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There's a chapter in the book I haven't seen quoted or discussed yet. It's about how the White House responded to the Enron scandal. What's interesting is that O'Neill and Alan Greenspan wanted to fundamentally change the standard of measure that CEO's should be held to. He quotes at length from a long internal memo that Greenspan wrote where he says that corporate governance is essentially broken and needs a major fix. O'Neill says, "I wish people could see this side of Greenspan", and I was thinking, me too!
In later cabinet meetings, O'Neill tries to convince people that the standard of measure for CEO's needs to be changed from "recklessness" -- which is practically impossible to prove except in the very worst cases, and even then it's very hard (think Ken Lay). Because the CEO's can always say, "Geez, I didn't know!" So he wanted the standard to be "negligence". That would remove the know-nothing dodge. If a CEO claimed he didn't know all the crooked stuff was going on, then he *should have* known, and would be negligent.
After sending off his recommendations to the Chimp, O'Neill gave a talk to the heads of the top 25 financial corporations. Needless to say, they didn't want to have anything to do with O'Neill's new standard, all saying it would simply lead to more lawsuits. After that they burned up the phone lines at the White House.
Also unsurprisingly, Chimp and Cheney (and probably Larry Lindsay and Harvey Pitt) gutted or eliminated most of O'Neill's suggestions. The loudly trumpted corporate governance laws they passed were a pale shadow of what O'Neill and Greenspan wanted.
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