Democrats: "We Will Not Simply Hand Over A $700 Billion Blank Check To Wall St"

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Democrats: "We Will Not Simply Hand Over A $700 Billion Blank Check To Wall St" stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

Huffington Post   |  Nicholas Sabloff and Nicholas Graham
First Posted: 09-21-08 09:51 AM   |   Updated: 10-22-08 05:12 AM

I Like ItI Don’t Like It
Paulson

***UPDATE*** 11:11PM Democrats have begun to push back on the bailout plan offered by the Bush Administration, specifically with legislation that would cut the salaries of the CEO's whose firms participate in the bailout and by adding more oversight provisions. The Washington Post reports:

Congressional Democrats considering the Bush administration's emergency plan to shore up the U.S. financial system yesterday countered with their own demands, presenting draft legislation giving the government power to cut salaries of chief executives at firms that participate in the bailout and slash severance packages for their top management...


...Democrats sought to add oversight provisions and taxpayer protections to the proposal, which amounts to the largest government intervention in the private markets since the Great Depression. "We will not simply hand over a $700 billion blank check to Wall Street," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said in a statement.

Under the proposal drafted by House Democrats, the Treasury would be required to force faltering firms that want to sell their troubled assets to the government to "meet appropriate standards for executive compensation." Those standards would include a ban on incentives that encourage chief executives to take "inappropriate or excessive" risks, a mechanism to rescind bonuses paid for earnings that never materialize and limits on severance pay.


Obama issued a "statement of principles" regarding the bailout plan. One principle it emphasized was that the plan cannot bail out Wall St. and ignore the troubles on Main St.:

"We must work quickly in a bipartisan fashion to resolve this crisis and restore our financial sector so capital is flowing again and we can avert an even broader economic catastrophe. We also should recognize that economic recovery requires that we act, not just to address the crisis on Wall Street, but also the crisis on Main Street and around kitchen tables across America...


...Taxpayers should be protected. This should not be a handout to Wall Street. It should be structured in a way that maximizes the ability of taxpayers to recoup their investment. Going forward, we need to make sure that the institutions that benefit from financial insurance also bear the cost of that insurance.

Help homeowners stay in their homes. This crisis started with homeowners and they bear the brunt of the nearly unprecedented collapse in housing prices. We cannot have a plan for Wall Street banks that does not help homeowners stay in their homes and help distressed communities.


The AP reports that Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said Sunday that the government should resist including households in its bailout plan despite calls from Democrats to do so:

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said Sunday that the nation's credit markets remain frozen and Congress must move quickly to pass a $700 billion bailout package for financial firms. But key Democrats said the legislation needs changes to provide better protections for taxpayers and homeowners in danger of losing their homes.

"The credit markets are still very fragile right now and frozen," Paulson said in an interview on NBC's Meet the Press. "We need to deal with this and deal with it quickly."[...]

Story continues below
advertisement

Democrats said they understood the need for urgency but insisted that the measure needed to provide help for homeowners threatened with losing their homes, perhaps by changes in bankruptcy laws to allow for mortgages to be modified, and by capping pay and benefit packages for executives at the huge Wall Street firms that will be selling their bad debt to the government.

"I don't want the American taxpayer to get this bad debt and then the guy (whose company once held the bad loans) gets millions of dollars on his way out the door," said House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass.

Paulson and President Bush have argued that the alternative would be credit markets that remain frozen, meaning that businesses will fail because they can't get the loans they need to operate and the economy will grind to a halt because consumers, who account for two-thirds of economic activity, won't be able to get the credit they need to keep spending.

At a rally in Charlotte Sunday Obama spoke about how he believed the government needed to deal with the financial crisis when it comes to households:

We must work quickly in a bipartisan fashion to resolve this crisis to avert an even broader economic catastrophe. But Washington also has to recognize that economic recovery requires that we act, not just to address the crisis on Wall Street, but also the crisis on Main Street and around kitchen tables across America.

Read more of Obama's remarks.

***UPDATE*** 11:11PM Democrats have begun to push back on the bailout plan offered by the Bush Administration, specifically with legislation that would cut the salaries of the CEO's whose firms partic...
***UPDATE*** 11:11PM Democrats have begun to push back on the bailout plan offered by the Bush Administration, specifically with legislation that would cut the salaries of the CEO's whose firms partic...
Report Corrections
 
Comments
7213
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next › Last » (150 pages total)

Don't fall this okey, doke -weapons of mass destructio­n-argument­! We have seen this movie. It's a slasher, and the taxpayer is the first casulty.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 PM on 09/22/2008
- JayDDrew I'm a Fan of JayDDrew 42 fans permalink

Let'em fail.
Paulson says we have to do this to bail out Wall Street firms. So what if they go under? A few rich cats don't get richer?
Bailing out Wall Street isn't going to bring a single job back from overseas.
Bailing out Wall Street isn't going to pay any American's mortgage.
So what if foreigners lose money from investing in this crap? No one bails us the average American out when we lose money on a stck or mutual fund.

Let the companies who ran their businesses right feed off the carcasses and then this crap will be cleaned up. And may the next President and Congress re-write the rules that Gramm, McCain, etc. stripped away that got us into this mess. These people have raped the American public and if you're voting for McCain, you need to at least buy some lubricant on your way to the voting booth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:38 PM on 09/22/2008
photo

Dont be fooled, Congress will give Bush and wall street whatever they want.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 PM on 09/22/2008
- hockeynut I'm a Fan of hockeynut 5 fans permalink
photo

lol is that you Al Gore lmao!!

seen that episode on south park the other night what a classic!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 AM on 09/23/2008
- oldfart1 I'm a Fan of oldfart1 5 fans permalink

This mess developed over 5 years, and many people (for instance, Warren Buffett) described it accurately at least 4 years ago. Paulson, at Goldman-Sachs, made a point of steering clear of it. Yet when he got to Washington and became Treasury Secretary on June 28, 2006, HE DID NOTHING ABOUT THIS PROBLEM FOR MORE THAN 2 YEARS. WHY DID HE DO NOTHING? Could it just be that Bush told him to do nothing, hoping to pass the bomb? If so, then he is nothing more than Bush's errand boy, and he should not be handed a blank check, which Bush can sign over to anyone he chooses.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:04 PM on 09/22/2008
- pithy I'm a Fan of pithy 10 fans permalink

"Cash for Trash" says it all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:39 PM on 09/22/2008
- LAThinker I'm a Fan of LAThinker 16 fans permalink

One of those who set house on fire


http://www.ucubd.com/Index.aspx?id=738&cid=3147

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 PM on 09/22/2008

So Bush/Cheney Inc. will rot in hell along with Saddam and Osama and all the others who think that they're better and more worthy. What goes around comes around. In the mean time let's do what we can do to make it better. My votes for Obama, he has both a brain and a heart and the desire to lead us to a better way. If you want a way out of this do the same.

Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
--Albert Einstein

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 PM on 09/22/2008
- LAThinker I'm a Fan of LAThinker 16 fans permalink

The answer is obvious


http://www.ucubd.com/Index.aspx?id=739&cid=3147

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 PM on 09/22/2008

I am trying to picture a future where the taxpayers hold all the bad mortgages in the United States while Wall Street returns to business as usual. However, what I see is homes still being foreclosed upon, housing prices still falling, property tax bases declining and main street Americans feeling recession.

Then our government is the owner of thousands of empty foreclosures and has to unload them.

So, here is my plan to bail out Wall Street and Main Street using taxpayer funds:

Since we, the taxpayers, already own Fannie and Freddie we can put them to work underwriting new FHA mortgages for any American who needs to get their payments down to a level they can afford.

The interest rate on these fixed rate mortgages will be set by the government at a level that is competitive but profitable for the taxpayers loaning the money to their fellow Americans. In order to get the payment to the amount the borrower qualifies for under traditional FHA terms, the term of the mortgage can be extended to 30, 40, 50 or 60 years.

This gets the Wall Street bankers out from under their bad paper, saves the victims of the predatory lenders and – most importantly – saves the taxpayers from having to print up 700 billion dollars to give to Wall Street and generates a modest return on the taxpayers investment.

What's wrong with this simple plan?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:09 PM on 09/22/2008
- oldfart1 I'm a Fan of oldfart1 5 fans permalink

Why not just lend money to homeowners at the same rates they lend it to banks?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:07 PM on 09/22/2008

McCain said today that Obama has not put forth a economic plan to help resolve this crisis, said he was absent. I guess McCain did not get Obama's 6-point memo prior to his own speech, so he had to make up lies instead of laying out his own plan. What is McCain's plan. I am tired of him spewing Obama's plans as his own.
Lies, lies and more lies.


OBAMA/BIDEN '08

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 PM on 09/22/2008
- KoolBreez I'm a Fan of KoolBreez 15 fans permalink

I think Democrats will simply hand over the money, if they are saying they won't.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:45 PM on 09/22/2008
- research I'm a Fan of research 276 fans permalink

The first clue should have been:

Bush and the GOP WANT IT.

Therefore,

it's evil.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:45 PM on 09/22/2008
- LAThinker I'm a Fan of LAThinker 16 fans permalink

They (including McCain) have set up this house on fire in the first place

http://www.ucubd.com/Index.aspx?id=738&cid=3147

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:40 PM on 09/22/2008
- research I'm a Fan of research 276 fans permalink

Duh.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 PM on 09/22/2008
photo

No to the bailout's Section 8 (no justice dept. or outside legal review or questioning ever allowed) and No to weekend news tsunamis from the Republican Administration.

How about, for once, giving Americans the straight talk on a Monday?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 PM on 09/22/2008
- collima I'm a Fan of collima 4 fans permalink

WRITE YOUR FEDERAL SENATE AND CONGRESSIONAL REPRESENTA­TIVES.... THESE MESSAGES MUST BE COMMUNICATED TO THEM...


https://forms.house.gov/wyr/welcome.shtml

http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm


DO SOMETHING!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:07 PM on 09/22/2008
- missedith I'm a Fan of missedith 4 fans permalink

Done!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:58 PM on 09/22/2008

Did: Sent a message to my Senator and to Nancy Pelosi. No Section 8. Must have oversite and "Main Street" help.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 PM on 09/22/2008

I did too ... (Jim Webb)

"The American people deserve:

- Oversight
- A smart tactical rampdown of these bad mortgages that causes them to be valued fairly and not at the seemingly arbitrary 700BB-1Trillion dollars proposed by Sec. Paulson.
- The inevitable, and necessary failing of some of the banks involved
- The recapitalization of some of the banks involved
- An equity investment in the firms bought by the Govt
- A return on my investment as a taxpayer"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 AM on 09/23/2008
- BARRY08 I'm a Fan of BARRY08 3 fans permalink

ENOUGH OF IT ..........

NO WAY MCCAIN !!!

THANK GOD FOR SENATOR OBAMA

HE IS A TRUE LEADER
AN INTELLIGENT ONE TO THAT !

GO HOME PALIN / MACAIN ADMIN , GO HOME

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 PM on 09/22/2008
- BARRY08 I'm a Fan of BARRY08 3 fans permalink

OF COURSE NOT

BY WHY DO YOU THINK CONGRESS SHOULD SIGN UNDER DURESS

WITHOUT SECOND THOUGHTS ,

LIKE THE IRAQ WAR ???

YOU ARE LIKE MCCAIN ..........­INSANE !

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:02 PM on 09/22/2008
- missedith I'm a Fan of missedith 4 fans permalink

What I've been saying all day. This is WMD all over again. Smoke and mirrors. Let them fail.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:59 PM on 09/22/2008
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next › Last » (150 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect