Bailout deal breaks down; Paulson back to Capitol

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JENNIFER LOVEN and JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS | September 25, 2008 11:37 PM EST | AP

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President Bush, center, meets with Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., far left, Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., far left, and congressional leaders in the Cabinet Room of the White House Thursday, Sept. 25, 2008, in Washington to discuss the proposed bailout of the financial industry. Also seated with them from left to right, Minority Leader John A. Boehner, R-Ohio, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Majority Leader Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

WASHINGTON — A Republican rebellion stalled government efforts Thursday to avoid economic meltdown, a chaotic turnaround that disrupted the choreography of am extraordinary White House meeting meant to show joint resolve from the president, the political parties and the presidential candidates.

After six days of intensive talks on the $700 billion financial industry bailout proposed by the Bush administration, with Wall Street tottering and presidential politics intruding six weeks before the election, there was more confusion than clarity.

An apparent breakthrough was announced with fanfare at midday by key members of Congress from both parties _ but not top leaders. Wall Street cautiously showed its pleasure, with the Dow Jones industrials closing 196 points higher.

But the good news and the market close were followed by a rash of less-positive developments.

Washington Mutual Inc. was seized by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. in the largest failure ever of a U.S. bank, after which JPMorgan Chase & Co. Inc. came to its rescue by buying the thrift's banking assets.

And a late-afternoon White House summit bringing together President Bush, presidential contenders John McCain and Barack Obama, and top congressional leaders, described as "a full-throated discussion" by one person in the room and "a contentious shouting match" by McCain's campaign, broke up with conflicts in plain view.

Conservatives were in revolt over the astonishing price tag of the proposal and the hand of government that it would place on private markets.

Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama, the top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, emerged from the White House meeting to say the announced agreement "is obviously no agreement." McCain's campaign issued a statement saying, "the plan that has been put forth by the administration does not enjoy the confidence of the American people as it will not protect the taxpayers and will sacrifice Main Street in favor of Wall Street." The White House, too, acknowledged there was no deal, only progress.

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Meanwhile a group of House GOP lawmakers circulated an alternative that would put much less focus on a government takeover of failing institutions' sour assets. This proposal would have the government provide insurance to companies that agree to hold frozen assets, rather than have the U.S. purchase the assets.

Inside the White House session, House Republican leader John Boehner announced his concerns about the emerging plan and asked that the conservatives' alternative be considered, said people from both parties who were briefed on the exchange. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the session was private.

Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank, the feisty Democrat who has been leading negotiations with Paulson, reacted angrily, saying Republicans had waited until the last moment to present their proposal.

Meanwhile McCain, who dramatically announced Wednesday that he was suspending his campaign to deal with the economic crisis, stayed silent for most of the session and spoke only briefly to voice general principles for a rescue plan.

Weary congressional negotiators then resumed working into the night, joined by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson in an effort to revive or rework the proposal that Bush said must be quickly approved by Congress to stave off potentially "a long and painful recession." They gave up after 10 p.m. EDT, more than an hour after the lone House Republican involved, Rep. Spencer Bachus of Alabama, left the room.

Talks were to resume Friday morning on the effort to bail out failing financial institutions and restart the flow of credit that has begun to starve the national economy.

The Bush administration plan's centerpiece remained for the government to buy the toxic, mortgage-based assets of shaky financial institutions in a bid to keep them from going under and setting off a cascade of ruinous events, including wiped-out retirement savings, rising home foreclosures, closed businesses and lost jobs.

The earlier bipartisan accord establishing principles and important details would have given the Bush administration just a fraction of the money it wanted up front, subjecting half the $700 billion total to a congressional veto. The treasury secretary would get $250 billion immediately and could have an additional $100 billion if he certified it was needed, an approach designed to give lawmakers a stronger hand in controlling the unprecedented rescue.

The Bush administration had already agreed to several concessions based on demands from the right and left, including that the government take equity in companies helped by the bailout and put rules in place to limit excessive compensation of their executives, according to a draft of the outline obtained by The Associated Press.

Democrat Obama and Republican McCain, who have both sought to distance themselves from the unpopular Bush, sat down with the president at the White House for the hourlong afternoon session that was striking in this brutally partisan season. By also including Congress' Democratic and Republican leaders, the meeting gathered nearly all Washington's political power structure at one long table in a small West Wing room.

"All of us around the table ... know we've got to get something done as quickly as possible," Bush declared optimistically at the start of the meeting. Obama and McCain were at distant ends of the oval table, not even in each other's sight lines. Bush, playing host in the middle, was flanked by Congress' two Democratic leaders, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

But neither Bush, McCain nor Obama have been deeply involved so far in this week's scramble to hammer out a package. The meeting was intended more to provide bipartisan political cover for lawmakers to support a plan in the face of an angry public and their own re-election bids in six weeks.

At day's end, Frank said he told Paulson "this whole thing is at risk if the president can't get members of his own party to participate."

Layered over the White House meeting was a complicated web of potential political benefits and consequences for both presidential candidates.

McCain hoped voters would believe that he rose above politics to wade into successful, nitty-gritty dealmaking at a time of urgent crisis, but he risked being seen instead as either overly impulsive or politically craven, or both. Obama saw a chance to appear presidential and fit for duty but was also caught off guard strategically by McCain's surprising gamble in saying he was suspending his campaigning and asking to delay Friday night's debate to focus on the crisis.

___

Associated Press writers Deb Riechmann, Martin Crutsinger, Christopher Wills and Beth Fouhy in Washington and researcher Judy Ausuebel in New York contributed to this story.

(Corrects quote in 13th paragraph, Weary congressional ..., to 'painful' instead 'deep' recession.)

WASHINGTON — A Republican rebellion stalled government efforts Thursday to avoid economic meltdown, a chaotic turnaround that disrupted the choreography of am extraordinary White House meeting m...
WASHINGTON — A Republican rebellion stalled government efforts Thursday to avoid economic meltdown, a chaotic turnaround that disrupted the choreography of am extraordinary White House meeting m...
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I notice Bush is using his same old words - "could" or "may" but not "will". This could happen NOT this will happen.

Congress should not cave into this BS. The economy is still growing, according to the government numbers. We are nowhere near the 46% unemployment of the Great Depression. The majority of the bad mortgages were NOT given out by regulated banks but by unregulated lenders. Let the market regulate itself. The government needs to be the government, not a financial industry. They need to pull their fingers out of this pie.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:04 AM on 09/25/2008
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Bush stood up in front of the nation yesterday trying to scare people with words like "panic" and "rescue."

A president does not due that. If a crash were imminent a president would be calming the nation, attempting to restore confidence. The last thing a president would do is contribute to inspiring a run on the banks.

He is the worst president ever. But this is a lie. I do not believe a crash is imminent. And even if it is, it's inevitable, and $700 billion to his cronies and out of our taxes will only make it worse in the end.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 AM on 09/25/2008
- MakeAWish I'm a Fan of MakeAWish 24 fans permalink

The Democrats are spineless passive aggressors, who go along with whatever the bully Republicans tell them to. They do a lot of posturing, but always end up in step with the bullies. How can one have respect for them, when they allow themselves to be pushed around and manipulated like that? No wonder they keep losing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 09/25/2008
- Wiredwilly I'm a Fan of Wiredwilly 23 fans permalink

Here's a deal : Congress gives $ 700 Billion to Wall Street & 301,000,000 Americans stop paying Income Tax.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 AM on 09/25/2008

Love it! Same thing I've been thinking.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:05 AM on 09/25/2008
- Tiggy I'm a Fan of Tiggy 24 fans permalink

This entire disaster is the best effort at a non partisan effort in our history. We have known for well over a year that the housing market was in crisis and millions stood to lose their homes and that was acceptable. We knew fraud was involved in a huge portion of these loans and did nothing to protect these people. But when Wall Street began to suffer as a result of their own greed and less than ethical practices, it is time for a bail out because it now effected almost all Americans'. All of Washington is to blame and no amount of grandstanding at this point will change that. Congress can write legislation to protect themselves from sharing in the debt and Bush walks away with his "golden parachute", it is as always, the average citizens left holding the empty bag with a huge IOU. There should be consequences for such negligence. For those in Congress who were bought out by these companies,there should be reviews of possible ethics violations at the very least. Especially anyone receiving money from financial institutions while sitting on committees in charge of oversight. There will be no free pass for anyone! Americans have good memories and every time we go to the voting polls, we will remember the bailout and how we got there until that bailout is completely paid back! So for all the grandstanding going on, enjoy the moment, because in the end, it is our vote that counts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 AM on 09/25/2008
- opticsopen I'm a Fan of opticsopen 7 fans permalink

Another screw job for the American citizen. Welcome to the United Socialist States of America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 AM on 09/25/2008
- ggirl00 I'm a Fan of ggirl00 6 fans permalink

Someone should tell McCain that they're close to making a deal. He's speaking at the Global Initiative right now and he said that there's no concensus in sight, that's why he needs to suspend his campaign at once.

Oh ... he just said he'd rather build a bridge to nowhere than take money from teachers ... why did he even mention that bridge?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 AM on 09/25/2008
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The Bailout is a bandaid on the finger of the severed arm.

The body is bleeding out as the leadership laments over the bleeding finger.

As we continue to hemorrhage capital down the oil pipeline, we do nothing to address the single sector drain on the economy.

Did no one hear Boone Pickens call the $700,000,000,000 transfer of wealth historic?

Stop the bleeding, adopt the 8 Point Plan!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 AM on 09/25/2008
- Snwbnny9 I'm a Fan of Snwbnny9 13 fans permalink
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I agree. I don't think we need to save these corrupt companies.

There are other ways to improve the flow of capital. Lets refinance all of these exotic loans into standard 30 year loans at 5.5%. PROVIDED that your income and expenses allow you to meet the payment. Otherwise, I'm sorry but you need to buy a house you can afford. I'd like a McMansion also but I can't afford it.

I was living in California. I saw the price of houses in my neighborhood go from $135k in 2001 to $340k in 2005. I didn't go get a negative amortizing loan to buy a house. I moved to Texas, where the houses are still reasonable. A lot of those loans were complete fabrications. Those people never could afford those loans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:31 AM on 09/25/2008
- UpstateNY I'm a Fan of UpstateNY 34 fans permalink

WHY does he have to suspend his campaign? He's a senior senator and the 'leader' of his party, going to Washington to work on this should be a natural - suspending your campaign shouldn't be necessary.

One thing that really disturbed me is that McCain said something about not needing politics at a time like this. We don't need the kind of politics that McCain has been practicing (we could certainly do without the lying and McCain should have stopped that a while ago) BUT we do need the campaigns. We have an important election coming up and we have to make an informed decision - we need the debates - all of them!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:06 AM on 09/25/2008

If the Democrats had any intestinal fortitude, they would hold up the bailiout bill until they can add a section on proposed regulatory reforms. If the Democrats and Republicans can't agree on one set of plans, then they should add two sections, one for each. Both Sen. McCain and Sen. Obama have both said that we need regulatory reforms, so this could be a place for them both to set out their ideas.
In some ways, this could be a short history of how we got into this mess, and how we can prevent it from happening again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:56 AM on 09/25/2008
- DuPageDem I'm a Fan of DuPageDem 19 fans permalink

Exactly. It's idiotic to pass something now, on Bush's fear-fueled timeline, and hope someone else later on will fix it. That's the story of the past eight years. See how well that's worked out? This bailout is a disaster. No welfare for billionaires.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:50 AM on 09/25/2008
- lily31 I'm a Fan of lily31 24 fans permalink

Way to go McCain ~ dash in at the last minute for your Superman like photo op and keep the wheels of negotiation from moving.

Don't even consider whether your last minute act of great sacrifice is wanted....­..........

Thanks Barney Frank for telling it like it is!!

No thanks, McCain for your bridge to bridge to resolution ~ take the time you save to prepare for the debate!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:48 AM on 09/25/2008
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