McCain Flip-Flops On AIG Bailout: Rejects It Tuesday, Says It's Okay Wednesday

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GLEN JOHNSON | September 17, 2008 04:54 PM EST | AP

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Republican presidential candidate Sen., John McCain, R-Ariz., shakes hands with supporters at a rally in Vienna, Ohio, Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2008. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)

ORION TOWNSHIP, Mich. — Republican presidential candidate John McCain, a day after flatly rejecting the idea of a taxpayer bailout for American International Group Inc., said Wednesday that the government had been "forced" into proposing an $85 billion loan to the nation's largest insurer.

McCain appeared to soften his opposition to the bailout proposed by the Federal Reserve, treating the plan as a necessary evil to protect ordinary Americans with finanical ties to AIG _ and asserting that such a financial collapse should not be allowed to happen again. He also called for an investigation to uncover any wrongdoing.

"The government was forced to commit $85 billion," McCain said in a statement. "These actions stem from failed regulation, reckless management and a casino culture on Wall Street that has crippled one of the most important companies in America."

"The focus of any such action should be to protect the millions of Americans who hold insurance policies, retirement plans and other accounts with AIG," he added. "We must not bail out the management and speculators who created this mess."

Democratic rival Barack Obama blamed the Republican anti-regulatory fervor of recent years for part of the mess, saying the crisis is "a stark reminder of the failures of crony capitalism and an economic philosophy that sees any regulation at all as unwise and unnecessary."

Neither candidate said how regulation should be improved.

Campaigning in Cleveland, McCain running mate Sarah Palin expressed disappointment that the federal government needed to inject tax money into yet another financial institution.

"The shot that has been called by the feds _ it's understandable but very, very disappointing that taxpayers are called upon for another one," Palin said during a visit to a deli.

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McCain noted that Obama now talks about possibly delaying his planned tax increases on wealthy Americans if he wins the election and the economy is still in recession when he takes office. McCain said that, in essence, was an acknowledgment that Obama's tax plan as written "will hurt our economy, not help it."

The Arizona senator visited a GM plant that employs 3,900 and vowed: "We're not going to leave the workers here in Michigan hung out to dry while we give billions in taxpayers dollars to Wall Street."

Indeed, both McCain and Obama support sending billions to the auto industry in what critics call yet another bailout by taxpayers. McCain, who lost Michigan primary after saying some U.S. jobs will never come back from overseas, now is behind a plan in Congress to give automakers $25 billion in federal loans to help them retool for cleaner cars.

"It's time to get our auto industry back on its feet," McCain said. "And it's time for a new generation of cars and for loans to build the facilities to make them."

Although McCain has stepped up criticism of government regulators as he seeks the presidency, he has long favored a reduction in corporate regulation.

McCain had a hand in economic matters as a member of the Senate Commerce Committee, which he once chaired. His campaign has noted that McCain was heavily involved in telecommunications regulation and deregulation.

McCain said in an interview that he didn't want the government to bail out AIG. "But there are literally millions of people whose retirement, whose investment, whose insurance were at risk here," he said on ABC's "Good Morning America." "They were going to have their lives destroyed because of the greed and excess and corruption."

Elaborating on the charge of corruption, McCain said that many Wall Street executives had claimed "everything's fine, not to worry" and that Congress and regulators had paid no attention. "All of them were asleep at the switch," he said, and went on to blame special interests and lobbyists as well.

Asked for specific examples of corruption regarding AIG, senior McCain campaign adviser Steve Schmidt offered none.

In two new television ads Wednesday, McCain asserts that he is the right leader to keep Americans' savings safe.

"I'll meet this financial crisis head on," he says in one ad. "Reform Wall Street. New rules for fairness and honesty. I won't tolerate a system that puts you and your family at risk. Your savings, your jobs _ I'll keep them safe."

___

On the Net:

McCain campaign: http://www.johnmccain.com/

Obama campaign: http://www.barackobama.com/index.php

(This version CORRECTS Corrects dateline; SUBS 3rd graf to DELETE extraneous words.)

ORION TOWNSHIP, Mich. — Republican presidential candidate John McCain, a day after flatly rejecting the idea of a taxpayer bailout for American International Group Inc., said Wednesday that the ...
ORION TOWNSHIP, Mich. — Republican presidential candidate John McCain, a day after flatly rejecting the idea of a taxpayer bailout for American International Group Inc., said Wednesday that the ...
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We, the taxpayers, bailed out AIG.
We, as the owners of AIG, should all get 10 shares of the company.
If it was our tax money then it is NOW OUR company.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 09/17/2008
- marytny I'm a Fan of marytny 4 fans permalink

HA....then my stock portfolio is really going to look diversified.....
Bear Sterns, AIG, Ford Motor, (that's coming), Washington Mutual?

All I have now is some Mutual Funds and Home Depot-at half what I paid....

We should buy gold....but it went up so high today. Paper money is going to be worthless.
Gov is OUT OF MONEY. They can't keep printing. Overseas markets in trouble and won't lend us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 PM on 09/17/2008
- sean6886 I'm a Fan of sean6886 14 fans permalink
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Don't make me panic anymore than I already am over Wamu. I have money in there.

But I think you're both right. We should all get a nice quarterly check or something. We are owners. We should also be invited to vote on decisions and choose who should run the companies.

We are the majority, right?!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:37 PM on 09/17/2008
- mrsmdressup I'm a Fan of mrsmdressup 404 fans permalink
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Don't forget you now own more house than McCain thanks to the Fannie/Freddie deal!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:38 PM on 09/17/2008
- marytny I'm a Fan of marytny 4 fans permalink

Move Palin to Supreme Court after election to futther GOP agenda?

I must be asleep and this is all a bad dream. 4500 not dead in a useless war,
economy not down the tubes, all the GOP corruption was the pizza I ate, a lady
from the mall doesn't really think she can be prez.....planet not running out of drinking water...
http://www.newsweek.com/id/158748

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 09/17/2008

double talking MCPAINLY...DON'T THEY KEEP RECORDS ON WHAT THEY SAID BEFORE...THEY FLIP FLOP MORE THAN ANY POLITICIAN IN MODERN DAY HISTORY.

I RECOMEND MCSAME AND PAINLY BE AWARDED THE BEST FLIP FLOPPERS IN THE WORLD.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 PM on 09/17/2008

Corporate socialism, plain and simple.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 PM on 09/17/2008
- mrJJ I'm a Fan of mrJJ 23 fans permalink

Sherrod Brown of Ohio raised the Republican nominee's involvement in the Keating Five scandal as evidence that voters couldn't trust McCain's record on both the economy and ethics.

"It is not so much his economic proposals but his economic record," Brown said of McCain. "His main adviser is Phil Gramm -- he was his mentor in the Senate -- and you just tie it all together. Of course John McCain supported the oil industry, he has oil lobbyists working for him. Of course John McCain supported these trade agreements, he has got Wall Street people working for him... It is all wrapped up together. John McCain is a creature of these interest groups in Washington. He is no maverick and, from the Keating Five on, his ethics have been questionable. He's not a maverick and Barack has got to just keep hammering on that."

During his speech on Tuesday, Obama drew parallels between that industry collapse and the current stumbles of the housing and financial sectors.

"It happened in the 1980s, when we loosened restrictions on Savings and Loans and appointed regulators who ignored even these weaker rules. Too many S&Ls took advantage of the lax rules set by Washington to gamble that they could make big money in speculative real estate."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 PM on 09/17/2008

Take a photo of your completed ballot as proof of your vote.

Wear blue on election day to show you voted for Obama.

Transparency may be the only key to a fair election.
*************************************************************************

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 09/17/2008
- sean6886 I'm a Fan of sean6886 14 fans permalink
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I swear, if the neo-cons keep making elections more difficult, we'll all soon have to get our ballots notorized.

BTW, are you a fan of the character from Willy Wonka or the band Verouca Salt?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:26 PM on 09/17/2008

McCain is such a flip flopper any more. I liked the old McCain better.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 09/17/2008
- JolieN I'm a Fan of JolieN 5 fans permalink

Mccain was one of the Keating five. Three of them took bribe $ to push for deregulation on financial institutions. Mccain did it for free because he was/(and is still) too stupid to know what is not good for the economy. He has been pushing for deregulation all the 26 years in congress, out of reckless and stupidity. Worst, if he knows and lies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 PM on 09/17/2008
- sean6886 I'm a Fan of sean6886 14 fans permalink
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This proves that McCain doesn't understand the economy and he doesn't care. It's all about the top 2% percent.

Bush and his cronies have done this. Now the dollar is weak and since the price of oil is based on the dollar, do you not think that Russia or Venezuela, or even Iran won't try to change that? If they do, we're s c r e w e d and you're drill, baby drill does you no good. Even if they do drill, and that's pretty uncertain condisering they're not drilling on the acres they have now, it's going to take at least 10 years before they even see any return, and they'll just sell it on the free market because they'll make more money.

"My goal is to cut government in half in twenty-five years, to get it down to the size where we can drown it in the bathtub."
—Grover Norquist, Executive Director, Americans for Tax Reform.

Guess what folks, we're drowning in the bathtub.

For those of you considering voting for McCain, consider this, he's only going to give the top 1 or 2 percent a tax cut, and cut more taxes on corporations, which means, to pay for all of this bailout, which they'll do with your tax dollars, they do what Bush does not, borrow from China to make up for the loss in taxes and your grandchildren will be paying that back, if McCain doesn't make them destitute first.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:19 PM on 09/17/2008
- mrsmdressup I'm a Fan of mrsmdressup 404 fans permalink
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Not to mention his plan to tax employer paid healthcare as income....for the taxpayer!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 PM on 09/17/2008
- Leonard I'm a Fan of Leonard 5 fans permalink

It proves it is not about McCain but his handlers staying in charge...can you say Neocons!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 PM on 09/17/2008

Truth is, neither Obama or McCain can control the out of control government handed mess this has turned out to be. It will settle itself out, it has before.

They both are playing politics since this event is now current.
Next week it'll be something else.

I don't know why the media make every single word out of their mouths a front-page headliner.
There's your problem, the MEDIA!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 PM on 09/17/2008
- dm92 I'm a Fan of dm92 11 fans permalink

Not quite that simple. A lot of this mess could have been averted with a little oversight and regulation. In the late '90s, Grahamm and McCain helped push through legislation that removed the Glas-Stegall(sp?) bill that was created during the depression to separate investment banks, that mainly deal with institutional money, from commercial banks that mainly deal with individual investors. After the overturning of that legislation and the heating up of the housing market, these investment banks started fueling the supply of mortgage money with all of these exotic and risky securities they were creating with the mortgages as underlying collateral. It was a vicious cycle that resulted in extension of credit to non-creditworthy people, lending abuses, etc - all to feed this endless hunger to create more of these securities and pay themselves huge amounts of money. To the haters of regulation, this is sort of a chickens coming home to roost.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:25 PM on 09/17/2008
- Tommygun264 I'm a Fan of Tommygun264 212 fans permalink
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Spoken like a true pub. Blame the media, announce that the free market will sort itself out so there is no need for regulation and then just walk away while all the billionaires who caused this mess stuff their pockets with cash and make use of their golden parachutes without consequence, leaving the working poor who actually pay taxes to clean up the devastation left behind. The "free market" the pubs love to crow about only exists within the parameters (also known as regulations) set up by the government - it doesn't simply "take care of itself". The things that make a free market possible, such as contract law and a court system to enforce it, didn't just come into being being on their own. The pubs make good use of all these rules and regulations when it works to their advantage, such as when they want to bust unions or deny workers pensions and benefits, but then when they screw up and they end up on the short end of the stick they announce that the system is broken and the only thing that can be done is wipe the slates clean and start over again on the American tax payer's dime, never mind where all that money went. Not this time, bucko.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:33 PM on 09/17/2008
- mrsmdressup I'm a Fan of mrsmdressup 404 fans permalink
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This is not a case of "ignore it and it will go away" The world is watching the most corrupt administration in history inventing fake wars (which sadly have killed many real people), taking a hands-off approach to everything except war while the collapse of the mortgage/housing/financial markets have rippled around the world.

We are playing in a global economy of instant news and if there is no global confidence in the US, what will happen? No candidate is perfect but one candidate is leaps and bounds better than the old man trying to control with more of the same. As someone who is not an American, when we see McCain we see W....and a huge threat to world stability.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:33 PM on 09/17/2008
- shanester I'm a Fan of shanester 15 fans permalink
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Hopefully during the first debate next week Obama will crush Mcnutty once and for all.

Obama is miles ahead in just basic intelligence and common sense.

Wake up America for eff sake!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 PM on 09/17/2008
- jk99 I'm a Fan of jk99 permalink

Guess who's watching the polls? Everytime popular opinion changes, so does McCains stance on the issues...it's getting embarrassing for the Republicans.

I especially like the new commercial that he is going to go in and fix Washington (he is Washington) and the greed of Wall St (He was Keating 5 until the doo-doo hit the fan and he flopped on them too to save his cajones)

Is it really going to get any better in the next 4 years with McCain in office....how many generation is it going to take to pay back all this bail out.....and we are only at the beginning. More banks are going to go under, as are insurers, airline and automakers.

We need REAL CHANGE, with real leaders, not someone who flip flops and makes decisions that are popular. We need someone with the balls to stand up for his/her convictions for the good of our country!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:16 PM on 09/17/2008
- ralph10 I'm a Fan of ralph10 24 fans permalink
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Oh no Obama's a flip flopper. Oh no Obama reads a teleprompter. Oh no Obama wants to teach sex-ed to kindergardners. Oh no!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:12 PM on 09/17/2008
- dogwalker I'm a Fan of dogwalker 4 fans permalink

Maybe if we tried to reason with him...

John McCain, once upon a time you really cared about your country. Do the right thing and step out of this election. You know that your party has failed the American people miserably and you now know you don't have any control over them. They forced you to choose an extremist for a running mate and they will continue to control you if you should be elected.

Don't let them ruin this once great country. You can do the right thing in the end. Stop now and help us save it. You don't have the power or the skills to do it alone. Save what little pride you have left.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 09/17/2008
- mrJJ I'm a Fan of mrJJ 23 fans permalink

McCain & the GOP "Lets Help Our Friends"

Gramm-Leach-Bliley Financial Services Modernization Act.

53 Republican Senators plus one Democrat - AYE

44 Democrats no Republicans - NAY

The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, also known as the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Financial Services Modernization Act, Pub. L. No. 106-102, 113 Stat. 1338 (November 12, 1999), is an Act of the United States Congress which repealed the Glass-Steagall Act, opening up competition among banks, securities companies and insurance companies. The Glass-Steagall Act prohibited a bank from offering investment, commercial banking, and insurance services.

"John McCain voted FOR the bank laws that led to the current credit crisis. John Mccain's economic advisor (Gramm) WROTE the law. 53 Republicans voted YES to the law. When you're in danger of losing your house, can you take a chance on more of the same from those who wrecked out economy?"

No truer words have been said "They (Fed & Treasury) have socialized risk.

Financial reward has always been associated with assumption of risk, but what the republicans have managed to do is divorce the two and in doing so they have managed to hold the rewards for themselves while transfering the risk to all of us.

They must really believe were stupid.
How The Senate voted


http://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_lists/roll_call_vote_cfm.cfm?congress=106&session=1&vote=00105

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 09/17/2008
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