Before there was Solyndra, there was Serious Energy. The company was personally hyped by President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, and Senator Roland Burris (remember him?) as a “green jobs” company funded by Obama’s 2009 stimulus. Today,
Serious Energy is closing factories and laying off workers--and the
Federal Trade Commission has found it made false claims about the energy
efficiency of its products.
The story of Serious Energy is a metaphor for Obama’s political
career, featuring strong-arm union tactics, corrupt Chicago politicians,
crony capitalism, and media propaganda. Back in May 2010, it was
already clear that Serious Energy was a fiasco, one Breitbart News
called the “Weatherization Undergound.” Two years and hundreds of millions of dollars later, the company is near the end of its natural trajectory as an Obama prop.
The story began with ShoreBank, the defunct Chicago bank that was the
darling of the Chicago left. ShoreBank specialized in lending in poor
neighborhoods, and was close to members of the Obama administration, as
well as to the Clintons. But the bank ran into trouble when the housing
bubble burst. Democrats lobbied for a bailout, which was partly thwarted
by Tea Party protests. The government eventually shut it down in 2010.
Along the way, however, Shorebank received $35 million in stimulus
credits as part of the “green jobs” focus of the Obama administration,
which was then overseen by Van Jones. Shorebank required low-income
borrowers to conduct an energy audit of their homes, in return for a
"free," energy-efficient refrigerator. Shorebank also required their
borrowers to “weatherize” their homes by installing “green” windows to
save energy.
One of the local producers of “green” windows was Republic Windows
and Doors, a company that failed in 2008--and which became an instant
cause célèbre for Obama, his union allies, and his friends in the
left-wing media. Workers, with the support of the SEIU, staged an
illegal strike inside the Republic factory in December 2008.
President-elect Obama endorsed the illegal strike, as did many fellow
Chicago-area politicians.
Republic’s main creditor was Bank of America--a favorite target of
the SEIU. In one of his last acts before being busted by federal
prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald for attempting to sell Obama’s
soon-to-be-vacated U.S. Senate seat, Gov. Rod Blagojevich (above)
declared the State of Illinois would withdraw all of its business from
Bank of America unless it bailed out Republic. The company was
eventually bought in 2009 by Serious Energy.
The White House soon made Serious Energy a symbol of “green jobs” as well as the stimulus. (It may have helped
that the official responsible for the stimulus-funded weatherization
program, Assistant Secretary of Energy Cathy Zoi, was married to a
senior executive at Serious Energy.) Vice President Biden visited the
Chicago factory calling it a “potentially thriving business that can
lead this country” (see video below).
Rachel Maddow of MSNBC touted
the story as a victory for unions and for “green collar jobs.” With
Obama’s endorsement and taxpayer dollars, Serious Energy raised
serious--and risky--private
capital. But “green windows” turned out to be neither green nor
profitable. The company is now focusing on selling software and
soundproof drywall. And the Chicago factory is about to
scrapped--perhaps like the Obama administration itself.
Big Government