He was on the board of AIG from 2001 to 2008, leaving just two months before the company imploded but not before executives had set the bonuses that have sparked bipartisan outrage. He received more than $100,000 in compensation annually, but according to the White House, “Mr. Holbrooke had nothing to do with and knew nothing about the bonuses.” Shouldn’t he have known something about those bonuses, given his generous compensation package?
Obama seemed to agree this week when he said “Nobody here was responsible for supervising AIG and allowing themselves to put the economy at risk by some of the outrageous behavior that they were engaged in.” How can Obama reward that behavior by allowing Holbrooke to serve a the top of his administration’s foreign policy apparatus? Or put another way, how can Richard Holbrooke possibly survive this story. The entire country is fuming over the train wreck that is AIG, and it turns out that RIchard Holbrooke was one of the guys who was asleep at the switch. Still — he got his bonuses:
As Obama would say, it’s an outrage.
