David Corn: Romney Defended By...Romney Policy Aide Who Worked for Bain
Romney Defended By...Romney Policy Aide Who Worked for Bain
By David Corn
Over at
National Review Online, Avik Roy takes issue with my scoop on Romney's investment in a Chinese appliance-manufacturing firm that sought to profit from US outsourcing. Roy says he used to work at Brookside Capital, the Bain-affiliated entity that made this investment, but he doesn't indicate whether he was around (or in a senior position) at the time of this particular deal in 1998. (On his Google+ page, by the way, Roy notes he was at Bain Capital, not Brookside. Yeah, I suppose, this stuff can be confusing.) Moreover, Roy now serves on Romney's health care policy advisory group. Thus, he has a stake in this venture.
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If Roy was not an eyewitness to internal Bain/Brookside deliberations in the late 1990s, his testimony is less than compelling. Can he say that Romney took no interest in how Brookside was being managed? Had no discussions with those Bain colleagues who were in charge of these decisions?
All that aside, Roy is promoting a classic corporate dodge. He writes:
Which of Bain Capitals investments is it fair to hold Mitt Romney accountable for?
The answer: He is accountable for the investments in which he actually made the decisions. If I have my 401(k) invested in the Fidelity Select Health Care Fund, am I responsible for every decision made by the portfolio manager at Fidelity? Obviously not. The same goes for Mitt Romney.
This was hardly equivalent to a retirement fund investment. Romney "wholly owned" Brookside, according to a SEC filing. He created this entity. No doubt, he had a say regarding who was managing it. It was part of the Bain world he oversaw. He bears a degree of responsibilityperhaps Romney can calculate the precise percentagefor this venture.
- more -
http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2012/07/romney-bain-brookside-avik-roy
Wait, this tool is comparing Romney's ownership of a company to investing in a 401K?