Frank Predicts Bailout Deal By Sunday

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JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS and DAVID ESPO | September 26, 2008 11:48 PM EST | AP

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President Bush delivers remarks to members of the media outside the Oval Office of the White House, Friday, Sept. 26, 2008 in Washington. Bush spoke on the negotiations to finalize legislation on the financial rescue package. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration and Congress anxiously revived negotiations Friday on a $700 billion financial bailout, one day after the largest bank collapse in U.S. history provided a brutal reminder of the risks of failure. Democrats talked optimistically of agreement by the end of the weekend.

"I'm convinced that by Sunday we will have an agreement that people can understand on this bill," predicted Massachusetts Rep. Barney Frank, a key Democrat in eight days of up-and-down talks designed to stave off an economic disaster.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi added that "progress is being made," although the day came and went without senior lawmakers from both parties sitting down together.

Neither she nor Frank divulged details at a late-afternoon news conference in the Capitol, though there was word of one fresh Democratic concession.

Pelosi told fellow Democrats during a closed-door meeting that the idea of letting judges rewrite mortgages to help bankrupt homeowners avoid foreclosure won't be a part of the emergency legislation. That provision, pushed by several Democrats, would be a deal-breaker for Republicans whose votes are needed to pass the measure, she said, according to lawmakers at the meeting.

Democrats and Bush administration officials also said they were willing to include House Republicans' idea of having the government insure distressed mortgages _ but only as an option, rather than a replacement for the administration's more sweeping approach.

Democratic and Republican staff aides met into the night on Capitol Hill. They were going line by line through legislative proposals in an attempt to clear the way for lawmakers to bargain over the weekend even as presidential contenders John McCain and Barack Obama agreed during their presidential debate Friday night that Congress must act soon.

Asked directly whether he intends to vote for a rescue plan taking shape in Congress, McCain said, "I hope so. ... sure."

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"We haven't seen the language yet," Obama said. "I do think there is constructive work being done."

Meanwhile, new details emerged of a remarkably tumultuous White House meeting on Thursday. With the session breaking up in disarray, according to two participants, President Bush issued an appeal, saying, "Can't we just all go out and say things are OK?" The group around the table, congressional leaders as well as McCain and Obama, spurned the presidential request for a publicly united front.

Earlier in the White House meeting, Democrats peppered House Republican leader John Boehner of Ohio with questions about the details of an alternative he was backing. At one point, Bush, too, said, "I don't know what the hell they are," recalled one person who was in the room. All the participants spoke on condition of anonymity, saying the meeting was private.

Bush sought to coax the talks back to life on Friday, prodding lawmakers in a morning appearance to "rise to the occasion" _ and quickly.

In a sign of progress, House Republicans dispatched their second-ranking leader, Rep. Roy Blunt of Missouri, to join the talks after their objections to an emerging compromise had brought negotiations to a standstill the day before. They demanded "serious consideration" for their plan.

"We want to see a deal happen _ there's no doubt about it," said Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va.

The legislation the administration is promoting would allow the government to buy bad mortgages and other sour assets held by investors, most of them financial companies. That should make those companies more inclined to lend and lift a major weight off the national economy that is already sputtering.

But a significant number of lawmakers, including many House conservatives, say they're against such heavy federal intervention. Under the GOP plan, the government would insure the distressed securities rather than buy them. Tax breaks would provide additional incentives to invest.

The crisis was hardly limited to the U.S.

Bush held a lengthy Oval Office meeting with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown that focused on how the problems were spreading, then said, "I told him the plan is big enough to make a difference, and I believe it will be passed."

Presidential politics weighed heavily and unpredictably on the election-season effort to stave off a full-blown economic crisis.

After announcing earlier in the week he would suspend his campaign and return to the capital until there was an agreement, Republican McCain abruptly reversed course and departed for Friday night's debate with Democratic rival Obama.

There were fresh signs of urgency at both the White House and the Capitol, one day after the rancorous White House session and the collapse of Washington Mutual, the largest failure in U.S. banking history. The Seattle-based institution had invested heavily in the now-moribund mortgage market.

Still, the Dow Jones industrials rose 121 points for the day as investors anticipated a weekend agreement.

In days of negotiations, the administration has accepted demands from lawmakers to give Congress considerable authority to oversee the bailout and require that the government try to renegotiate the bad mortgages it acquires so more borrowers could keep their homes. Paulson also relented to requests to limit the severance packages that corporate executives can receive from firms benefiting from the government bailout.

In addition, rather than provide $700 billion up front, as Paulson initially requested, Congress would approve the funds in stages. Under one approach, $250 billion would be made available at once, with the president able to certify the need for an additional $100 billion on his own authority. The final $350 billion would become available with a second presidential certification, although this time Congress would have authority to block it.

Any compromise is also expected to require the government to obtain partial ownership of any company it invests in.

Democrats, too, signaled they were ready to jettison some of their priorities.

Frank indicated they might ultimately drop a requirement that a portion of any profits from the rescue be funneled to a fund to build housing for low-income people. That mandate, deeply unpopular with Republicans, "is not an essential," Frank said.

While Democrats control a majority of both the House and Senate, their leaders have made it clear they will not force their rank and file to vote without Republican support on a bailout advanced by an unpopular president on an unwilling public.

In an Associated Press-Knowledge Networks poll, only 30 percent of those surveyed expressed support for Bush's package. Forty-five percent were opposed, with 25 percent undecided. The survey was conducted Thursday and had a margin of error or plus or minus 3.8 percentage points. It was conducted over the Internet by Knowledge Networks, which initially contacted people using traditional telephone polling methods and followed with online interviews.

Aides to lawmakers in both parties say telephone calls from constituents are running heavily against the bailout _ in some cases nearly 100-1 against, making the vote a potentially tricky one for a candidate in a competitive race.

___

Associated Press writers Charles Babington, Jim Kuhnhenn and Jennifer Loven contributed to this report.

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration and Congress anxiously revived negotiations Friday on a $700 billion financial bailout, one day after the largest bank collapse in U.S. history provided a br...
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration and Congress anxiously revived negotiations Friday on a $700 billion financial bailout, one day after the largest bank collapse in U.S. history provided a br...
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- Fabini I'm a Fan of Fabini 46 fans permalink
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I am sad to hear "...the idea of letting judges rewrite mortgages to help bankrupt homeowners avoid foreclosure won't be a part of the emergency legislation." Why would legislators be against this? It is more reassuring than curbing executive pay.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 AM on 09/27/2008

Since this whole mess began with the mortgage meltdown, why hasn't anyone suggested that we:
Pass a law converting all adjustable rate mortgages and interest only mortgages into 40 year, low interest, fixed mortgages. No 700B. That way, the people stay in their homes and the money continues to flow to the banks. Granted that no one is going to buy the paper but at the end of 40 years the people own their homes, the mortgages get paid off and inflation is limited. If we pay the 700B, we are destroying our future. Inflation will minimize our savings, the banks will not learn from their mistakes, there will be a round two of this bailout, Americans will continue to live a lifestyle based on debt and we will become a nation owned by non-Americans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:37 AM on 09/27/2008
- neo1 I'm a Fan of neo1 3 fans permalink

I totally agree. Americans have already given up most of their rights and with this mess, they will be giving up most of their assets as well. Americans won't own a damn thing in America at this rate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 PM on 09/27/2008
- olephart I'm a Fan of olephart 113 fans permalink

Over the last several days I have never seen so much absolute bullshit written about a subject as has been written about the bailout. The Secretary of the Treasury and the Chairman of the Federal Reserve have been reacting like hysterical monkeys for the past year. They’ve been throwing their every resource at the collapsing empires of financial malfeasance without success. Their every action is to sacrifice the honest for the dishonest. To make matters worse, they’re incompetent! Each of their “that ought to do its” has failed.

Now they’re playing “The sky is falling” card. It’s never mind how we got here we have to save the economy for everyone’s sake. If we don’t act quickly we’re all doomed! I’ve seen better pitches by smucks selling time shares in Florida. This is a con job to bail out their bumbling billionaire bond barons. It is unfortunate that the “leaders” of the Democratic Party have no balls. It is ironic that those who allowed this to happen by their stupid and corrupt philosophy of non Government intervention in the Markets are opposing the bailout. It is frightening that no one can read the handwriting on the wall that says “The U.S. Government is next.”

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 AM on 09/27/2008

Franks helped cause this mess now it "horrifies" him. And of course his answer is to toss a trillion dollars at it, at our expense.

Stand aside with your corruption Franks and let McCain fix the problem.

Will congress finally, finally, finally kill all earmarks, stop the corruption, and stop spending us to death by giving us balanced budgets? Franks, Pelosi, Reid, they are spending us to death. They are all spending us to death. It's got to stop.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:32 AM on 09/27/2008

Watch the Democrats Sell Out America Again.

Iraq
FISA
Torture
Patriot Act

And coming soon....Bailouts for Billionaires.

And even though the Democrats Sell $h!t Burgers, Many of you will keep on buying them.

Vote Third Party

You do have a choice.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:54 AM on 09/27/2008

That means all assets belonging to senators and congress will be protected.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:49 AM on 09/27/2008
- Gipper44 I'm a Fan of Gipper44 4 fans permalink

Quite remarkable.

the Dems in bed with Presient Bush.

How is it possible that this is not the main angle of the story?

And McCain? You know, Bush III, how does that work?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:09 AM on 09/27/2008

The Democrats sell out America? Again? I'm shocked SHOCKED!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:55 AM on 09/27/2008

Where are they going to get $700 billion? Will this amount be borrowed from other countries and then paid for by the same taxpayers who are already losing their houses, savings and retirement? What kind of interest are we talking about here?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:01 AM on 09/27/2008
- dgscol I'm a Fan of dgscol 4 fans permalink
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What if they want another $700B in March? There goes health insurance, support for education, etc. The gov't will be essentially bankrupted : No new programs, and probably they would have to destroy some existing programs. What would the nation think of its president, who approved the bailout they are supposedly working on now? My guess is that his presidency would basically be destroyed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 AM on 09/27/2008
- dgscol I'm a Fan of dgscol 4 fans permalink
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Our politicians are dealing with an international banking cartel. Are we even sure that those securities are from the US? We may be bailing the banks, out of bad loans and investments in Asia and Africa.
It is as if our government in under their control. They are just dumping money on their laps. There is no demonstrated crisis - only the desire of the banks to get the money through their proxy - Paulson.
I believe they want to dump those bad securities and obtain cash so they do not have to relinquish their foreign loans and investments. Both McCain and Obama are going for the bailout - so it is actually a done deal. They are probably pretending to hash out details, just to appear to be doing more than just flipping us off and feeding the internationalists.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:55 AM on 09/27/2008
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Bailout provision I would like to see:
That the bankers/capitalists who were paid billions to create this mess be declared "Economic Terrorists." Economically, they have harmed our country far more than the 9/11 hijackers.

How about adding their names to a "No Invest" list. Before walking into a financial institution, the ISA ("Investment Security Administration") must clear them, that they are not carrying dangerous financial instruments with them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:54 AM on 09/27/2008
- loki I'm a Fan of loki 134 fans permalink
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Why does Barny Frank always look like a drunk who tried to dress himself without a mirror to look into?
With the money congress members bring in, you would think he could look a little better than he does.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:53 AM on 09/27/2008
- Mother77 I'm a Fan of Mother77 4 fans permalink

He's a bright man who cares about our country. Any air head model can make a suit look good.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:12 AM on 09/27/2008
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 436 fans permalink
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Will SOMEONE please get the message to Franks, Pelosi and Reid that we do NOT, repeat NOT, want this bailout!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 AM on 09/27/2008
- loki I'm a Fan of loki 134 fans permalink
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Why would anyone in congress start listening to us now? They never have before. Especially Reid and Pelosi. They have sided with Bush more than McCain has.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:54 AM on 09/27/2008
- bascombe I'm a Fan of bascombe 36 fans permalink
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the millionaires are happy to sell us out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 AM on 09/27/2008

You sold out when you stopped saving money and bought into "interest only" Ponzi schemes. Don't try to deflect responsibility now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:19 AM on 09/27/2008
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 436 fans permalink
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Well, I certainly didn't buy into any of it. So, what are you saying, let everyone who did pay the price? I'd be glad to vote for that since I had nothing to do with this mess.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:23 AM on 09/27/2008
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Reading the article about the Fed window and the amounts of money being lent by the FED why do we need to use taxpayer money?

The Real cost of the Bailout is orders of magnitude greater two Sunday's and the taxpayer is on the hook for nearly 1.5 trillion.
After this spin of the roulette wheel is it over or will there be another Sunday and another Sunday?

Schumer wants it to be smaller to start an amuse bouche but really the 700 billion this week is an amuse bouche.

Estimates I have read say we will need 5 trillion to 20 trillion thats 20thousand billion to finally stabilize and offset all the bad paper in the system.Whoot!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:35 AM on 09/27/2008
- NicoleAnon I'm a Fan of NicoleAnon 9 fans permalink

Over 200 professional economists have said this is a mistake. And Paulson owns Goldman Sachs stock and can't be objective. The CEO of GS, Lloyd Blankfein was meeting with congress about the bailout this week. But nobody was there to represent us - Bush and Paulson both know congress will approve this. They just need it done berfore Paulson leaves his job.

Many years from now people will still be talking about this - it's not enough that Bush is responsible for the death of thousands of innocent Americans and Iraqis. It's not enough the Republican administration lied to us about why they went to war. It's not enough that they won't let us see the bodies of all the Americans who have died in Iraq. It's not enough that some families have lost the most important people in their life. That isn't enough for Bush and Paulson - they need to make sure that Americans know how much they hate us, and how they think we're worthless and our lives don't have value. They must use our money to make their buddies richer and make us pay for it. And Paulson refused to let congress extend unemployment benefits because it would take money away from Goldman Sachs and the other banks.

"PERINO: There’s some elements of the package that have been put forward by Democrats that we do not think would be stimulative to the economy, such as unemployment insurance. The food stamps, we believe we have met the

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 AM on 09/27/2008
- dadw5boys I'm a Fan of dadw5boys 281 fans permalink
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The Federal Reserve has already put $740 Billion extra into buying up bad loans !!!!!!


Bank failures and Bear Sterns and then Fannie and Freddie after the Fed forced the bad laons on them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 AM on 09/27/2008
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 436 fans permalink
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You forgot the $87 B that the Fed repaid to JP Morgan on the $138 B they advanced to Lehman Brothers post bankruptcy.

http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2008/09/138-billion-post-bankruptcy-jp-morgan.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:27 AM on 09/27/2008
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Discount Window Borrowing Jumps to $262 Billion
American Banker | Friday, September 26, 2008
By Steven Sloan

WASHINGTON During another turbulent week on Wall Street, lending through the Federal Reserve Board's discount window skyrocketed to $262.3 billion on Wednesday, thanks to new lending programs unveiled during the week.

It was the second record in as many weeks and more than double from the previous high water mark.

The heaviest lending was centered on the primary dealer credit facility, which was established in March to give investment banks access to the discount window. The Fed eased terms on the facility on Sunday when it approved requests from Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to convert to bank holding companies.

The Fed said Goldman and Morgan, the last of the major investment banks, could borrow on the same terms as commercial banks and with the same collateral. In response, lending through the PDCF totalled $105.662 billion on Wednesday, from $59.8 billion a week earlier.

Commercial banks were also very active at the discount window. Loans to banks increased 17.7%, to $39.9 billion, a new record.

Meanwhile, the Fed issued loans to weak banks for the second week in a row. These loans increased 5.6%, to $19 million on Wednesday.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 AM on 09/27/2008
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