Some people are worried that President Obama is going to try and run the banks and credit card issuers but how about this little tidbit from the Wall Street Journal:
Then-U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson threatened to remove Bank of America Corp. Chief Executive Kenneth Lewis and the bank's board of directors if the bank backed out of its merger with Merrill Lynch & Co. last year, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said.
Mr. Lewis had informed Mr. Paulson on Dec. 17, 2008, that Bank of America was planning to invoke a material adverse event clause in the merger agreement that would allow it to call off the deal, Mr. Cuomo said. Three days before, Mr. Lewis had learned that Merrill Lynch's financial condition "had seriously deteriorated at an alarming rate" since Dec. 8, 2008, Mr. Cuomo said.
The difference between this news and the ouster of GM CEO Rick Wagoner, of course, is that the government is a creditor of GM and without having lent them money, GM would have filed bankruptcy a long time ago. Forcing shareholder-owned companies to merge simply to prevent possible instability in the financial system is questionable at best and completely inappropriate at worst. I hope the Obama administration doesn't repeat these types of things. Fortunately, pushing for a credit cardholder bill of rights, as discussed today in Washington, does not fall into such a category. Let's cross our fingers it stays that way in the future.