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White House Revisionist history. Speak Out!


Yesterday the current liar...I mean spokesman for the White House Dana Perino answered questions about the ongoing financial crisis on Wall Street.  In one sentence she complained about Democratic finger pointing and in the next sentence she .....points the finger at Democrats.  Priceless truly. But of more consequence is the issue of her taking liberty with the facts.  Here is the relevant part of the questioning.

MS. PERINO: Well, unfortunately -- unfortunately, I don't think that the reaction of finger-pointing from Democrats to the White House is anything new.

I would ask you to go back and look and ask Speaker Pelosi or any of the other Democrats who are pointing fingers, what specific regulation did they want that we blocked? What specific regulation did we eliminate? In fact, it was the White House that worked to try to get them to act on GSE reform as early as 2003. Unfortunately, they did not act on that until most recently when there was a crisis and we got the authorities that we needed in August of 2007. What we were looking for in that GSE reform was a strong regulator. That's what we wanted. It was more regulation, more transparency, and a stronger independent regulator who could actually look at the books of the GSEs, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and tell us exactly what was going on.

In addition to that, we wanted FHA modernization so that more low-income people could have their mortgages backed by the FHA. They didn't move on that until there was a crisis at hand. We wanted rules -- they're called RESPA rules, I can't remember what it stands for, it's Real Estate Settlement Act -- but it would help people understand what they're getting into when they have a loan. Unfortunately they didn't act on that. Hank Paulson's regulatory blueprint that he laid out early last spring fell on deaf ears to the Democratic members of Congress.

So while we wish they'd have acted, that's behind us. There are times in our country when we can set politics aside and come together and work on a problem together in a bipartisan way. We would hope that that would happen. Unfortunately, this week Speaker Pelosi declined to come to a bipartisan meeting that Hank Paulson held up on Capitol Hill with several members of both the House and the Senate from both sides of the aisle, and she declined to show up.

Q But there's a -- I guess a criticism raised is sort of a philosophical question that a cornerstone of Republican philosophy has been deregulation, less government, less regulation. And so the extension of that thought is that this is what happens when you have less regulation.

MS. PERINO: But let me -- but again, I would go back and ask you, can they name one regulation that we eliminated? Can they name one regulation that they wanted to have us implement that we blocked? And I'm sure that they can't. And what we have asked for is smarter regulation across the board, and that's what we have laid out. We had a regulatory blueprint for them to follow, and they declined not to. But as I said yesterday, we're not going to be in the blame game. We're going to continue to lead, act and govern and take the necessary steps to prevent broader damage to the economy.

Now that sounds great but earlier this year the New York Times ran an article about the proposal  on Wall Street reform which exposed it as an attempt to loosen regulations rather than tighten them.  The great overhaul was more of a shift of responsiblity than an attempt to reign in bad behavior on Wall Street.  It once again was an attempt to prop up the failed philosophy of deregulation as a means to spur economic growth.  This GOP endorsed philosophy, as crazy as it sounds, has endured even as the crisis has escalated more and more each day.  As a matter of fact in contrast to John McCain's rehetoric the last couple of days, Secretary Hank Paulson was quoted in the article as saying:
“I do not believe it is fair or accurate to blame our regulatory structure for the current turmoil.”

Pay attention folks because this is just another attempt by the GOP to make use of revisionist history in trying to improve their image to average Americans and if no one disputes it they will succeed!


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So what specific action has this Republican dominated government
taken in the last eight years that helped cause this financial crisis?

Any bills or amendments you can cite?

Or is it more the lack of any intervention at all?

I'm trying to learn a little more about this.

Here you go

In 1933, a few years following the stock market crash, Congress passes the Glass-Steagall Act, in hopes that regulating banks will help prevent market instability, particularly amongst Wall Street banks. The purpose of the act is to separate commercial banks that focus on consumers from investment banks, which deal with speculative trading and mergers.

The Glass-Steagall Act provided the proper oversight and entity separation that would prohibit banks and other financial companies from merging into giant trusts (conflict of interests) -- giant trusts or corporations being more powerful, naturally, and having the seemingly limitless capital to lobby their corporate interests, however, with a very myopic scope (particularly when it comes to factoring in potential losses -- most banks, as seen in contemporary times, chose not to anticipate losses in the mortgage market; they presumed home prices would continue to appreciate).

In 1999, former Senator Phil Gramm (who is, incidentally, Senator John McCain's economic adviser and cochairs his presidential campaign) set out to completely gut the Glass-Steagall Act, and did so successfully, replacing most of its components with the new Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act: allowing commercial banks, investment banks, and insurers to merge (which would have violated antitrust laws under Glass-Steagall). Sen. Gramm was the driving force behind the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, as he had received over $4.6 million from the FIRE sector (Finance, Insurance and Real Estate donations) over the previous decade, and once the Act passed, an influx of "megamergers" took place among banks and insurance and securities companies, as if they had been eagerly awaiting the passage of Gramm's Act. Everything in between Glass-Steagall and Gramm-Leach-Bliley (i.e. Savings and Loan crisis/bust) was, in large part, the incubation period for what would take place over the nine years that would follow the passage of Gramm's Act: an experiment in deregulation.

Shortly after George W. Bush was elected president, Congress and President Clinton were trying to pass a $384 billion omnibus spending bill, and while the debates swirled around the passage of this bill, Senator Phil Gramm clandestinely slipped a 262-page amendment into the omnibus appropriations bill titled: Commodity Futures Modernization Act. It is likely that few senators read this bill, if any. The essence of the act was the deregulation of derivatives trading (financial instruments whose value changes in response to the changes in underlying variables; the main use of derivatives is to reduce risk for one party). The legislation contained a provision -- lobbied for by Enron, a major campaign contributor to Gramm -- that exempted energy trading from regulatory oversight. Basically, it gave way to the Enron debacle and ushered in the new era of unregulated securities. Interestingly enough, Gramm's wife, Wendy, had been part of the Enron board, and her salary and stock income brought in between $900,000 and $1.8 million to the Gramm household, prior to the passage of the Commodity Futures Modernization Act.

In 2003, Gramm left the Senate to join UBS, which had acquired investment house PaineWebber due to his deregulation bill. At UBS, Gramm lobbied Congress, the Fed and the Treasury Department. During Gramm's tenor at UBS and as a lobbyist, Congress passed the Responsible Lending Act, billed as an anti-predatory-lending measure, but was called the "Loan Shark Protection Act" by consumer advocates, as it was designed to preempt stronger state laws against anti-predatory lending. The Fed largely ignored the underlying and growing problems within the subprime mortgage/housing markets, as Bernanke famously acknowledged the housing market in April, 2007 as, "[showing] signs of softening," but said that a "sharp slowdown," is unlikely. Then, according to Mother Jones magazine, Henry Paulson became the Treasury Secretary in July, 2007, when, "In 2005, [at] Goldman [he] securitized $68 billion in residential mortgages and $23 billion in 'other assets' primarily related to CDOs," (Mother Jones, August, 2008). With such self-interest, and a lack of the nation's interest, we can see how this subprime mess was allowed to escalate to such great proportions.

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Specifically?
I think the clearest example is the attempts to resurrect the economy after the dotcom bubble and 9/11 by telling people to go shopping - and to do so, buy a house with ARMs and use HELOC as a credit card for consumer goods. That and their focus on tax breaks to stimulate GDP growth instead of direct spending to stimulate employment growth led to a growing inability to maintain consumer spending - which is what drives 70% of the US economy.
Add a generous dash of certainty that housing prices would never go down, and free the large investment firms(3 of 5 are gone now) from capital reserve requirements so they could leverage to their hearts' content, and voila! We got the lovely pyramid (scheme) that is now just beginning to crumble around our ears.

Well, I can point to two regulations that helped this economic catastrophy on its way:

1. The law that previously prevented lenders and investment firms from fondling each other was repealed, thanks to repiublicans:

"Enactment of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) in November 1999 effectively repealed [by a Republican Congress; rendered veto-proof]
the long-standing prohibitions on the mixing of banking with securities or insurance businesses and thus permits “broad banking.” Since the barriers that separated banking from other financial activities have been crumbling for some time, GLBA is better viewed as ratifying, rather than revolutionizing, the practice of banking."

http://www.occ.treas.gov/ftp/workpaper/wp2000-5.pdf

2. New bankruptcy law enacted in the midst of the build-up to the mortgage crisis (mortgage fraud) which would prevent average Americans from filing bankruptcy (how convenient):

"President Bush signed the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (S. 256) into law. The new law will make for some of the most significant changes in consumer and business bankruptcy practice."

http://www.abiworld.org/Content/NavigationMenu/OnlineResources/LegislativeNews/NewBankruptcyLaw/New_Law1.htm


Two very significant events which contributed mightily to the current economic crisis.

Essentially, it allowed lenders to rake borrowers over the coals with some really horrific financial "products" newly invented to make the rich richer with no discernable trail as to origination (mortgages rebundeled and sold over and over and over again until they landed in the investment market). It's not as though this was somehow accidental. It was THE ideal arrangement for the newly created mortgage lending - real estate - investment banking complex. Great for them, lousy for us.

Don't you love it how these "Screw the Public Acts" are always slapped with a title that somehow implies they're doing us a favor?

[Like the USA Patriot Act}

Oh hey, your post (sgwhiteinfla) beat me to the punch. Thanks for the in-depth explanation. Nice how Phil Gramm seems to pop up whenever disaster is in the air.

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In fact, it was the White House that worked to try to get them to act on GSE reform as early as 2003. Unfortunately, they did not act on that until most recently when there was a crisis and we got the authorities that we needed in August of 2007.

Refresh my memory: Weren't the Republicans in control of both houses in 2003? Wasn't 2007 when the Democrats took over?

It seems that Dana Perino is commending the voters on tossing out the Republicans.

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sgwhiteinfla

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