Author Topic: Obama Friends Surround Push to Acquire For-Profit University of Phoenix  (Read 615 times)

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Obama Friends Surround Push to Acquire For-Profit University of Phoenix
Group must get approval from the Department of Education to close deal, which has cracked down on the industry
BY: Joe Schoffstall   
July 1, 2016 3:40 pm
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A close friend of President Barack Obama who has launched a stealth campaign to get the Department of Education to green light the sale of the for-profit University of Phoenix to his firm has invoked the aid of a group that employs former close aides to the president.

Obama’s proximity to the players involved has caused concern, Politico reported this week. Of particular interest is Marty Nesbitt, the founder of the Chicago-based private equity firm Vistria Group that focuses on education, healthcare deals, and financial services.

Nesbitt is considered Obama’s best friend. He was tasked with spearheading the development of the Obama Foundation, the president’s vehicle to continue public service after he leaves the White House, which is focused on building a presidential center on Chicago’s South Side.

Nesbitt’s Vistria Group announced earlier this year their intent to purchase Apollo Education, the owner of the for-profit University of Phoenix. Vistria would be joined in the purchase by Apollo Global Management (no relation to the Apollo Education) and Najafi Companies.

However, in order for the $1.1 billion acquisition to go through, the Department of Education—which has put a stranglehold on the for-profit industry in recent years—must approve the deal.

Vistria is well positioned with a direct line to the department.  ...


Amy Brundage, the senior vice president of public affairs at SKDK, is working with Vistria on the communications front and is listed as the media contact on Vistria’s press releases.

Brundage was one of Obama’s longest serving aides, having joined Obama’s Senate office in 2007 as press secretary and propelling herself to the deputy assistant to president and White House deputy communications director.

Jen Psaki, the current White House communications director, spoke of Brundage’s close relationship with Obama at the time of her departure from the White House.

“The good news is she will remain in the Obama family working on the Foundation from the outside, and won’t be more than a phone call away,” Psaki told the Washington Post.

Brundage moved to SKDK in 2015 and was tasked with working on the Obama Foundation—which Nesbitt is overseeing—alongside SKDK’s managing director, Anita Dunn, who is managing the account. Dunn previously served as the White House communications director.

The Obama Foundation paid SKDK $230,000 for marketing and communication services in 2014, according to the group’s most recent Form 990.

The Obama administration has cracked down on the for-profit education industry in recent years by imposing regulations that have pushed the industry to the brink.

Since 2010, enrollment in the for-profit industry has dropped 20 percent. During this time, the University of Phoenix closed 115 campuses and saw its enrollment cut in half. Apollo announced the layoff of 600 workers. Many for-profits have closed up shop.

The Department of Defense also suspended the university from recruiting on military bases and stopped their access to federal education funding for service members in September 2015.

A few months later, in January 2016, the department lifted the suspension on the university just two weeks before Vistria announced their interest in purchasing Apollo Education.

It was later discovered that Democratic lawyer Jamie Gorelick, who chairs regulatory and government affairs at the D.C.-based law firm WilmerHale, had lobbied the Pentagon to end its suspension on the university.   ...
Full story at Free Beacon


Nesbitt and Obama. Why is "The Look of Love" playing in my mind?
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The For-Profit Government Industry
Column: How President Obama’s friends profit from his policies
BY: Matthew Continetti
July 1, 2016 5:00 am
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Got an email from Marty Nesbitt a few minutes ago. He’s a Chicago businessman and, in the words of the Tribune, the “first friend” to President Obama. Since 2014 he has served as the chairman of the Barack Obama Foundation, the nonprofit that will build the Obama Presidential Center and library, and it was to the possible architects of the library that his email sought to introduce me. “We have big plans for the Obama Foundation and Presidential Center, friends,” he wrote. Of this I am sure.

Nesbitt has a lot of plans. An article in Politico this week described one of the many business opportunities that await the Obama presidential circle, and how some members of that circle wish to capitalize on it, as the forty-fourth president moves out of the White House. Jaded observers of politics know all about the revolving door between the private and public sectors, the iron triangle of special interests, campaign donations, and legislation, the tell-all books and cable news contracts that await influential staff, confidants, and hangers-on of former presidents. Cynicism is a part of the D.C. dress code; on Veep jadedness and self-seeking are elevated to art. But I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t shocked by what I read in Politico.

“Bid to buy for-profit college by former Obama insiders raises questions,” read the headline of Michael Stratford and Kimberly Hefling’s story. Questions like, Are you kidding me? For years the Obama administration has scrutinized and tightened the regulation of for-profit colleges, the most famous of which, the University of Phoenix, has been subject to multiple investigations and court actions. The battle has taken a toll. As Preston Cooper observes, shares of the Apollo Education Group, which sold at $87 when the president was inaugurated, have sunk to less than $10 a piece. Critics of the for-profits are gleeful. “Let’s hope this Phoenix does not rise from the ashes!” Alan Singer, a social studies educator at Hofstra University, lamely punned on the Huffington Post last spring.  ...
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He caddies, too!
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