirs of Jefferson and Jackson to no longer wage war upon each
    other but to instead renew the struggle against the ancient enemies of
    man: ignorance, poverty and disease. That is why we are here. That is
    why.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: He was so disgusted with Washington. And, of course,
    he stayed. And there are all these examples of what he has gone on to
    do. So, look, it all speaks for itself. I mean, you can-- it's nice
    that there are commentators who can put a fine a point-- or a finer
    point on it. But this is all out there.

    BILL MOYERS: Chris Dodd, former Peace Corps volunteer.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Chris Dodd, very nice guy, very fun-loving guy. I
    mean, very sort of, you know, outspoken liberal. He was-- he had this
    great legislative last hurrah in 2010, where he-- you know, he
    coauthored Dodd-Frank. He was one of the chief engineers of the health
    care bill. I remember talking to him when he announced he wasn't going
    to run. He got in some trouble-- was very, very unpopular back in
    Connecticut. He got in some trouble with a mortgage broker.

    BILL MOYERS: He took a loan, I think, from Countrywide--

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Countrywide.

    BILL MOYERS: --in the housing--

    MARK LEIBOVICH: In the housing--

    BILL MOYERS: --bubble.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Right, at a time when he was, you know, presumably,
    you know, chairman of the banking committee could have been very
    involved in that. But also was running for president in a fairly
    quixotic--

    BILL MOYERS: With a lot of money from--

    MARK LEIBOVICH: A lot of money from Wall Street. You know, and he
    basically decamped to Iowa for a few months in 2008. Chris Dodd, I
    remember having lunch with him in the Senate dining room and saying,
    "So what are you going to do now?" And it was a triumphant moment. And
    he-- I mean, because he-- these bills were actually going to pass.
    And he said-- "Oh, boy, the possibilities are endless. I mean, I could
    be a college president. I might go out to work for some startup. I
    might rejoin the Peace Corps." I mean, he had this look of
    possibility. And I said, "So you're not going to lobby, right?" And he
    said, "Oh no, no, no, take that off the table right, right now." And
    he is now head of one of the most powerful lobbies in town, the Motion
    Pictures Association of America. You know, he would say that, "Well,
    I'm not registered to lobby, technically." And it's true. But he also
    oversees a staff of lobbyists. And the chapter about that is-- I talk
    about just the institutionalization of being part of the political
    class.

    BILL MOYERS: Do you think he lied to you?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: He would say that his thinking evolved. He would-- I
    don't think he-- I don't know. What do you call it? It turned out not
    to be true. I mean, he-- look, it's disappointing. I mean, I have to
    say that as someone who is looking for someone to level with him.

    BILL MOYERS: The official language in Washington is fraudulent
    language. It's the language of spin, marketing, P.R.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: It's not how human beings talk to each other. But
    yeah, no, it's-- people don't rec-- you become very anesthetized. And
    Washington is a huge, huge dome of anesthesia. People don't fully know
    just, again, the B.S. that is just part of the day to day
    transaction. And again, it's hard to realize when you're living
    there. I mean, I think Bob Bennett, the senator from Utah, he was
    voted out.

    BILL MOYERS: He lost to the Tea Party candidate.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Tea Party guy. He, I think, was-- someone said, "So
    you're going to cash in." He goes, "I'm entitled to make a living."
    And that's-- look, it's what they do.

    BILL MOYERS: You write about-- you write about Anita Dunn. Tell me
    about Anita Dunn.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Anita Dunn is a long-time Democratic operative. She
    was one of the top aides for President Obama's '08 campaign. She was
    the communications director for a time in the White House. Very, very
    sharp woman.

    BILL MOYERS: As you say, Anita Dunn helped Michelle Obama set up her
    `Let's Move' program to stop obesity. I'm almost quoting you verbatim.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Yep, sure.

    BILL MOYERS: Then she signs on as a consultant to the food
    manufacturing and media firms trying to block restrictions on sugary
    foods targeting children. Her husband, by the way, and this is, of
    course, incidental I'm sure, happened to be the president's White
    House council.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Certainly Anita Dunn has benefited greatly from a
    perception of her being still a figure with ties to the White House,
    whether it's her husband who's now the former White House council. But
    someone who has all kinds of friends there. Who's on the phone there
    all the time. I mean, that has to be a boon to her corporate clients.

    BILL MOYERS: You talk about President Obama and his campaign and his
    opposition to the revolving door. Let me play you an excerpt from one
    of his speeches.

    BARACK OBAMA: But the American people deserve more than simply an
    assurance that those who are coming to Washington will serve their
    interests. They also deserve to know that there are rules on the books
    to keep it that way. They deserve a government that is truly of, by,
    and for the people. As I often said during the campaign, we need to
    make the White House the people's house. And we need to close the
    revolving door that lets lobbyists come into government freely, and
    lets them use their time in public service as a way to promote their
    own interests over the interests of the American people when they
    leave.

    BILL MOYERS: And what happened?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: They have put this law in place, "We won't have
    lobbyists in the White House." They kept making exceptions. They--
    there have been a number of people who they have waived that rule
    for. But ultimately, I think what's happened is more on the other
    end. You said people leaving the White House to go right to K
    Street. You've had people leaving the White House going right to
    Goldman Sachs, going right to BP, going right to Citigroup. I mean,
    some of the biggest corporate nemeses in this administration in the
    first term are now being staffed at the highest levels by people who
    were staffing the Obama administration at the highest--

    BILL MOYERS: Peter Orszag, who was Obama's--

    MARK LEIBOVICH: --director of management and budget director.

    BILL MOYERS: Now at Citi.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: High level at Citi. Jake Siewert who was a chief
    counselor to Tim Geithner, secretary of treasury-- they were doing all
    kinds of battle with Goldman Sachs during the first term, especially
    after the financial crisis. Jake is now the head of communications for
    Goldman Sachs. I mean, you--

    BILL MOYERS: And so many of them have a connection to someone else who
    figures prominent in your book, Robert Rubin.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Yeah, Robert Rubin--

    BILL MOYERS: Was Clinton's treasury secretary.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: There's always been a symbiosis between Wall Street
    and Washington to some degree. But I think the Clinton Era introduced
    a whole new level of magnitude to this. And Bob Rubin, who was the
    sort of storied head of Goldman Sachs for many years, coming to take
    the reins of treasury was really-- I mean, he was a real guru. And
    brought a lot of protégés, Larry Summers being the biggest example, to
    town. Tim Geithner being another one. And yeah, and then, you know,
    the economy crashes, the banks crash. I mean, Robert Rubin gets a
    great deal of blame. I mean, Bill Clinton himself did a mea culpa on
    Robert Rubin.

    BILL MOYERS: On ABC News.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: On ABC News, on George Stephanopoulos.

    BILL MOYERS: Rubin had been a force in killing Glass-Steagall, which
    was the firewall between commercial banks and investment banks.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Investment banks.

    BILL MOYERS: And he was a big supporter of derivatives, deregulation.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Absolutely.

    BILL MOYERS: And all that contributed to the fiscal crisis. After he
    left the Treasury Department, he went to Citi.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Went back to Citi--

    MARK LEIBOVICH: --Citi.

    BILL MOYERS: You say he made $126 million in nine years.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: No, he did. No, he did very, very, very well. And--

    BILL MOYERS: And you called Rubin "The primest of movers of in the
    modern marriage of politics and wealth creation."

    MARK LEIBOVICH: He was the ambassador to the Clinton wealth machine. I
    mean, even-- I mean, you had people like Rahm Emmanuel, who was a
    mid-level White House, you know, operative in the Clinton White House,
    who, was able to go to Wasserstein Perella and make, you know, $16.2
    or $16 point something million.

    BILL MOYERS: $18 million in two years.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: And then before he went back to become a public
    servant again and run for Congress. But yeah, Bob Rubin brought this
    whole generation of Wall Street people to Washington. Then he brought
    them back from Washington to Wall Street, greatly enriched. And look,
    he's a hero to a lot of people on Wall Street. He was a hero to a lot
    of people in Washington. And again, I think Bill Clinton more than
    anyone in the last, you know, few decades has sort of engineered this
    relationship.

    BILL MOYERS: When we come back, Mark Leibovich and I will talk about
    how the Washington press corps has been seduced by the power game, but
    first, this is pledge time on Public Television. We're taking a short
    break so you can show your support for the programming you see right
    here on this station.

    BILL MOYERS: For those of you still with us... For all its greed and
    power madness, Washington's still a place where citizens can go and
    make a noise. Here's a story from earlier this year about a group of
    restaurant workers who barely survive on minimal salaries and customer
    tips. They marched on Capitol Hill for a fair wage and a square
    deal...
    For the past 22 years, these workers have been stuck at a federal
    minimum wage of $2.13 an hour. At the head of the march, Saru
    Jayaraman.

    PROTESTERS: Roc United!

    BILL MOYERS : The organization she co-founded, Restaurant
    Opportunities Centers United, is fighting to improve wages and working
    conditions for the people who cook and serve the food we eat at
    restaurants and then clean up when we're done.
    Saru Jayaraman's new book Behind the Kitchen Door is an insider's
    expose of what it's really like to work at the lowest rungs of the
    restaurant industry.

    SARU JAYARAMAN: There are actually now over 10 million restaurant
    workers in the United States. So seven of the ten lowest paying jobs
    in America are restaurant jobs, and the two absolute lowest paying
    jobs in America are restaurant: dishwashers and fast food preps and
    cooks are the two absolute lowest paying jobs in America. These
    workers earn poverty wages because the minimum wage for tipped workers
    at the federal level has been frozen for 22 years at $2.13 an hour,
    and it's the reason that food servers use food stamps at double the
    rate of the rest of the U.S. workforce, and have a poverty rate of
    three times the rest of the U.S. workforce.
    We got to this place because of the power of the National Restaurant
    Association; we call it the other NRA. They've been named the tenth
    most powerful lobbying group in Congress and back in 1996 when Herman
    Cain was the head of the National Restaurant Association, he struck a
    deal with Congress saying that, `We will not oppose the overall
    minimum wage continuing to rise as long as the minimum wage for tipped
    workers stays frozen forever,' and so it has for the last 22 years.
    Imagine your average server in an IHOP in Texas earning $2.13 an hour,
    graveyard shift, no tips. The company's supposed to make up the
    difference between $2.13 and $7.25 but time and time again that
    doesn't happen.
    And when slow night happens and you don't earn anything or very little
    in tips you often can't pay the rent. And I guarantee you in every
    restaurant in America there's at least one person who's on the verge
    of homelessness or being evicted or going through some kind of
    instability. It's an incredible irony that the people that who put
    food on our tables use food stamps at twice the rate of the rest of
    the US workforce. Meaning that the people who put food on our tables
    can't afford to put food on their own family's tables. The other key
    issue that we find that workers face is the lack of paid sick days and
    healthcare benefits; two-thirds of all workers report cooking,
    preparing, and serving food when they're ill, with the flu or other
    sicknesses. And with a wage as little as $2.13, so reliant on tips for
    their wages, these workers simply cannot afford to take a day off when
    sick, let alone risk losing their jobs. The majority of workers are
    adults; many are parents and single parents, single mothers, using the
    restaurant job as their main source of income. We partner with more
    than a hundred small business owners around the country who are doing
    the right thing, providing good, decent wages, better working
    conditions, paid sick days, benefits, opportunities for
    advancement. So I think that's the first thing I would say to a small
    business owner is, `Look, there are tons of people who are already
    doing it. We're here to help you, they're here to help you try this
    new way of doing business.'

    BILL MOYERS: Acting on that democratic impulse, Saru Jayaraman and the
    protesting workers march from Capitol Hill to the Capital Grille
    steakhouse, owned by one of the biggest restaurant chains in
    America...

    SARU JAYARAMAN: Eighty-six thousand customers of yours have signed a
    petition calling on you to pay a minimum of at least five dollars an
    hour to your workers cause $2.13 is just not enough to live on. So
    here you go.

    CAPITAL GRILLE MANAGER: Thank you.

    SARU JAYARAMAN: Thank you.

    NARRATOR: We now return to Moyers & Company...

    BILL MOYERS: Let's get to the press. You write, "Never before has the
    so-called permanent establishment of Washington included so many
    people in the media." And you write, "The Washington press puts the
    `me' in `media.'' How so?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Look, I mean, first of all, just the rise in new media
    has given everyone a voice. I mean, the rise of cable has given
    everyone a face. I mean, it's never been easier to become a media
    celebrity. And I think punditry has replaced reporting as the gold
    standard of my profession. I mean, there-- the media is everywhere in
    Washington. I mean, I think the White House Correspondent's Dinner is
    a classic example of how Washington, you know, rewards being famous,
    being on TV, being a brand-- more than anything.

    BILL MOYERS: Your descriptions of the White House Correspondent's
    Association Dinner, the annual dinner are fabulous in the book. The
    dinner's sold out every table since 1993, at $2,500 a pop?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Yeah, but I mean, even the greater outrage is that
    there's-- it now goes over five days. You have probably about two
    dozen pre-parties and after parties. You probably have tens of
    millions of dollars, some funded by corporations, in entertainment, in
    sort of people sucking up to everyone else, and food and musical acts
    and so forth.
    Because, of course, you know, a single banquet is no longer sufficient
    to celebrate the accomplishments of the Washington media. Tom Brokaw
    who has become a real activist against the White House Correspondent's
    Dinner said that it sends the message that it's all about the people
    on the screen. It's all about the media. Which I think to some degree
    is true. I mean, the media is feeling great about itself. The media is
    as rich as any other part of the economy. And I think the
    Correspondent's Dinner is a classic example of this.

    BILL MOYERS: Have you attended one?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: I have, although not since 1996, because the `New York
    Times' stopped letting us go.

    BILL MOYERS: Why?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: They thought it was too-- Dean Baquet, who's now the
    managing editor of `The Times', he was the Washington bureau chief of
    `The Times.' I think it was in 2007, actually, declared that this is
    too cozy. He didn't like the message it sent. He would prefer that we
    stop going. I thought it was a great decision.

    BILL MOYERS: Describe the dinner to me.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: It's just this room full of tuxedoed people.
    A lot of Hollywood celebrities come in. A lot of people talk about,
    you know, the good that the press does. But again, it's an
    extravaganza that continues, that it becomes the ultimate bubble
    world, the ultimate example of decadence in Washington that people
    know intuitively is wrong, but have no either will or ability to stop
    it.

    REPORTER 1 at the WHCD: This is a big night in Washington. Anyone
    whose anybody is here. And the key question for everyone in Washington
    is `What are you wearing?'

    REPORTER 2 at the WHCD: So you've got the politicians, the
    journalists, and plenty of celebrities thrown in between. I had a
    Katie Perry sighting, saw Bradley Cooper too.

    REPORTER 1 at the WHCD: Is there anyone you're excited to meet
    tonight?

    MICHAEL STEELE at the WHCD: Everyone actually. I just came here with
    my buddy Chris Tucker it was good to see him.

    REPORTER 1 at the WHCD: You know Michael Steele?

    CHRIS TUCKER at the WHCD: Michael Steele? Who is Michael Steele?

    REPORTER 3 at the WHCD: And who are you wearing tonight?

    CELEBRITY at the WHCD: Badgely Mischka.

    GEORGE STEPHANOPOLOUS at the WHCD: You're asking people what they're
    wearing and all that....

    REPORTER 1 at the WHCD: Are there any political conversations you're
    going to have at all?

    KIM KARDASHIAN at the WHCD: Sure we're having one now aren't we?

    ROBERT GIBBS at the WHCD: Is this still not the craziest thing ever?
    When did this get to be like this?

    BARACK OBAMA at the WHCD: Thank you everybody. How do you like my new
    entrance music?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: The problem is excess. To some degree, it is perfectly
    emblematic of the reality distortion field inside of Washington, of
    just having no sense whatsoever. And what I think is sort of striking
    is this year Kevin Spacey is the star of `House of Cards,' which is
    not a very flattering picture of Washington. And Julia Louis-Dreyfus,
    who is the star of `Veep,' which is this very, very funny HBO show.

    BILL MOYERS: About the vice president.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: About the vice presidency, neither of which paint
    Washington in a flattering light. They both showed up to the
    dinner. They went to the big after party sponsored by Vanity Fair and
    Bloomberg. And they were both swarmed. Everyone was like, "Oh, we have
    to get our picture taken with Kevin Spacey and with Julia
    Louis-Dreyfus, who, I mean, ultimately, paint a hideous portrait of
    how Washington works. And Washington at its most grotesque and
    perverse. And yet, that's what we're celebrating. And again, you do
    sort of pinch yourself after one. It's like, "What are we celebrating
    here?"

    BILL MOYERS: There's a sequence in Netflix's `House of Cards', where
    some of Washington's best-known journalists are playing themselves in
    a fantasy world.

    GEORGE STEPHENOPOLOUS on House of Cards: Just before we came on the
    air, I received an advance copy of an article that's going to be in
    tomorrow's Washington Herald - it's front page, and it was written by
    Zoe Barnes. And in it she quotes an editorial that ran in the Williams
    College Register when you were editor back in September 1978 which
    called the Israeli presence in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank quote,
    an illegal occupation. [...]

    JOHN KING on House of Cards: Quoting a source close to the President
    as saying that Katherine Durant will likely be the new nominee for
    Secretary of State after Michael Kern's withdrawal.[...]

    CANDY CROWLEY on House of Cards: Congressmen Frank Underwood says he
    got quote schooled by AFT spokesman and chief strategist Martin
    Spinella during a debate last night on this network. In the past 24
    hours reruns of the gaff have played non-stop on tv news programs and
    the internet. [...]

    BILL MOYERS: Does it say something to you that prominent journalists
    are willing to erase the line between reality and fiction?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: That if you look at something like `House of Cards,'
    if you look at something like the Correspondent's Dinner, where you
    have Hollywood and Washington merging and you have kind of a joined
    mind, a joined fame machine. You realize that the lines might not be
    that drawn to begin with. It-- in any mind. I mean, I think one of the
    things-- there's a scene at the end of this book in which a member of
    the campaign team from 2012 for President Obama said, "After a while
    it just seemed like everyone was thinking about who was going to play
    them in the next version of `Game Change'," which is this campaign
    book that was written by Mark Halperin and John Heilemann about the
    2008 campaign, best-seller. And again, that sort of goes to the larger
    cinematic sense that people have with themselves here. There's this
    sense of preening, a sense of, "Who's going to play me in the movie?
    Will I get a cameo playing myself in the movie?" as people in the
    `Game Change' movie did. That's another scene in here. And again, it's
    a sort of blame-- it's a sort of blurring of the larger class of fame,
    of really the ruling class in the public perception game. That I think
    is as much a part of this decadence as really anything else.

    BILL MOYERS: I was surprised when I read the book, because I have
    followed your reporting. And you were reporting good stories,
    anecdotal stories, and fact-driven stories. But they didn't seem to
    have the narrative arc that emerges in this. Was that something you
    came to in the course of writing it or in the course of reporting? How
    did that come about?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: It became a moment. And it-- and it did occur to me
    in-- in being exposed to this that the political class that I'm
    writing about has reached some kind of critical mass in the 21st
    century. I think there's something going on in Washington that needed
    to be called out.

    BILL MOYERS: And the moment you talk about?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: The moment I talk about. Again, I don't think the can
    be sustained. And I think it's indecent. I think it is not how
    Americans want their government and their capital city to be. I think
    in some ways-- and I always sort of cower under this-- this claim when
    people ask me for prescriptions. But I think in some ways-- I mean,
    I'm holding a mirror to a culture. It is a culture that people only
    know around the edges. I wanted to take it sort of full on, in all its
    components, including the media, and hope to paint a picture that will
    stand as something that is lasting for this era.

    BILL MOYERS: Is it conceivable to you that one, two, three, or four
    more people in your book might say, "Wait a minute, this is
    shameful. And they can't change it out there, because we are
    impenetrable. So I'm going to stand up. And we're going to change it
    from within."

    MARK LEIBOVICH: I mean, look, I mean, there are a lot of good people
    in Washington. I mean, it sounds contradictory given a lot of what
    we've talked about. But there are people who-- a lot of people who
    especially when they're young or when they were young, they came from
    a place of decency. They came from a place of hope. And that doesn't
    completely go away, right? So-look, I wrote a book-- and I'm speaking
    as a journalist-- who-- that I think in probably some level was a
    product of disgust, my own disgust. Maybe even there was a level of
    unconscious desire to check myself before finding myself too deep in
    the club, too much a part of this world. And, I mean, so look, I mean,
    I absolutely love-- would love this book to be a source of shame, of
    self-reflection. But I think-- I am willing to start with
    discomfort. If this is a source of discomfort, I'm very happy with
    that, too.

    BILL MOYERS: Suppose this culture in Washington is more representative
    of the country today than you want to acknowledge. What if Washington
    has become the Wall Street way, the Las Vegas way, the Silicon Valley
    way?

    MARK LEIBOVICH: It it's a classic chicken/egg question. What we have
    now in the population is a level of dissonance, right? It's a level of
    disgust that is parallel to-- you know, maybe some indifference. But
    that is also parallel to your own role in reelecting your congressman,
    your own role in watching these shouting matches on cable, your own
    role in perpetuating this system, and being in-- being transfixed by
    these ads. So yes, I mean, I think that this dissonance is something
    that lives in a very, very distilled way inside our nation's
    capital. And I think it's acted out by these-- by these real-life
    players, who are in a very writ-large way experiencing both the
    American dream and the American nightmare. And that is something that
    I think makes this town, but also the nation's capital, at this
    moment, a very, very palpable place to watch this disconnect play
    out. And again, it's a lot to get your head around. I do think it is
    worth a discussion. And frankly a smarter discussion than many people
    in Washington are willing to have.

    BILL MOYERS: This Town is the place to begin. Mark Leibovich, thank
    you very much for the book. And thank you very much for being here.

    MARK LEIBOVICH: Thank you, Bill.

    BILL MOYERS: That's it for this week. I'm Bill Moyers, see you next
    time.


    This week's show (http://vimeo.com/79940704) originally aired on
    August 20, 2013.

    Mark Leibovich covers Washington, DC, as chief national correspondent
    for The New York Times Magazine. In his new book, "This Town," he
    writes about the city's bipartisan lust for power, cash and
    notoriety. It's the story of how Washington became an occupied city;
    its hold on reality distorted by greed and ambition. Leibovich pulls
    no punches, names names, and reveals the movers, the shakers and the
    lucrative deals they make - all in the name of crony capitalism.

    http://billmoyers.com/episode/encore-americas-gilded-capital


    From: Baghdasarian
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