GOP Plan: 'Democrats Are Wall Street Patsies'
Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)
The Republican Strategy on Financial Reform:
Make Democrats Look Like Patsies for the Street
enate Republicans today debuted their new strategy for financial reform: Refuse to cooperate with Democrats on grounds that the Dems are too willing to give Wall Street what it wants.
I'm not making this up.
In a Senate floor speech Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Republicans couldn't support the legislation that emerged from Chris Dodd's banking committee because it "institutionalizes" future taxpayer bailouts of the Street, giving the Federal Reserve "enhanced emergency lending authority that is far too open to abuse." Senator Bob Corker, a senior Republican on the committee who had spent many weeks negotiating the bill with Dodd, huffed that Dodd's final bill provides "the ability to have bailouts."
Sen. Lamar Alexander, a member of the Senate Republican leadership, blasted Dodd for partisanship - "Dodd jerked the rug out from under Sen. Corker and went back into a partisan bill" - that is, partisanship toward Wall Street. Alexander said Republicans will hold out for a plan "that would end the practice of too big to fail and that would make certain that we don't perpetually use taxpayer dollars to bail out Wall Street."
Republicans have been looking for a way to oppose Senate Dems on financial reform without looking like patsies for the Street. And now they think they've found it - by trying to make Democrats look like patsies for the Street. The strategy is surely the handiwork of Republican pollster Frank Luntz who for months has been telling Republicans "the single best way to kill any legislation is to link it to the Big Bank Bailout." (See Luntz's memo.)
Let's be clear: The Dodd bill doesn't go nearly far enough to rein in the Street. It allows so-called "specialized" derivatives to be traded without regulatory oversight; its capital requirements are weak; it gives far too much discretion to regulators, who, as we've seen, can fall asleep at the switch; it does nothing about conflicts of interest within credit rating agencies that rate the issues of the companies that put food on their plates; it puts a consumer protection agency inside the Fed whose consumer bureau didn't protect consumers; it doesn't do anything to control the size of banks; it delays dealing with other hard issues by assigning them to vaguely-defined "studies;" and, yes, it preserves the possibility that the Fed could launch another bank bailout.
But the Street thinks the Dodd bill goes way too far, and wants its Republican allies to water it down with more loopholes, studies, and regulatory discretion. Republicans figure they can accommodate the Street by refusing to give the Dems the votes they need unless the Dems agree to weaken the bill - while Republicans simultaneously tell the public they're strengthening the bill and reducing the likelihood of future bailouts.
It's a bizarre balancing act for the Republicans, reflecting the two opposing constituencies they have to appease - big business and Wall Street, on the one hand, and the emerging Tea Partiers, on the other. The Tea Partiers hate the Wall Street bailout as much as the left does. It was the bailout that "really got this ball rolling," says Joseph Farah, publisher of WorldNetDaily, a website popular among Tea Party adherents. "That's where the anger, where the frustration took root."
The awkward fact, of course, is that the bank bailout originated with George W. Bush and a Republican congress. "Without this rescue plan," Bush told the nation in September 2008, "the costs to the American economy could be disastrous." New Hampshire Senator Judd Gregg, the leading Republican negotiator of the bailout bill, warned that without the bank bailout, "the trauma, the chaos, and the disruption to everyday Americans' lives would be overwhelming."
Republicans figure the public's attention span is so short they won't remember, and that the public understands so little about the details of financial reform that Republicans can weaken the Dodd bill without leaving any fingerprints.
I have a suggestion for Senate Democrats: Don't let them get away with it. Smoke the Republicans out. Respond to their criticism that the Dodd bill leaves open the possibility that some future bank will become too big to fail by amending the bill to limit the size of banks to $100 billion of assets - so no bank can become too big, period. Challenge the Republicans to join you in voting for the amendment. If they decline, force them to explain themselves to their local Tea Partiers.
Open Article On Originating Site
Robert Reich is Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. He has written twelve books, including "The Work of Nations," "Locked in the Cabinet," and his most recent book, "Supercapitalism." His "Marketplace" commentaries can be found on publicradio.com and iTunes.
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Comments
He was trying to sell the concept of NAFTA. Well my employment was directly coupled with the manufacturing secter and guess what. I became unemployed with an was unable to get a job. The trainng was a load of bull, I never came to pass. And the job market was almost nill. I was unemployed for a year before I got a job, and that job market was paying me half of what I was capable of earning. I'm sorry, the hair on the back of my neck stands up when I hear him talking about anything that involves the economy. We need JOBS, not words. If not jobs, then place tarrifs on all the imported goods to pay for all the entitlements that the unemployed working class needs to have to survive here.
He also failed to dissuade Clinton from givnig China Most Favored Nation trading status.
He has actually continued to champion free trade in the face of massive American underemployment .
Like a busted clock, he does tell the truth on occasion.
Mostly, we need to convince consumers to not buy things made in countries where the average income is less than ours. Doing this, alone, would restore the economies of western countries starting noticeably within months.
We also need to avoid the use of commercial banks like the plague. Use credit unions instead (Not for Profit!)
Corporations and upper 1% earners need to realize that annual compensation for individuals above $500,000 and net incomes for corporations above 9% of costs will be taxed at 90%.
Finally, realize, that interest rates and rates of return on investment are not sustainable above 9%.
Don't you feel that the underlying T.P message and motivation is race priviledge..?
1) Remove the bailout component entirely, and publicize it as an effort toward bipartisanship;
2) Use the Republican claim (Dems are too soft) to toughen the legislation to something that can really work.
from the "Big Banks" and "Big Corporations". I say let's elect a group of "one term" legislators and change the "Rules" dramatically with a Congress unbeholden to financial interests.
FDR used Executive Orders combined with Fireside Chats to shame congress into capitulating and it worked. In so doing he funded his initial programs out of Contingency Funds until congress caught up.
He was relentlessly Progressive and aggressive, going time after time to the people and making certain that the people responded by speaking with them by phone or letter making them feel a part of his mission, and him a part of theirs.
This congress is made up of weakling, avaristic, hypocrites, who are in no way in touch with the lower, middle and upper middle classes. This Congress is as close to fascism as it is possible to get without a marriage license.
But if Rubin is right that the "bill doesn't nearly go far enough", then maybe it isn't tough enough to begin with.
Secrecy in our financial markets & a "shadow" banking system are creating a financial oligarchy in our country.
Our Congress has evolved into a remarkably polarized, ineffectual state. We desperately need a leader with FDR's capabilities.
Meanwhile, at least Reich offers suggestions for improving the current financial reform bill stalemate in Congress.
We're going to need a *lot* of reform to rebalance regulation, after 25 years of reckless deregulation. We need a strong Driver.
The problem now is; American based multi-national conglomerates make enough profit overseas that they do not feel the need to honor the social contract here in the US. Profits are up and real employment for those now out of work will never return.
Jettison the Democrats, or get used to "the New Boss" ?
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