A campaign of National People's Action

$500 Million and apology from Goldman, but still not enough

In Foreclosures on November 18, 2009 at 11:46 pm

Yesterday, Goldman Sachs announced it would donate $500 million to help small businesses recover from the recession and finally apologized to the American people:

“We have participated in things that were clearly wrong and have reason to regret…we apologize,” said Goldman’s CEO, Lloyd Blankfein, at the National Association of Corporate Directors event in New York.

The charitable initiative is a good step toward fixing the economy that Goldman Sachs helped to break, but it’s a drop in the bucket compared to what they could do to help families and workers stay in their homes and keep their jobs, especially over the holidays.

In the past month, we have made three attempts to deliver a letter to Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein asking that he donate their 2009 bonuses and compensation pool, which exceeds more than $500 million, to stop the tidal wave of job losses and foreclosures that they helped spur. These attempts occurred on October 25 in Manhattan by National People’s Action affiliate Northwest Bronx Community & Clergy Coalition at the home of Lloyd Blankfein; on October 26, during the second day of the Showdown in Chicago with a 1,000 person demonstration outside Goldman Sachs’ Chicago headquarters; and on November 16 where more than 200 people led a spirited demonstration outside Goldman Sachs’ DC headquarters. Goldman Sachs officials accepted our demand letters in Chicago and in Washington D.C.

Nov 16, DC - Rev. Pierce of National People's Action calls out Goldman Sachs and its CEO, Lloyd Blankfein, for not doing enough for communities who bailed out the Wall Street firm.

Goldman Sachs owns loan-servicing companies, like Litton LLC, who have offered loan modifications to only 12% of their eligible borrowers. They also invest in companies like the Stella D’Oro cookie factory in the Bronx, that recently laid off 150 employees and decided to move the company to a non-union facility in Ohio to cut costs.

If Goldman Sachs is serious about helping small businesses and everyday Americans, they will tell their loan servicing companies to do what it takes to keep families in their homes, and give workers like those at the Stella D’Oro cookie factory their jobs back.

Hundreds say “Enough is Enough!” to Treasury and Goldman

In Foreclosures on November 16, 2009 at 11:30 pm

Hundreds of Americans brought the spirit and message of the Showdown in Chicago to Washington D.C. today, with actions at the U.S. Treasury and Goldman Sachs’ Capitol Hill headquarters.

Check out photos and video from the events.

At the U.S. Treasury, Mitzi Rivers-Singleton from Sunflower Community Action in Kansas tried to get Secretary Tim Geithner’s attention with chants that echoed off the Bank of America building across the plaza from Treasury – “Bust up big banks! Bailouts? No thanks!” and “Who got the money money, the banks got the money money…we got the bill!”

At Goldman Sachs, National People’s Action was joined by allies from SEIU, Public Citizen, Americans for Financial Reform, National Community Reinvestment Coalition and several other organizations, to demand Goldman Sachs CEO, Lloyd Blankfein, be a hero this holiday season and donate their bonus pool to halt foreclosures and stop lobbying against common sense financial reform.

Leaders delivered a letter to Goldman Sachs with a list of demands from the American people, and with a very clear and final message–

NPA will continue to pay visits to Goldman Sachs and the Treasury as often as it takes until they put an end to big bank greed and start siding with the American people.  Enough is Enough!

Taxpayers to converge on Goldman Sachs, Monday

In Action, Bank Accountability on November 13, 2009 at 10:20 pm

Following a powerful series of actions targeting big banks at the Showdown in 
Chicago, a couple hundred taxpayers will be paying a visit to Goldman 
Sachs’ DC headquarters on Monday, November 16.

The message is simple: Banks, like Goldman, that have been deemed “too big to fail” are too big to exist.

The American people cannot be expected to continue to prop up the same institutions that created this economic crisis and meanwhile are handing out billions in bonuses.  And until the Administration and Congress have the stomach to go toe to toe with the big banks, everyday Americans will have to take the lead and do it ourselves.

Follow the DC action live. We will be covering the Monday action live
 through Twitter (hashtag #nobigbanks) and be uploading video and photos 
immediately after the event. Be sure to check www.showdowninchicago.org 
 on the hour to get the latest from DC.

Four ways to ACT NOW:

  1. Sign the People’s Petition and tell Congress: Enough is Enough!
  2. Read our Huffington Post piece about the Goldman action, and spread the word about Monday.
  3. Have a friend in DC?  Pass this email along to them and tell them to meet us at Goldman Sachs HQ, high noon.
  4. Plan an event or direct action to hold big banks accountable in your community! And be sure to tell others about it.