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echo: crossfire
to: Tim Richardson
from: Bob Klahn
date: 2009-12-23 18:43:00
subject: Republican History.

TR>> G.W. Bush wasn't even on the political horizon when the
TR>> groundwork was laid for the housing mortgage meltdown.

BK>>Yet he bought into it big time. He had 8 years in office, the
BK>>first 6 he could have done a lot to stop it, instead he
BK>>contributed to it.

 TR> Al Hubbard and Noam Neusner - Where Was Sen. Dodd? -
 TR> washingtonpost.com

 Two Bush administrators. Goes back to the old truth, "If a
 conservative says it, it's misstated, misleading, or just plain
 wrong." Only with the Bush administration that was in spades.

 TR> By Al Hubbard and Noam Neusner


 TR> Friday, September 12, 2008

 TR> Taxpayers face a tab of as much as $200 billion for a
 TR> government takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the

 In 2008, as compared to that much for the S&L bailout in the
 late '80s, when that was a lot more money.

 ...

 TR> We will save the senator some trouble. Here is what we saw
 TR> firsthand at the White House from late 2002 through 2007:
 TR> Starting in 2002, White House and Treasury Department
 TR> economic policy staffers, with support from then-Chief of
 TR> Staff Andy Card, began to press for meaningful reforms of
 TR> Fannie, Freddie and other government-sponsored enterprises
 TR> (GSEs).

 The then 100% republican controlled congress could have given it
 to them. Why didn't they?

 Senate R 221 D 212 House R 50 D 50 Cheney casting deciding vote.

 Oh, because the right did not want reform, they wanted
 abolition.

 TR> The crux of their concern was this: Investors believed that
 TR> the GSEs were government-backed, so shouldn't the GSEs also
 TR> be subject to meaningful government supervision?

 Yes, they should have been. Why didn't the republicans arrange
 it?

 TR> This was not the first time a White House had tried to
 TR> confront this issue.

 TR> During the Clinton years, Treasury Secretary Larry Summers
 TR> and Treasury official Gary Gensler both spoke out on the
 TR> issue of Fannie and Freddie's investment portfolios, which
 TR> had already begun to resemble hedge funds with risky
 TR> holdings.

 So, why didn't the congress, republican controlled from 1995 on,
 do something about it?

 TR> Nor were others silent: As chairman of the Federal Reserve,
 TR> Alan Greenspan regularly warned about the risks posed by
 TR> Fannie and Freddie's holdings.

 Greenspan's primary purpose in office was to keep people out of
 work to fight inflation. Thanks, don't care what he thought.
 OTOH, Greenspan also believe whole heartedly in the ability of
 the market to police itself, which he has since recanted.

 "Greenspan's epitaph should be his statement to Congress in July
 1998 that "regulation of derivatives transactions that are
 privately negotiated by professionals is unnecessary.""
 Robert Sheer, The Nation, June 3, 2009.

 TR> President Bush was receptive to reform. He withheld
 TR> nominees for Fannie and Freddie's boards -- a presidential
 TR> privilege. While it would have been valuable politically to
 TR> use such positions to reward supporters, the president put
 TR> good policy above good politics.

 How does withholding nominees accomplish anything? Why didn't he
 just nominate people who would act as he thought responsibly?

 TR> In subsequent years, officials at Treasury and the Council
 TR> of Economic Advisers (especially Chairmen Greg Mankiw and
 TR> Harvey Rosen) pressed for the following:

 TR> Requiring Fannie and Freddie to submit to regulations of
 TR> the Securities and Exchange Commission; to adopt financial
 TR> accounting standards; to follow bank standards for capital
 TR> requirements; to shrink their portfolios of assets from
 TR> risky levels; and empowering regulators such as the Office
 TR> of Federal Housing Oversight to monitor the firms.

 Yet republicans were the primary purveyors of deregulation. Was
 that why it didn't happen? Was it because the republicans in
 congress would not tolerate it?

 TR> The administration did not accept half-measures. In 2005,
 TR> Republican Mike Oxley, then chairman of the House Financial
 TR> Services Committee, brought up a reform bill (H.R. 1461),
 TR> and Fannie and Freddie's lobbyists set out to weaken it.
 TR> The bill was rendered so toothless that Card called Oxley
 TR> the night before markup and promised to oppose it. Oxley
 TR> pulled the bill instead.

 Nice little fraud. Give the number of the bill instead of the
 name. HR 1461 was the Home Financing Reform Bill of 2005.
 Remember that? It was the bill McCain so proudly claimed to have
 co-sponsored. Michael Oxley co-authored that bill with Barney
 Frank, and it' passed the house overwhelmingly. It was in the
 Senate where it died, after the Bush administration asked the
 Senate to kill it. Seems the Bush administration wanted *MORE*
 money going into those low income mortgages the right claims
 were responsible for the mortgage crises.

 Remember how Oxley, when asked about the bill's failure, said,
 "President Bush gave us a one fingered salute."?

 TR> During this period, Sen. Richard Shelby led a small group
 TR> of legislators favoring reform, including fellow Republican
 TR> Sens. John Sununu, Chuck Hagel and Elizabeth Dole.

 IOW, most republicans, the majority party, were against them.

 TR> Meanwhile, Dodd -- who along with Democratic Sens. John
 TR> Kerry, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton were the top four
 TR> recipients of Fannie and Freddie campaign contributions
 TR> from 1988 to 2008 -- actively opposed such measures and
 TR> further weakened existing regulation.

 How did the minority party weaken regulations. Seems Hubbard and
 Neusner might be playing a bit fast and loose with the truth.

 TR> The president's budget proposals reflected the nature of
 TR> the challenge. Note the following passage from the 2005
 TR> budget: Fannie, Freddie and other GSEs "are highly
 TR> leveraged, holding much less capital in relation to their
 TR> assets than similarly sized financial institutions. . . . A
 TR> misjudgment or unexpected economic event could quickly
 TR> deplete this capital, potentially making it difficult for a
 TR> GSE to meet its debt obligations. Given the very large size
 TR> of each enterprise, even a small mistake by a GSE could
 TR> have consequences throughout the economy."

 Which has what to do with his budget proposals? Just what did
 Bush intend to do about it, and how would that be part of his
 budget proposals anyway?

 TR> That passage was published in February 2004. Dodd can find
 TR> it on Page 82 of the budget's Analytical Perspectives.

 Yes, when congress was controlled by republicans in both houses.
 Republicans controlled the entire federal government.

 TR> The administration not only identified the problem, it also
 TR> recommended a solution. In June 2004, then-Deputy Treasury
 TR> Secretary Samuel Bodman said: "We do not have a world-class
 TR> system of supervision of the housing government- sponsored
 TR> enterprises (GSEs), even though the importance of the
 TR> housing financial system that the GSEs serve demands the
 TR> best in supervision."

 That's not a solution. What was the solution?

 TR> Bush got involved in the effort personally, speaking out
 TR> for the cause of reform: "Congress needs to pass
 TR> legislation strengthening the independent regulator of
 TR> government-sponsored enterprises like Freddie Mac and
 TR> Fannie Mae, so we can keep them focused on the mission to
 TR> expand home ownership," he said in December. He even
 TR> mentioned GSE reform in this year's State of the Union
 TR> address.

 Independent regulator? Isn't that more allowing the financial
 system to regulate itself? Isn't that an admission by Bush that
 he can'd do his job?

 Yet he didn't do a damn thing.

 BTW, the real cause of the financial meltdown was not Fannie May
 or Freddie Mac, that 200 billion was a small portion. It was the
 deritives and such as credit default swaps that republicans have
 consistently and overwhelmingly opposed regulating.

 And of the top 25 subprime lenders, only one was subject federal
 regulations on those loans.


BOB KLAHN bob.klahn{at}sev.org   http://home.toltbbs.com/bobklahn

... Remember, the post WW2 debt load went up only under anti-tax presidents.
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