27
February 2015, 4.54pm GMT
Hillary Clinton donor
scandal puts spotlight on US philanthropy sector
As As she plans her 2016 presidential campaign,
Hillary Clinton is getting embroiled in the sort of influence-peddling fiasco
that has dogged philanthropists for decades.
Though
she has yet to announce her 2016 presidential candidacy, Hillary Clinton is
already assumed to be runnning – and has already hit trouble.
In recent
weeks, there have been unedifying reports that the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation
accepted millions of dollars from seven foreign governments during Hillary
Clinton’s tenure as US secretary of state, skirting dangerously close to
outright violation of conflict-of-interest agreements it had made with the
Obama administration.
But this
isn’t just a problem for Hillary’s imminent presidential campaign – it also
indicates a deep structural problem with the whole edifice of American
philanthropy.
The US’s
philanthropic sector is massive and hugely powerful. It’s also
unrepresentative, unaccountable and generally secretive. Despite having
tax-exempt status, it exists outside democratic electoral or shareholder
oversight and is entirely beholden to the interests and whims of the very
wealthy and powerful and their donors – whether they are major transnational
corporations, dictatorial governments, or lobbyists out for direct or indirect
personal gain or client influence.
This way
of doing things has been causing trouble for a long time.
Rockefeller row
In 1915,
in the wake of a controversy about the political and self-interested character
of the Rockefeller Foundation, the US Congress condemned the foundation as
nothing more than a front for the industrial interests of one of the richest
men in history, John D Rockefeller.
Rockefeller
had wanted his foundation to focus on the “causes of industrial unrest” – this
in the wake of a series of strikes for decent pay, conditions and union rights,
which were bloodily suppressed by privately armed gangs in his own iron ore mines
in Colorado.
It is
unsurprising that exactly 100 years later, when the new corporate billionaires
have set up their own philanthropic (or rather philanthro-capitalist)
foundations, that a another public scandal is brewing around a major
politico-philanthropist. After all, much this wave of billionaires derive their
corporate wealth from the latest technological revolution, just as the
Rockefellers and Carnegies set up theirs during the post-US Civil war era of
rapid industrialisation.
And in
terms of wealth at least, America is just as unequal and polarised a society today as
it was when Rockefeller came under fire: in 1916, the richest 0.1% owned around
20% of total wealth, and today, the percentage is even higher, at around 25%.
Political animals
Politics
is a fundamental raison d'être for American philanthropists, despite their
foundations' loud proclamations of non-partisanship and independence from both
big business and the state.
The
Clinton Foundation’s role has long mirrored and complemented the official
approach of the US State Department, dealing as it does in microcredit
initiatives, free-market boosterism, corporate-linked development strategies,
and “partnership-building” above, through and beneath state structures.
In a way,
it’s better to think of organisations such as the Clintons' not as lobbying and
fundraising foundations, but as tax-exempt intelligence-gathering bodies and
diplomatic powerhouses. Their ultimate role is to channel American influence
around the world and create lasting bonds to ensure stability in formal
relations.
Working
along these lines, foundations have been at the core of American “soft power”
for a century, embedding American influence in difficult places. China is a
core example.
American
philanthropic organisations are now firmly embedded as major presences in
Chinese territory. Since at least the 1970s, while public relationships between
US politicians and their Chinese counterparts have fluctuated between
politeness and froideur, American foundations have kept up a massive
programme of complex bond-building work across the Pacific.
Independent
of any explicitly articulated US government policies, the Rockefeller, Ford and
Carnegie foundations – among many others – have long been establishing inroads
and building major operations within China. The Ford Foundation, for example,
has had an office in Beijing since 1978, from which it engages in developing
the “rule of law”, efficient local election machinery, and greater
non-governmental organisation activity. But in reality, most its efforts have
focused more on stabilising Chinese society rather than
democratising it.
It is the
long-term work of these foundations that has made China and the US’s present
interdependency virtually unbreakable. Yes, the US is reliant on goods from the
East – and benefits increasingly from the hundreds of thousands of students and
tourists that come to its shores – but the relationship works both ways.
US firms
and other organisations have major presences in China, which is happy to
accommodate their investment and avoid doing anything to turn them off.
This is
the reality that a Hillary Clinton presidential campaign will have to
negotiate. And while it may not do her any favours, the unflattering attention
directed at the Clinton foundation might help shed some light on a hitherto
very cloistered wing of America’s society and economy.
Foundations
such as the Clintons' are some of the world’s largest and most closed
institutions, even as they are part of one of the world’s most open societies.
In the interests of democracy, propriety and morality, their doors need to be opened, and
their activities subject to meaningful scrutiny.
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