Obama Managing Crisis 'Horribly': Jack Welch

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Obama Managing Crisis 'Horribly': Jack Welch

The Obama administration has utterly mismanaged the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and it has been "horrible" at crisis management, Jack Welch, former CEO of General Electric, told CNBC.

"Here's the difference between a businessman and a politician: Businessmen focus on solutions. Politicians focus on 'who can we blame?'" he said. "We have to be managers right now, not politicians. No photo ops."

The administration's finger-pointing is a petty distraction while the oil continues to gush, according to Welch. "There will be time for a criminal investigation when the oil stops leaking out of the ocean. Until then, every resource should be directed towards solving that problem," he said.

Since day one of the explosion, Obama has insisted that BP pays for its mess, and Senate Democrats are currently negotiating a $20 billion escrow fund to ensure it does just that.

But Welch said Obama's request for money may not have even been legal, and that the $20 billion Obama publically requested from BP has probably been agreed in secret with the oil company already, because "I don't even know if it's legal."

The spill—by far the worst in US history—has rekindled the debate about whether or not America is overly dependent on oil.

In his speech from the Oval Office on Tuesday, President Obama summoned Americans to a "national mission" to move away from oil towards renewable energy, casting the disaster as a golden opportunity to create clean-energy jobs.

A "Brutal Problem"

But Welch thinks that selling the push towards renewable energy as a "jobs package" is "crazy." The incident may have been a stark reminder of the hazards of oil production, but Welch believes that the world will be using fossil fuels in the near future.

Obama should have met with oil executives much sooner than Wednesday, according to Welch.

"He's got a brutal problem. He doesn't know how to manage it." Instead of trying to defend BP or, more significantly, trying to alleviate the crisis, many of BP's competitors spent their energy Tuesday sneering at the safety lapses of the distressed oil company - a phenomenon Welch finds outrageous.

"It's an industry-wide problem," he said, "The government needs the brainpower of the entire industry in order to clean up this mess."

On the global economy, Welch thinks economic pundits such as Nouriel Roubini, nicknamed "Dr. Doom," are too negative, and the idea that business is bad these days is wrong.

Europe, like America, is "not crater-ing," and is not going to change the shape of the US recovery, he said.

However, he said there is a mismatch of economic and political sensibilities between European nations, which makes operating a common currency extremely tough, according to Welch.

He welcomed the decline in the currency, which has been overvalued for a while. "The euro could go below a buck," Welch predicted.

General Electric is the parent company of CNBC.
 
LOL the warmer/eco-warrior makes me laugh. onceler, you're a joke.

It's friggin' hilarious that you still call me a "warmer." You must have serious, serious issues with reading.

As for Welch, you don't think it's ironic that the PCB king of the greater Hudson Valley is making these comments?
 
sometimes the law is not tough enough, good thing for La Obama is smarter that any two top republicans put together. Yeah, you republicans don't like when corporation have to pay up for their gross negligence. Bush 1 & II sat on thier hands as Exxon raped alaska and made those folks wait 20yrs, Obama bitch slapped them in 2 months.
 
sometimes the law is not tough enough, good thing for La Obama is smarter that any two top republicans put together. Yeah, you republicans don't like when corporation have to pay up for their gross negligence. Bush 1 & II sat on thier hands as Exxon raped alaska and made those folks wait 20yrs, Obama bitch slapped them in 2 months.
GED, KKK, poor.
 
It's friggin' hilarious that you still call me a "warmer." You must have serious, serious issues with reading.

As for Welch, you don't think it's ironic that the PCB king of the greater Hudson Valley is making these comments?

Welch is one of this country's best CEO's. To go back 10 years to the PCB issue and pretend that somehow discredits Welch from commenting on leadership capabilities is nothing short of hacktastic.... not to mention pathetic.

Quite sad how far the disciples will go to protect their messiah from criticism.
 
your neighborhood right. LOL now wonder you can afford two hillbilly houses

Which one do you consider hillbilly, the 4000 sf all brick colonial in a leafy restricted suburban development or the 2400 sf custom timber frame in a leafy restricted resort community?

We've been here before Topshit. Since you're an abject failure at debate you try to denigrate me by claiming superiority on some issue unrelated to the debate, eduction, money, housing, physical attributes, yet you lose there as well.

:lol:
 
Welch is one of this country's best CEO's. To go back 10 years to the PCB issue and pretend that somehow discredits Welch from commenting on leadership capabilities is nothing short of hacktastic.... not to mention pathetic.

Quite sad how far the disciples will go to protect their messiah from criticism.

Please. If you know anything at all about the PCB issue and what it did to the Hudson Valley, you would understand that his "blame game" rhetoric is the pot calling the kettle black.
 
Welch is one of this country's best CEO's. To go back 10 years to the PCB issue and pretend that somehow discredits Welch from commenting on leadership capabilities is nothing short of hacktastic.... not to mention pathetic.

Quite sad how far the disciples will go to protect their messiah from criticism.


Welch is a Republican former CEO. I'm *shocked* that he criticized Obama. Absolutely floored. Never would have guessed it in a million years.

And frankly, his criticism is fucking stupid:

The administration's finger-pointing is a petty distraction while the oil continues to gush, according to Welch. "There will be time for a criminal investigation when the oil stops leaking out of the ocean. Until then, every resource should be directed towards solving that problem," he said.

That's fucking brilliant, Jack. I'm sure people are just sitting on their thumbs and spinning in circles instead of trying to get the oil leak stopped and all it would take is for some super-executive type to tell them to fix it and it would be fixed.

Since day one of the explosion, Obama has insisted that BP pays for its mess, and Senate Democrats are currently negotiating a $20 billion escrow fund to ensure it does just that.

But Welch said Obama's request for money may not have even been legal, and that the $20 billion Obama publically requested from BP has probably been agreed in secret with the oil company already, because "I don't even know if it's legal."


Whaaaaaaaaa. Leave BP alone! Newsflash, Jack: if BP agreed to it, it's legal.
 
Please. If you know anything at all about the PCB issue and what it did to the Hudson Valley, you would understand that his "blame game" rhetoric is the pot calling the kettle black.

GE sold a legal product and disposed of it, at the time, legally. The government made them clean it up at great expense, likely causing more pollutant damage then if simply left in the deep river sediments.

The two cases are not even remotely similar. This simply an attack on Jack Welch to deflect your messiah's failure.
 
Please. If you know anything at all about the PCB issue and what it did to the Hudson Valley, you would understand that his "blame game" rhetoric is the pot calling the kettle black.

Please. If you knew anything about LEADERSHIP, you would know that Welch is one of the most respected leaders in the business world. His comments were directed at the lack of LEADERSHIP from the Obama administration.

Pretending that because GE had the PCB issue that somehow disqualifies Welch from talking about leadership is complete buffoonery on your part.
 
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