To this day,
the U.S. government has not provided a clear legal definition
of insider trading. This allows the feds to engage in periodic
witch hunts against unpopular business people such as Martha Stewart,
the purpose of which is to divert the public’s attention away
from the government’s own failed policies and blame it all on
"capitalism."
But there
is a particular type of insider trading – political insider trading
– that has been clearly understood for generations. Because this
kind of insider trading involves politicians themselves, however,
there are no laws against it. A good example of political insider
trading appeared recently on an episode of "The
Sopranos," the HBO television series about a New Jersey
Mafia family. The "don," Tony Soprano, is friends with
a sleazy and corrupt state legislator, who gives Tony an inside
tip that the legislature is about to give the go ahead to commercial
development along the riverfront. Tony quickly purchases some
land in the area, and his insider information allows him to buy
low and sell high, after the development is announced, and make
a killing. The state legislator does the same.
The great
historian of the American west, Dee Brown, describes the historical
origins of political insider trading in his book, Hear
that Lonesome Whistle Blow: The Epic Story of the Transcontinental
Railroads, which was recently brought to my attention
by John Denson. The book tells the story of a group of men who
might be called the founding fathers of political insider trading,
the most prominent of which was Abraham Lincoln. The rest were
some of the founding fathers of the Lincoln’s Republican Party;
many of them served as generals in the union army.
In the
mid to late 1850s Lincoln was a prominent railroad lawyer. His
clients included the Illinois Central, which at the time was the
largest corporation in the world. In 1857 he represented the Chicago,
Rock Island and Pacific Railroad, which was owned by four men
who would later become infamous as "robber barons" for
receiving – and squandering – millions of dollars in federal subsidies
for their transcontinental railroad. Granting these men their
subsidies would become one of the first orders of business in
the Lincoln administration.
These
men – Thomas Clark Durant, Peter Dey, Grenville Dodge, and Benedict
Reed – were easterners from New England and New York State who
had "a store of hard experience at canal and railroad building
and financing," writes Dee Brown. And they must also have
been quite expert at stealing taxpayers’ money for useless government-funded
boondoggles. Prior to the War between the States, government subsidies
for railroad and canal building were a financial disaster. So
disastrous were these government pork barrel projects that by
1860, according to economic historian Carter Goodrich, Massachusetts
was the only state in the union to have not amended its
constitution to prohibit taxpayer subsidies to private corporations
(Carter Goodrich, Government
Promotion of American Canals and Railroads, 18001890,
p. 231).
In
a dispute with a steamship company the above-mentioned men "sought
out a first-rate lawyer, one who had a reputation for winning
most of his cases," writes Dee Brown. "They found him
in Springfield, Illinois and his name was Abraham Lincoln."
The jurors in the case failed to reach a decision, but Lincoln’s
performance "won him a considerable amount of attention in
the Chicago press and among men of power, who two years later
would push him into the race for President of the United States."
One of those "men of power" was Chicago newspaper editor
Joseph Medill, whose newspaper trumpeted the Lincoln candidacy
on behalf of the railroad interests of Illinois.
This
powerful clique of New England/New York/Chicago business interests
"aroused the suspicions of the South," says Brown, since
they were so vigorously lobbying Congress to allocate huge sums
of money for a transcontinental railroad across the Northern
states. Southern politicians wanted the route to pass through
their states, naturally, but they knew they were outgunned politically
by the political clique from "the Yankee belt" (New
England, Pennsylvania, Ohio, the upper Midwest).
These
Northern political insiders, who would form the core of leadership
of the Republican Party and later, in some cases, of Lincoln’s
army, positioned themselves to earn great riches from the proposed
railroad subsidies. John C. Fremont, who would be a general in
Lincoln’s army, was a wealthy California engineer who conducted
an extensive engineering survey "to make certain that the
most favorable route would end up not in San Diego but in northern
California, where Fremont himself claimed sizable land holdings."
Another wealthy Yankee, Pierre Chouteau, "put his money into
a St. Louis factory to make iron rails and went to Washington
to lobby for the 38th parallel route."
Illinois
Senator Stephen Douglas "owned enough strategically located
land in Chicago to be a millionaire if his favored route westward
through Council Bluffs and Omaha was chosen . . ."
And "Abraham
Lincoln, the future President evidently agreed with his debating
partner that the route through Council Bluffs-Omaha and the South
Pass was the most practical. Lincoln acquired land interests
at Council Bluffs" (emphasis added). A short time later,
after the Chicago/New England/New York "men of power"
propelled him into the White House, Lincoln began signing legislation
giving these men millions of acres of public lands and other subsidies
for their railroads.
Virtually
all of the "leading lights" of the Republican Party
got in on the political insider trading game by demanding bribes
for their votes in favor of the subsidies. Pennsylvania congressman
Thaddeus Stevens "received a block of . . . stock in exchange
for his vote," but he also demanded "insertion of a
clause [in the subsidy legislation] requiring that all iron used
in the construction and equipment of said road to be American
manufacture." In addition to being a congressman, Stevens
was a Pennsylvania iron manufacturer. At the time, British iron
was far cheaper than Pennsylvania iron, so that Stevens’s "restrictive
clause" placed a bigger burden on the taxpayers of the North
who, at the time, were already being taxed to death to finance
the war.
Congressman
Oakes Ames, "who with his brother Oliver manufactured shovels
in Massachusetts, became a loyal ally [of the subsidy-seeking
railroad companies] and helped to pressure the 1864 Pacific Railway
Act through the war-corrupted Congress." (It took a lot
of shovels to dig railroad beds from Iowa to California).
During
the post-war Grant administration the Republican Speaker of the
House of Representatives, Schuyler Colfax (later Grant’s vice
president) visited the western railroad routes to attend a ceremony
in his honor but, writes Dee Brown, "he preferred cash above
honors, and back in Washington he eagerly accepted a bundle of
Credit Mobilier stock from his follow congressman Oakes Ames,
and thus became a loyal friend of the Union Pacific."
Another
of Lincoln’s generals, General John Dix, was the Washington lobbyist
for the railroads who "spent most of his time strutting about
Washington in a general’s uniform." (Dix was the same general
who Lincoln ordered in 1862 to shut down all the opposition newspapers
in New York City and arrest and imprison the editors and owners).
General
William Tecumseh Sherman was also sold land at below-market prices
and, after the war, he would be in charge of a twenty-five year
campaign of ethnic genocide against the Plains Indians, which
was yet another form of veiled subsidy to the railroad corporations.
After the war Grenville Dodge, who was also a Union Army general
despite his lack of military training, proposed making slaves
of the captured Indians and forcing them "to do the grading,
with the Army furnishing a guard to make the Indians work, and
keep them from running away."
These
men – the founding fathers of insider trading – were responsible
for the massive corruption of the grant administrations which
was only the beginning of what historians call "the era of
good stealings."