McCain says Fed should stop government bailouts

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BETH FOUHY | September 19, 2008 11:36 PM EST | AP

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Republican presidential candidate, Sen., John McCain, R-Ariz., greets supporters at the conclusion of a campaign rally in Blaine, Minn., Friday afternoon, Sept. 19, 2008. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)

GREEN BAY, Wis. — Republican John McCain said Friday the Federal Reserve needs to stop bailing out failed financial institutions. The Republican presidential hopeful said the Fed should get back to "its core business of responsibly managing our money supply and inflation" and he laid out several recommendations for stabilizing markets in the financial crisis that has rocked Wall Street and commanded the dialogue in the presidential campaign.

McCain made little mention of the massive proposal being crafted by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson that could amount to a $1 trillion taxpayer bailout of the mortgage industry. McCain said simply that leaders should put aside partisan differences and "any action should be designed to keep people in their homes and safeguard the life savings of all Americans."

The Fed engineered an $85 billion takeover of insurance giant AIG this week after seizing control of housing giants Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. McCain said that to help return the U.S. to fiscal solvency, the powerful central bank should instead focus on shoring up the dollar and keeping inflation low.

"A strong dollar will reduce energy and food prices," McCain said to applause from the Green Bay Chamber of Commerce. "It will stimulate sustainable economic growth and get this economy moving again."

In the speech and later at a boisterous rally in Minnesota, McCain sharply criticized Democratic rival Barack Obama for ties to Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae and for advocating tax increases McCain said would "turn a recession into a depression."

Obama has said he would raise taxes on people making over $250,000 a year and would cut taxes on the middle class. McCain restated his claim that Obama had voted to raise taxes on people who make just $42,000 a year _ a claim that has been widely debunked by nonpartisan fact check organizations.

McCain noted the Illinois senator had taken large campaign contributions from both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and that the one-time head of Obama's vice presidential search team, Jim Johnson, had received a $21 million severance deal after stepping down as Fannie Mae CEO. McCain's campaign released a new television ad Friday hitting Obama for his connection to Johnson.

The Arizona senator neglected to say that some of his closest advisers had ties to or lobbied for the home loan giants.

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McCain is correct when he says Obama is the No. 2 recipient of campaign money from employees of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Obama has collected $126,349 from those sources, according to a compilation by the Center for Responsive Politics, second only to Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., who has received $165,400. The ranking covers the period since 1989.

In Minnesota, the mention of Johnson's severance deal brought loud chants from thousands of McCain supporters who filled an airport hangar. "Give it back! Give it back!" they shouted.

McCain renewed his call for tighter regulation of financial markets, even though he has generally championed deregulation throughout his career in the Senate and as chairman of the influential Commerce Committee.

He called Securities and Exchange Commission Chris Cox a "good man" but reiterated his view that Cox should step down or be fired, saying there needed to be greater accountability in Washington.

McCain said as president he would create a Mortgage and Financial Institutions Trust to help homeowners avoid foreclosure. He said he would propose and sign into law changes to prevent financial firms from concealing "bad practices."

Throughout the week, McCain and Obama have tangled over which candidate is better to steer the U.S. out of its financial crisis. One investment giant, Lehman Brothers, collapsed this week and another, Merrill Lynch, was purchased by rival Bank of America for less than half its value.

McCain spokesman Matt McDonald said the campaign was reviewing the Paulson plan and McCain had not yet taken a position on it. "He's supportive that there are steps being taken," he said.

GREEN BAY, Wis. — Republican John McCain said Friday the Federal Reserve needs to stop bailing out failed financial institutions. The Republican presidential hopeful said the Fed should get back...
GREEN BAY, Wis. — Republican John McCain said Friday the Federal Reserve needs to stop bailing out failed financial institutions. The Republican presidential hopeful said the Fed should get back...
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- kappa08 I'm a Fan of kappa08 77 fans permalink
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Can this guy be any more out of touch...ke­ep pushing his tired old a55. He'll eventually crack.
His campaign has become a a test case on how far you can lie and manipulate stupid American and actually get real data on who and where the "dumb" is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:48 PM on 09/19/2008
- stanjam I'm a Fan of stanjam 10 fans permalink
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McCain is the one that needs to step up and start his "Straight Talk" on this one. He admits that he doesn't know jack about economics, so it should be relatively easy for him to do. He needs to own up to his part in removing the post-depression regulations that have CAUSED THIS MESS! If he truly wants to fix Washington, he needs to first and foremost ADMIT THAT HE WAS WRONG about removing these regulations. He needs to champion an effort to resore and modify those regulations, and needs to close the Enron loophole.

About the bailout, it is too late Mr. McCain. The horses have left the barn. You are quite right. The Greedy people have run the economy and financial institutions into the ground. However it was YOU that took the lock off the barn door, you and Graam and your deregulation cronies. You took away the regulations that were put into place to keep this from ever happening, and now you act shocked that it is. Welcome to the second great depression, brought to you by John McCain and Mr. Graam. If these clowns get into office, it will take us twenty years to recover, if ever.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:28 PM on 09/19/2008

In this one statement, McCain is correct.

The problem with this American form of capitalism is that the risk to these big companies is totally outsourced - and placed on the public's (>>our

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 09/19/2008

McCain, that great bloviator of hot air, is at it again. He'd like everyone to forget he's the "great deregulator" who is one of the principals in getting us into this mess. These huge financial problems are caused by DEREGULATION, as championed by McCain. The housing crisis is a result of DEREGULATION of lending practices. I am a banker who retired at the end of 1999. For most of my 30 year career the banking industry was heavily regulated because of reforms that were put in place after the Great Depression of the 1930s. But that great economic expert Phil Gramm (who is widely thought to be the new Treasury Secretary if McCain should be elected) got greedy and wanted to deregulate the markets and the banking industry so he, his wife and his cronies, including Ken Lay of Enron, could get rich off of questionable business practices. His cheerleader McCain was cheering him all along the way. They and other Repuglicans passed Gramm's bill and now here we are today.

How dare McCain even insinuate he's the savior here. He's the PROBLEM! Oh, and by the way, the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. McCain's son recently quietly resigned from the board of Silver State Bank of Nevada, weeks before the feds shut that bank down for insolvency. Sounds like the father taught his son everything he knows!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 PM on 09/19/2008

"McCain said as president he would create a Mortgage and Financial Institutions Trust to help homeowners avoid foreclosur­e."

So, once again, the Republican response is a Bigger Government!

Statistics show clearly that the governmet grows more under republican rule than under democratic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:43 PM on 09/19/2008
- budderbean I'm a Fan of budderbean 2 fans permalink

It's to bad we play political gotch with this when we should be playing GET THEM.. What will either party do about the "bad' predatory loans that are still outstanding. We're getting it from both ends.. What I cant pay my charge card because my tax is going to have to go up WHOMEVER is in office because the bailout costs taxpayers (me) so much..

We're gonna get it on both ends. Pay 33% interest to a company that's getting bailed out? (your brain should be hurting with mine). So the U.S. government is going under because it's going to be the one that basically owns this investment house through taxpayer bailout?.. Who makes out in this? Since there is no debters prison does that rule now go out the window because the markets are owned by the feds? I'm confused. Who do I owe, what to I owe, and how much and will I go to jail for not paying because I (A people) owe myself? Man there are more chefs in the kitchen than i can keep track of..

Oh yeah and they say things are moving quick on this bailout... You cant steal if your not fast! And this "rescue" is moving like poop through a goose... Watch your step folks. Goose poop is slick.. it's easy to fall on.

So How much do I pay myself Me A People of America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 09/19/2008

Imagine this....ta­lk about having it at both ends. I worked for AIG for 15 years, not as an executive, but in the middle managment. They paid less than everyone else and expected more. You were motivated by management to stay for for stability due to the company's high financial ratings. Many employees bought stock, and some even had stock as part of their portfolio. Those people are screwed now...they will likely have jobs at least for a while but the company, no matter what anyone else says, will never be what it was. How do you think they feel about paying twice?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 PM on 09/19/2008

McCain startard republican bullshit is what got us here. I dont think he has even tried to comprehend how bad things must be for a Republican admistration to take these step. McCain economic policies deserve a vote of No confidence

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:41 PM on 09/19/2008
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McCain Flip Flops: (This list does not include the recent economy flip flops)

http://www.alternet.org/election08/90956/?page=entire

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 PM on 09/19/2008

OK, so "shoring up the dollar" is McCain's plan, right?

Now, would anyone like to explain to me exactly what "shoring up the dollar" entails? Anyone?

Other than just being a meaningless, B.S. talking point, that is?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:20 PM on 09/19/2008

been nailing mine to a board . . . THAT sure shore it up and made it stronger . . . a bit tough to feed into the ATM though . . . gotta get thinner boards . . . .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:28 PM on 09/19/2008

"Shoring up the dollar" is political speak for improving the exchange rate of the dollar against the currency of major trading partners. It's not necessarily a bad idea because we could get more oil for each dollar but "there's no such thing as a free lunch" in economics. As the dollar improves it becomes more difficult to sell our exports overseas and it makes foreign imports more competitive.

The ultimate problem is that the value of the dollar is mostly determined by the money supply. To reduce the money supply the Fed would have to raise interest rates (not going to happen with a looming recession) or the Treasury would have to stop borrowing money (which is only going to happen if the President manages to balance the budget). Bush's decision to cut taxes while fighting two wars has created the budget deficit's that have put us in this predicament.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:38 PM on 09/19/2008

If you know a shred about the markets, you realize this week we were (and still are pending the results of the bailout) the end of the western financial system as we know... period. And... at the expense to the tax payers, thanks to Bush, his cabinet and buddies in Wall St.

This just makes McCain's "fundamentals are strong" and Graham's "mental recession.­.. nation of whiners" statement even more damaging, especially since everyone agrees we are in recession, and the fundamentals are currently teetering on the brink of the entire collapse of the banking and investment institutions in the US.

Ads... ads.. ads...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:19 PM on 09/19/2008

We are witnessing the American equivalent of the Fall of the Roman Empire. It will never be the same again. This nation is headed for some really tough times. This is just the tip of the iceberg -- unfortunately.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 09/19/2008

Actually, in the current campaign cycle, McCain has received far more money from Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac employees and directors than Obama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 09/19/2008

Clueless McCain. The Herbert Hoover of 2009. One of the principal post Reagan de-regulatory architects of this fiasco, he has absolutely no place at the table. Along with Greenspan, Gramm and numerous others.

I've always felt that the warm, gooey feelings many Americans get, swaying to the dreamy lullabies of "trickle down" capitalism­,...are just banks, investment firms and hedge funds...pe­eing on your leg!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 PM on 09/19/2008

McDuffus just proclaimed he would "end the greed and power of the lobbyists" . . . guess there will be a LOT of openings on his STAFF . . . I got a checking account, maybe I should apply fro "Economic Adviser" and I've BEEN to Europe so maybe a fall back would be "International Expert" . . .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:32 PM on 09/19/2008
- ffny I'm a Fan of ffny 2 fans permalink

What is really wrong with this bailout is He is sorry it wasn't his idea!!!!

Should have gone back to his Keating notes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 PM on 09/19/2008
- omop I'm a Fan of omop 2 fans permalink

The past may have just caught up with Sen. McCain and a fitting nickname is just around the next interview. imo. it needs be. ConManMcain.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:58 PM on 09/19/2008
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McCain claims experience on the economy because he sits on the Commerce Committee which, according to McCain, oversees every aspect of the economy. All I can say is, heckava job Johnny!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:52 PM on 09/19/2008
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