News from Congressman Dale E. Kildee
For immediate release
March 19, 2009
Contact: Alec Gerlach
202-225-3611
 
 
Kildee Calls for an End to the Double Standard for TARP Recipients
Auto Industry Asked to Make Concessions While Wall Street Executives Are Paid Million Dollar Bonuses
 
Washington, D.C. Congressman Dale E. Kildee (D-MI) today joined his colleagues in approving by a vote of 328-93 a bill that would impose a 90 percent tax on bonuses received by executives at financial firms that were recipients of the taxpayer-funded Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP), such as AIG.

 

Below are the prepared remarks of Rep. Dale E. Kildee in support of the measure.

 

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Madam Speaker I rise today in support of H.R. 1586, a bill to impose an additional tax on bonuses received from certain TARP recipients.  Financial firms such as AIG, who have accepted government assistance, need to recognize that the days of lavish travel, million dollar bonuses and golden parachutes are over.

 

When bridge loans were granted to General Motors and Chrysler, they were required to reduce wages and salaries.  Auto workers are being asked to accept lower wages and stock contributions to their benefits account – which funds their healthcare – rather than cash.

 

What are executives at banks and financial institutions asked to do?  Maybe spend fewer afternoons at the spa.  Those firms should be subject to the same requirements imposed on GM and Chrysler and on their employees.  My constituents have had enough of the double standard that rewards greedy executives and punishes working families.

 

After accepting $170 billion from the federal government, AIG is responsible to the American taxpayer.

 

Before I ran for elected office, I was a high school Latin teacher. And I can tell you that in Latin, “bonus” translates to “good.” A bonus is supposed to be a reward for something good – for excellent performance, not for running your company into the ground and sending the economy into a tailspin.

 

AIG’s performance warrants a pink slip, not a paycheck.

 

Thank you, and I yield back my time.

 
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