US "The Squad" Megathread - Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Talib Derangement Syndrome

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
I honestly only know about American politics from what I read on the Internet but since we all love shitting on leftists I figured we'd get a kick out of this. Also it's trending on Twitter so you know it's important.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...irect=on&noredirect=on&utm_term=.960552c9ba53

NEW YORK — Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a 28-year-old political novice running on a low budget and an unabashedly liberal platform, upset longtime U.S. Rep. Joseph Crowley on Tuesday in the Democratic congressional primary in New York.

The surprise victory by the community organizer in a district that includes parts of the Bronx and Queens came after an energetic, grassroots campaign that mustered more than enough support in a low-turnout race that many had expected to be an easy win for Crowley, a member of the Democratic House leadership.

“The community is ready for a movement of economic and social justice. That is what we tried to deliver,” said Ocasio-Cortez, who has never held elected office and whose candidacy attracted only modest media attention.

She told The Associated Press after her victory that she didn’t have enough money to do polling in the race, but felt in her gut that her message had a chance to connect.

“I live in this community. I organized in this community. I felt the absence of the incumbent. I knew he didn’t have a strong presence,” she said.

Crowley has been in Congress since 1999 and hadn’t faced an opponent in a primary election since 2004, when Ocasio-Cortez was just a teenager. He was considered a candidate to become the next House speaker if Democrats win the majority.

“It’s not about me,” Crowley, 56, told his supporters at a campaign party following his loss. “It’s about America. I want nothing but the best for Ms. Ocasio-Cortez. I want her to be victorious.”

He later played guitar with a band at the election night gathering, and dedicated the first song, Bruce Springsteen’s “Born to Run,” to Ocasio-Cortez.

Crowley represents New York’s 14th Congressional District, where he is also the leader of the Queens Democratic party.

Ocasio-Cortez was outspent by an 18-1 margin during her race but won the endorsement of some influential groups on the party’s far left, including MoveOn, as well as the actress Cynthia Nixon, who is running for governor. She defeated Crowley by 15 percentage points.

Born in the Bronx to a mother from Puerto Rico and a father who died in 2008, Ocasio-Cortez said she decided to challenge Crowley to push a more progressive stance on economic and other issues.

She attended Boston University, where she earned degrees in economics and international relations, and also spent time working in the office of the late U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy.

After graduating, she returned to the Bronx where she became a community organizer. In the 2016 presidential campaign she worked for U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Among her issues is expanding the Medicare program to people of all ages and abolishing Immigrations and Customs Enforcement. She recently went to Tornillo, Texas, to protest against policies that have separated parents from their children at the southern U.S. border.

Ocasio-Cortez gained some internet attention for a campaign video called “The Courage to Change,” a two-minute spot for which she wrote the script and featured footage from her own home.

Crowley is chair of the House Democratic Caucus, the fourth-highest ranking position in Democratic leadership in that chamber of Congress.

His loss drew the attention of President Donald Trump.

“Wow! Big Trump Hater Congressman Joe Crowley, who many expected was going to take Nancy Pelosi’s place, just LOST his primary election. In other words, he’s out! That is a big one that nobody saw happening. Perhaps he should have been nicer, and more respectful, to his President!” he tweeted.

The Republican candidate for the office, Anthony Pappas, is running unopposed and had no primary. Pappas teaches economics at St. John’s University.

She was a Bernie campaigner, is supported by BLM, and wants to abolish Immigrations and Customs Enforcement. Also this was in a solid-blue Congressional District so you know she's a shoo-in for next Congress.

But hey, we did get to see Trump laugh at Crowley on Twitter.
 
AOC raises money for Texas. $2 million? That's a LOT of tricks turned. 😆

AOC announces that she's raised $2 million for Texas relief efforts in under 24 hours​


Christopher Wilson
·Senior Writer
Fri, February 19, 2021, 9:39 AM

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has raised more than $2 million for Texas relief efforts in under 24 hours, her office told Yahoo News on Friday. (Bet that thing's mighty sore! 😆 - JS)

Early Thursday evening, the New York Democrat encouraged her 12.4 million Twitter followers to donate money to five Texas charities working on the frontlines there. A rare winter storm brought snow and freezing temperatures to the state this week, costing dozens of Texans their lives and knocking out power and water for millions more.


According to her office, the fundraiser crossed the $2 million threshold just before 11 a.m. ET Friday, securing hundreds of thousands of donations for Family Eldercare, Feeding Texas, Houston Food Bank, ECHO (Ending Community Homelessness Coalition) and the Bridge Homeless Recovery Center. The fundraiser has since added five more groups.
https://sneed.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/qFLYtQ8_ebJfK8uklq0FgQ--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTcwNTtoPTM5Ni41NjI1/https://sneed.yimg.com/os/creatr-uploaded-images/2021-02/4f93dbb0-72d6-11eb-980f-5665aaa850c2
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. (Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)

“Team AOC is launching relief efforts for Texas starting today,” the congresswoman tweeted. “Our first effort is a partnership w/ 5 Texas orgs getting on-the-ground relief to Texans ASAP. If you’re able, please donate here - it’ll split your contribution to all 5.”

Celia Cole, the CEO of Feeding Texas, told Yahoo News that the group has been “humbled” by the donations it’s received.


“Feeding Texas is humbled by the outpouring of support from people across the country. Hundreds of thousands of Texans are going to need help from their food bank in the days and weeks to come, on top of the millions already struggling to feed their families during the pandemic,” Cole said.

“We are particularly grateful to our elected leaders in Texas and Washington who are helping raise money for Texas food banks. These donations are critical to helping food banks keep their communities nourished and resilient through this crisis.”(Bitch, please...we have no leaders, only office-holders. - JS)

The haul is a sign of the congresswoman’s social media reach. She tweeted the call for donations at 5:42 p.m. ET Thursday and announced she had reached $1 million just four hours later.

The fundraising efforts were launched the same day Texas Sen. Ted Cruz returned early from a vacation to Cancún, Mexico. In his initial statement, Cruz said he made the trip because his daughters and their friends were out of school and wanted to take a last-minute vacation. He went back to Texas amid fierce criticism and eventually admitted the trip was a bad idea.
https://sneed.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/zm6UaWqv6rpiIW5z0UIB3Q--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTcwNQ--/https://sneed.yimg.com/os/creatr-uploaded-images/2021-02/ffca06d0-72d6-11eb-9ff7-937bee3c6459
Sen. Ted Cruz at Cancún International Airport on Thursday. (Stringer/Reuters)

Cruz and Ocasio-Cortez are both prolific social media users and have repeatedly clashed since the congresswoman was elected in 2018. Ocasio-Cortez has repeatedly called on Cruz, who objected to the certification of President Biden’s victory, to resign for his role leading up to the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol, telling the senator last month that “you almost had me murdered 3 weeks ago.” (Bitch, please. - JS)

Ocasio-Cortez has announced she will be traveling to Texas this weekend along with Rep. Sylvia Garcia, a Democrat who represents a Houston-area district. Biden said Friday he is planning to visit Texas but didn’t want to be a “burden” so he would make a decision early next week. (He heeds to find out where Texas is, first. - JS)

Former Rep. Beto O’Rourke, who lost to Cruz in the 2018 Senate race, has leveraged his organization in the state to reach out to senior citizens, noting that his group had made hundreds of thousands of calls to older Texans. On Thursday morning, O’Rourke told MSNBC of Cruz, “I understand he’s vacationing in Cancún right now when people are literally freezing to death in the state he was elected to represent and serve.”

“I don’t know how much we were expecting from him, to begin with,” O’Rourke told Vanity Fair in an interview. “That guy wants nothing to do with government, or at least our form of it.”


 
Last edited:
AOC raises money for Texas. $2 million? That's a LOT of tricks turned. 😆

AOC announces that she's raised $2 million for Texas relief efforts in under 24 hours​


Christopher Wilson
·Senior Writer
Fri, February 19, 2021, 9:39 AM

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has raised more than $2 million for Texas relief efforts in under 24 hours, her office told Yahoo News on Friday. (Bet that thing's mighty sore! 😆 - JS)

Early Thursday evening, the New York Democrat encouraged her 12.4 million Twitter followers to donate money to five Texas charities working on the frontlines there. A rare winter storm brought snow and freezing temperatures to the state this week, costing dozens of Texans their lives and knocking out power and water for millions more.


According to her office, the fundraiser crossed the $2 million threshold just before 11 a.m. ET Friday, securing hundreds of thousands of donations for Family Eldercare, Feeding Texas, Houston Food Bank, ECHO (Ending Community Homelessness Coalition) and the Bridge Homeless Recovery Center. The fundraiser has since added five more groups.
https://sneed.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/qFLYtQ8_ebJfK8uklq0FgQ--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTcwNTtoPTM5Ni41NjI1/https://sneed.yimg.com/os/creatr-uploaded-images/2021-02/4f93dbb0-72d6-11eb-980f-5665aaa850c2
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. (Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)

“Team AOC is launching relief efforts for Texas starting today,” the congresswoman tweeted. “Our first effort is a partnership w/ 5 Texas orgs getting on-the-ground relief to Texans ASAP. If you’re able, please donate here - it’ll split your contribution to all 5.”

Celia Cole, the CEO of Feeding Texas, told Yahoo News that the group has been “humbled” by the donations it’s received.


“Feeding Texas is humbled by the outpouring of support from people across the country. Hundreds of thousands of Texans are going to need help from their food bank in the days and weeks to come, on top of the millions already struggling to feed their families during the pandemic,” Cole said.

“We are particularly grateful to our elected leaders in Texas and Washington who are helping raise money for Texas food banks. These donations are critical to helping food banks keep their communities nourished and resilient through this crisis.”(Bitch, please...we have no leaders, only office-holders. - JS)

The haul is a sign of the congresswoman’s social media reach. She tweeted the call for donations at 5:42 p.m. ET Thursday and announced she had reached $1 million just four hours later.

The fundraising efforts were launched the same day Texas Sen. Ted Cruz returned early from a vacation to Cancún, Mexico. In his initial statement, Cruz said he made the trip because his daughters and their friends were out of school and wanted to take a last-minute vacation. He went back to Texas amid fierce criticism and eventually admitted the trip was a bad idea.
https://sneed.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/zm6UaWqv6rpiIW5z0UIB3Q--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTcwNQ--/https://sneed.yimg.com/os/creatr-uploaded-images/2021-02/ffca06d0-72d6-11eb-9ff7-937bee3c6459
Sen. Ted Cruz at Cancún International Airport on Thursday. (Stringer/Reuters)

Cruz and Ocasio-Cortez are both prolific social media users and have repeatedly clashed since the congresswoman was elected in 2018. Ocasio-Cortez has repeatedly called on Cruz, who objected to the certification of President Biden’s victory, to resign for his role leading up to the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol, telling the senator last month that “you almost had me murdered 3 weeks ago.” (Bitch, please. - JS)

Ocasio-Cortez has announced she will be traveling to Texas this weekend along with Rep. Sylvia Garcia, a Democrat who represents a Houston-area district. Biden said Friday he is planning to visit Texas but didn’t want to be a “burden” so he would make a decision early next week. (He heeds to find out where Texas is, first. - JS)

Former Rep. Beto O’Rourke, who lost to Cruz in the 2018 Senate race, has leveraged his organization in the state to reach out to senior citizens, noting that his group had made hundreds of thousands of calls to older Texans. On Thursday morning, O’Rourke told MSNBC of Cruz, “I understand he’s vacationing in Cancún right now when people are literally freezing to death in the state he was elected to represent and serve.”

“I don’t know how much we were expecting from him, to begin with,” O’Rourke told Vanity Fair in an interview. “That guy wants nothing to do with government, or at least our form of it.”


Archive glacial.
You laugh, but this will definitely curry favor for the Democrats in Texas if the Republicans don't do anything about this or the situation facing the state at hand-- that, and Cruz was already in a precarious position.
 
You laugh, but this will definitely curry favor for the Democrats in Texas if the Republicans don't do anything about this or the situation facing the state at hand-- that, and Cruz was already in a precarious position.
You laugh, but this will definitely curry favor for the Democrats in Texas if the Republicans don't do anything about this or the situation facing the state at hand-- that, and Cruz was already in a precarious position.
Welcome to Kiwifarms. Don't double post.
 
1613773638859.png
 
You laugh, but this will definitely curry favor for the Democrats in Texas if the Republicans don't do anything about this or the situation facing the state at hand-- that, and Cruz was already in a precarious position.
This is shaping up to be Cruz's (and probably Abbott too if he doesn't knock the recovery out of the park) Katrina moment. Cruz is done both nationally and probably statewide too and the Texas GOP might go the way of Georgia if they don't play their cards very well in the next few months.
 
This is shaping up to be Cruz's (and probably Abbott too if he doesn't knock the recovery out of the park) Katrina moment. Cruz is done both nationally and probably statewide too and the Texas GOP might go the way of Georgia if they don't play their cards very well in the next few months.
Given the way they've acted in the past week, I think it's fair to say that the blame rests squarely with them.
 
Given the way they've acted in the past week, I think it's fair to say that the blame rests squarely with them.

I think heads are going to roll at the Texas Electric Reliability Council. Here's their site.


Conditions were back to normal as of this morning, but everyone and his brother want to know why the grid wasn't ready to handle the storm. ERCOT made Pacific Gas and Electric look competent, which is just fucking amazing. I sure as hell do, have family members there who went 24 hours without power, then sporadic service until yesterday. Luckily, they have a fireplace and a gas hot water heater. Son bought a gas grill, too.

FINALLY above freezing in the Dallas area. Been days since that happened. In the 40's tomorrow, then the 50's and 60's, back to normal.
 
This is shaping up to be Cruz's (and probably Abbott too if he doesn't knock the recovery out of the park) Katrina moment. Cruz is done both nationally and probably statewide too and the Texas GOP might go the way of Georgia if they don't play their cards very well in the next few months.
That's fairly optimistic. Cruz's got a good four years before he's up for reelection, although Abbott's up for reelection next year. They should try to get on top of this, although I'm surprised Beta O'Rourke is still desperately trying to become Senator of Texas, especially after he admitted to wanting to take people's guns.
 
Some people really put all their hope on AOC. Just jump to the end for a big fat nothing.

I Waited Five Hours for AOC to Ask the Robinhood Guy a Question, and This Is What I Got​

By Whitney Kimball

Those of us who sat through yesterday’s five-and-a-half-hour House Committee on Financial Services hearing on the GameStop short squeeze had maybe, foolishly, hoped against hope to see some cold hard accountability. We came to hear Robinhood’s CEO explain why, at the peak of the GameStop run, the trading app shut out its users from buying GameStop, after which the value of the stock plummeted. The committee had the CEO of Robinhood and its credibly-suspicious hedge fund friends all assembled and vulnerable to potentially incriminating questions.




And yet, we got an epic bipartisan shit show.

Over 50 Congress members attempted rapid-fire five-minute interrogations while battling an experimental noise band of moving furniture, clinking cups, and ambient yelling. Present were the major GameStop squeeze characters: Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev, Citadel CEO Kenneth Griffin, Melvin Capital CEO Gabriel Plotkin, and unofficial WallStreetBets CEO “DeepFuckingValue” aka Keith Gill. (And, for some reason, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman.) For all of the chaos, delight, comedy, parody, boredom, rage, and rage-inspiring boredom this produced, our elected representatives’ loose command of the mute button quickly got depressing.

Republicans argued that the Democrat-led hearing was political theater, via political theater. We veered into breathtakingly delusional meta-questions about why Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev isn’t monitoring all of social media for trustworthy investment advice. One representative spent the whole of his time talking about TikTok and the Chinese Communist Party, and others lobbed righteous but scattershot protests against class inequality to hedge fund CEOs. Some prompted the thought: “You’re on the Financial Services Committee? That’s terrifying!” And many demonstrated the potential value in ceding time to a fellow party member.

The hearing rarely came close to the point, which is that Wall Street guys may have effectively sequestered a ton of uninformed poor people into a casino that’s presented itself as the stock market. To review, the hearing was prompted in late January, when the free, entry-level trading app Robinhood essentially pulled the rug out from under a once-in-a-lifetime raid on Wall Street devised by members of the subreddit WallStreetBets. (That’s the movie version.)

The story is that working-class Redditors banded together to take an enormous risk by buying up tons of stock on an ailing company—the video game retailer GameStop—which sensationally paid off, driving GameStop’s value to unthinkable heights at the expense of hedge funds who’d shorted the stock. At the peak of the GameStop run, Robinhood decided, without warning, to block its users from buying GameStop stocks. GameStock’s value plummeted, and some even claimed that the app had force-sold their shares, a charge which Robinhood has denied.

Some think the whole idea of the hearing is stupid, and they make a valid point. “If the hearing is being called because Congress believes that small investors were hurt because they could not trade GME for a day, I think it is being delusional,” Aswath Damodaran, Professor of Finance at the Stern School of Business at New York University, refreshingly told Gizmodo via email. “Stop trading incessantly, since no one (not the hedge funds, portfolio managers) wins that game in the end. And if you put your money in Citadel as an investor, I have no sympathy for your hand wringing.”

Payment for order, oh no

So yes, GameStop was gambling 101. But, if we’re calling a hearing to seize on a rare opportunity to probe Wall Street’s practices, Congress could easily have made hay out of this group. They would examine Robinhood’s relationship with Citadel Securities, a division of a hedge fund that pays Robinhood (a lot) for the power to broker its users’ orders. They would also note that Citadel happened to pass a $2 billion bailout to its fellow hedge fund Melvin Capital, the major holder of GameStop short positions which Robinhood users weaponized.

Many, including Elizabeth Warren, would like to better understand whether these relationships pose the kind of conflict of interest that might, for example, incentivize Robinhood to stop its own users from trading.

The relationship deserves inspection because Robinhood doesn’t make money directly from users on its commission-free trades. When you tap “buy” or “sell” on Robinhood, your order doesn’t go straight to the New York Stock Exchange; instead, Robinhood sends your order to high-frequency trading firms, primarily, Citadel Securities, in what’s called “payment for order flow” (PFOF). Citadel then executes both sides of the trade internally (called “internalizing”) and pockets the difference between the rates at which the seller sold and the buyer paid. Because I am not a financial journalist, I defer here to the brilliant Matt Levine:

The wholesaler [eg Citadel Securities] does the thing I just said: It pays the sellers more for their shares than the exchange offers, charges the buyers less for shares than the exchange would, and keeps 5 cents for itself. Well, it keeps, say, 3 cents for itself, and sends 2 cents back to the retail broker who sent it the trade. The broker has subcontracted the internalizing job to the wholesaler, and they share the profits.
PFOF proponents say that the process actually incentivizes market makers to execute trades within a slimmer, more competitive price range. Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev has maintained that Robinhood had to halt sales of GameStop stocks due to a last-minute call for $3 billion in cash from its clearinghouse, the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC). As Levine has also pointed out, it’s not unusual or unreasonable for a clearinghouse to ask for collateral during a totally unpredictable trading frenzy over a stock that could diminish to a quarter of its value by tomorrow.

But prior to this, the SEC has fined both Citadel and Robinhood for misleading unknowing retail investors to turn a profit. So that’s what we’re here to learn about, and I spent the entirety of the hearing hoping that AOC would attend. She did, we’ll get to that, but I’m not sure it was worth it.

DeepFuckingValue wins

WallStreetBets investor and financial analyst DeepFuckingValue (aka Keith Patrick Gill) passed this hearing with flying colors. Do I trust him? Not at all, but his testimony did exactly what it needed to: disarmingly cast himself as the antithesis to the surrounding assholes, a guy who plausibly believes in GameStop as a company, rather than a savvy investor who identified the potential for a short squeeze (as portrayed in a lawsuit accusing him of unfairly manipulating followers for personal gain). He opened with the disclaimer: “I’m not a cat. I’m not an institutional investor, nor am I a hedge fund.” Bravo. He went on to advocate for GameStop’s inherent value:

I grew up playing video games and shopping at GameStop, and I plan to continue shopping there. GameStop stores still provide real value to consumers and reliable revenue for GameStop. Second, I believe that GameStop has the potential to reinvent itself as the ultimate destination for gamers within the rapidly-growing, $200 billion gaming industry. GameStop has a unique opportunity to pivot toward a technology driven business by embracing the digital economy. GameStop may be able to find new revenue streams that vastly exceed the value of its business.
Uh-huh. But if he were thinking about this like a Wall Street investor who legally does this all day long anyway—why not?

When I wrote and spoke about GameStop and social media with other individual investors, our conversations were no different from people in a bar or on a golf course or at home talking or arguing about a stock. Hedge funds and other Wall Street firms have teams of analysts working together to compile research and analyze shares of companies. Individual investors do not have those resources. Social media platforms like Reddit, YouTube and Twitter are leveling the playing field. The idea that I use social media to promote GameStop stock to unwitting investors and influence the market is preposterous. My post did not cause the movement of billions of dollars into GameStop shares. It is tragic that some people lost money in my heart goes out to them. But what happened in January just demonstrates again that investing in public securities is extremely risky.

Are Congresspeople okay?​

About an hour into the hearing, Representative Ed Perlmutter (D-CO) finally acknowledged the elephant in the room.

“Madame Chairman—Madame Chairman—point of order,” he said. “I’d just like—yeah, Perlmutter, just to remind people, when they’re not speaking—to mute themselves because there’s a lot of feedback when the question is asked and the mic stays open.”

Representative Maxine Waters affirmed that representatives should heed the mute rules. And yet, hours later, as Kenneth Griffin was midway through explaining why Citadel offers better execution than exchanges limited by regulatory mandate, this happened:

Kenneth Griffin: We’re able—
Distant offscreen voice: WHY ARE YOU HERE, AND WHAT ARE YOU DOING??
Griffin: Ex-excuse me?
Rep. Frank Lucas (R-OK): That wasn’t either one of us, continue, Mr. Griffin.
Griffin: Alright. So, we’re able to share our trading acumen with retail investors, and we’re able to give them a better price, and we’re able to make payments for order flow to firms like Robinhood that allow them to have lower or, today, in most cases, no commission.
Well, that’s ominous.

Robinhood stopped selling GameStop because of fucking Democrat regulations!!!

Republicans are very pissed that Democrats are using this little show trial to push their Big Government agenda. In the telling of certain GOP reps, the government stepped in and forced Robinhood to stop allowing their users to buy meme stocks, and now Maxine Waters is manipulating the outrage to impose more market regulations. Not for nothing, this stance could score points with voters and potential hedge fund donors.

The reality is a little more complicated. Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev has maintained that the company had to halt GameStop buys after its clearinghouse NSCC suddenly asked for $3 billion in collateral at 5am ET. The NSCC and its parent company, the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC), are beholden to SEC rules designed to mitigate risk. Tenev pointed out in his testimony that this might not have been an issue if the SEC enabled clearinghouses to settle trades immediately, rather than the current two-day cycle (the “T+2" settlement period).

On the day Robinhood halted GameStop buys, CNBC interrogated Tenev about whether Robinhood simply didn’t have the money on-hand for collateral, i.e., whether Robinhood had a “liquidity problem.” Money problems are probably not good to admit from a business standpoint, but that might have been a more understandable answer than Tenev’s vague insistence that Robinhood just had to “‘protect the firm and protect our customers” while meeting “SEC net capital requirements.”

Yesterday, Tenev finally sorta admitted to “liquidity issues” in a line of questioning from Rep. Anthony Gonzalez (R-OH). Here’s the exchange:

Gonzalez: In your testimony, you mentioned that the automated deposit requirements for DTCC came in at 5:11 a.m. Eastern, and it showed a three billion dollar deficit, correct?
Tenev: I believe that’s correct. Yes.
Gonzalez: OK. At that point, at 5:11 a.m., did you have the liquidity to meet the additional three billion dollar deposit requirement?
Tenev: So as we wrote in detail...in my written testimony, there were a series of steps that the Robinhood securities team took to….
Gonzalez: At that exact moment, did you have the liquidity for three billion, 5:11 AM?
Tenev: At that moment, we would not have been able to post the three billion in collateral.
According to Fortune, a source close to the NSCC confirmed that Robinhood was able to reduce that $3 billion to $1.4 billion by agreeing to halt purchases of meme stocks.

Anyway, Republicans seized on his reference to regulations in order to point out that the government shouldn’t regulate markets.

Rep Barry Loudermilk (R-GA): Mr. Tenev, again, can you remind us again why Robinhood temporary paused trading of GameStock—GameStop—and other stocks?
Vlad Tenev: Of course, thank you, Congressman. Robinhood paused trading temporarily—or, I should say, paused buying about 13 securities on Thursday—so we could meet our regulatory deposit and collateral requirements.
Loudermilk: Okay, so what you’re saying is you were paused [sic] because you had to comply with regulations, is that true?
Tenev: Correct.
Loudermilk: Alright, so it’s ironic that the people who are criticizing brokerage firms because they paused trading, which they sometimes have to do to comply with regulations—these same folks are now saying we need to respond to this with more regulations. I would say if people don’t like brokers occasionally having to pause trading, I would suggest they look at the regulations that required it.

Subplot: Elon Musk Revenge Theory

Wait, why wasn’t Elon Musk here? He doesn’t really have anything to do with this, but neither does Steve Huffman and he showed up.

At least one man made sure that he was not forgotten. Rep. Steve Stivers (R-OH) worked him into a back-and-forth with Melvin Capital CEO Gabe Plotkin:

Stivers: Mr. Plotkin, are you a frequent short seller? Yes or no?
Plotkin: We were on a long, short portfolio. The majority of our investments are long investments, but we also have short investments to hedge our market risk.
Stivers: Thank you, Mr. Plotkin. Has Melvin capital ever engaged in short selling of the stock Tesla?
Plotkin: We have been short Tesla in the past, that’s correct.
Stivers: Mr. Plotkin also this is a longer question...did you see the tweet from Tesla CEO Elon Musk about GameStop stock?
Plotkin: I did see that, after market hours on, uh, yes—
Stivers: Do you believe that Mr. Musk’s tweet had any significant effect of driving the price in GameStop stock?
Plotkin: I don’t want to speculate on what the actions of his tweet were. The stock did rise.
Stivers: Do you believe that that tweet was targeting you because you had shorted Tesla’s stock in the past?
Plotkin: You know, we had a very small, short position years ago in Tesla, that would be pure speculation as to his motives in putting that tweet out.

AOC Asks a Useful Question, and This is What Happens

Imagine now that you’re 5 hours and 15 minutes deep into this livestream, and you’ve nearly abandoned all hope. By some miracle, Waters calls upon Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

AOC to Tenev: If removing the revenues that you make from payment for order flow would cause the removal of free commissions—doesn’t that mean that trading on Robinhood isn’t free to begin with because you’re just hiding the cost? The cost in terms of potentially poor execution or the cost of lost rebates to your customers?
Tenev: So, certainly, Congresswoman, Robinhood is a for-profit business and needs to generate some revenue to pay for the costs of running this business. People were initially skeptical that the model even with payment for order flow would work when you remove commissions, and I think we’ve proven that otherwise by making this the standard model by which brokerages operate now.
AOC: I see...I have a timeline question here for Mr. Plotkin. I see that earlier your testimony today was that Melvin Capital had not engaged in..um...sorry—Madame Chairwoman?
[Maxine Waters, indiscernible]
AOC: I’m sorry, I think you’re not muted, sorry about that. [Laughs] Mr. Plotkin, earlier today you mentioned that Melvin Capital had not engaged in a naked short of GameStop. And Melvin closed out its position on GME on the [inaudible date], correct?
Waters: I’m sorry, but the gentlelady’s time has expired.
 
You waited months to NOW do full on “investigations” into a Governor who actually won an Emmy Award and spoke to people as if cared about humanity and not so sick old people well-being, and now you want to be on the right side of the same people that helped support his actions in the first place?

49780E73-2ABE-44C6-A3E8-AAAA5854E9DC.jpeg
 
But they're not her constituents. She could have raised that money to help those she screwed out of work in the Amazon deal. Just think how much better NYC would be doing if that went through with the pandemic.
I'm guessing all of this is a ploy by the Democrats to gain voters in Texas.
"See? These Republicans didn't do anything while you froze to death, but we did".
 
Back
Top Bottom