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Final Financial Reform Bill Passes House

JIM KUHNHENN   07/ 1/10 12:08 AM ET   AP

House Financial Reform

WASHINGTON — Nearly two years after a Wall Street meltdown left the economy reeling, the House on Wednesday passed a massive overhaul of financial regulations that would extend the government's reach from storefront thrifts to the executive suites of Manhattan.

Senate support for the far-reaching bill remained in flux, however. The Senate was forced to delay its vote to mid-July, denying President Barack Obama a victory before Independence Day. Democrats struggled to secure the votes of a handful of Republican senators even after meeting their demands and backing down on a $19 billion tax on big banks and hedge funds.

The legislation, swelling to more than 2,000 pages, would rewrite the nation's regulatory books. Simple supermarket purchases and exotic derivatives trades would be subject to new laws. And the entire financial system would be placed on a risk watch in hopes of thwarting the next threat of a financial crisis.

Obama hailed the vote as "a victory for every American who has been affected by the recklessness and irresponsibility that led to the loss of millions of jobs and trillions in wealth."

The 237-192 House tally broke largely along party lines but attracted more support than in December when no Republicans voted for the House version of the bill. The new legislation combines the House bill with one passed by the Senate last month.

"Today, I rise with a clear message that the party is over," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi declared. "No longer again will recklessness on Wall Street cause joblessness on Main Street. No longer will the risky behavior of the few threaten the financial stability of our families, our businesses and our economy as a whole."

Republicans portrayed the bill as a vast overreach of government power that would do little to prevent future bailouts of failing financial institutions. They complained that it failed to place tighter restrictions on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage giants forced into huge federal bailouts after their questionable lending helped trigger the housing and economic meltdowns.

"This legislation is a clear attack on capital formation in America," said Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia, the second-ranking House Republican. "It purports to prevent the next financial crisis, but it does so by vastly expanding the power of the same regulators who failed to stop the last one."

Only three Republicans voted for the bill: Joseph Cao of Louisiana, Mike Castle of Delaware and Walter Jones of North Carolina. Nineteen Democrats voted against it, eight fewer than in December.

As predictable as the House vote may have been, the Senate was a study in unpredictability.

House and Senate negotiators were forced to reconvene Tuesday to remove a $19 billion tax on large banks and hedge funds, hoping to overcome objections from Sens. Scott Brown, Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe, all Republicans who voted for the Senate version last month.

Democrats inserted the tax late last week as they assembled a combined House-Senate bill, catching big banks by surprise. Brown was the first to complain and threatened to vote against the bill if the tax remained in the final measure.

Desperate to hold at least 60 votes to beat back procedural hurdles, House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd and Obama administration officials scrambled to drop the tax and devise another means of financing the bill's cost.

In the end, House and Senate negotiators, voting along party lines, agreed to pay for the bill with $11 billion generated by ending the unpopular Troubled Asset Relief Program – the $700 billion bank bailout created in the fall of 2008 at the height of the financial scare.

They also agreed to increase premium rates paid by commercial banks to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to insure bank deposits. The increase would not affect banks with assets under $10 billion.

On Wednesday, Collins issued a statement saying she was now inclined to vote for the bill.

But Brown remained uncommitted, saying he needed Congress' weeklong July 4 recess to examine the details of the bill. He did credit Dodd for "thinking outside the box" in finding an alternative.

Snowe late Wednesday said she, too, wanted to review the bill, but said that the last-minute change put the bill "in a much better position."

The American Bankers Association denounced the bill, and its president and CEO, Edward Yingling, vowed to continue to make the industry's case to the Senate.

"Many small banks are telling us they will simply have to sell out to larger institutions that have the staff to deal with the massive volume of new reports and rules," Yingling said in a statement.

The administration and House and Senate lawmakers have worked for more than a year to forge a bill. It has prompted a backlash from the financial industry and a populist cry from Congress to punish banks for the freewheeling practices that contributed to the 2008 meltdown.

The easy margin of victory in the House belied Frank's need to navigate the bill through the competing interests of New Yorkers, moderates and liberals. Frank, who will share the bill's official title with Dodd, credited Pelosi and the Democratic leadership for being "therapists, counselors, advisers – muscle when I needed it."

The legislation creates a new federal agency to police consumer lending, it sets up a warning system for financial risks, forces failing firms to liquidate and maps new rules for instruments that have been largely uncontrolled.

The legislation requires bank holding companies to spin off their derivatives business into self-funded subsidiaries. Banks would be allowed to keep less risky derivatives operations.

It sets new standards for what banks must keep in reserve to protect against losses, though lobbyists carved out a grandfather exception for banks with assets of less than $15 billion.

Commercial banks would not be permitted to trade in speculative investments, but they could invest no more than 3 percent of their capital in hedge funds and private equity funds.

At a consumer level, lenders would have to disclose more information and require proof that borrowers have the ability to pay off their mortgages. Even retail purchases would be affected – merchants could end up paying lower fees to banks for debit card purchases by their customers.

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WASHINGTON — Nearly two years after a Wall Street meltdown left the economy reeling, the House on Wednesday passed a massive overhaul of financial regulations that would extend the government's ...
WASHINGTON — Nearly two years after a Wall Street meltdown left the economy reeling, the House on Wednesday passed a massive overhaul of financial regulations that would extend the government's ...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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Wallysmom 07:16 AM on 07/01/2010
I am shocked at the negativity on this story. It is the first time serious efforts are being taken for the Federal Government to regulate the Banking industry. You have to question why the Banking industry is so heartily against it if it is such a weak and effete bill. Do you truly feel that anything would have been done by a Republican controlled Congress. And it has not gone to the Senate, where it will  Read More...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SPQR1775
04:20 PM on 07/01/2010
I must admit, Honorable Pelosi have become an honest broker and a true leader. OBAMA-PELOSI 2012...YES SHE CAN!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
evalela
03:20 PM on 07/01/2010
Oh goodie goodie,now congress where's my unemploment??????????
Henri101
There is nothing more dangerous than sincere ignor
02:44 PM on 07/01/2010
We need to vote out of office all those(democrats and republicans) who voted against this bill solely for the reason of protecting the financial institutions.
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FoxIslander
Fox Island...no relation to Fox News
01:06 PM on 07/01/2010
...another bill watered down by those owned by K street...I'll admit its way better than nothing though, which of course is what the G0P wants.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
eddw88
12:22 PM on 07/01/2010
Always always what about me!

Hey, I say we do nothing and continue to get skewered the way we are getting it today.

Many complain about the size of the Bills in congress. Many complain that our leadership doesn't read what's there. Truth is republicans aren't reading what is there, but they sure as heck are attacking the Bill for not (or is) doing what they don't know what is in it.

Hum 2000 pages, we should be so lucky that that is all it takes. It takes 30 to 40 pages to close on a house. Why do you cry babies expect it will take a couple hundred of pages to define how our national financial system would operate?

Either people are really ignorant of reality, or they are doing a wonderful job at faking it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rogo99
Has the world changed, or have I changed?
12:12 PM on 07/01/2010
Now let's get the Unemployment extensions done.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
laserstain
12:09 PM on 07/01/2010
And as everything they have done before, this new law will do nothing that it was intended to do. Just like Health Care.... Sad.
AlanInGA
Why Turn Around When You Can Just Pivot
11:42 AM on 07/01/2010
Here's a must read.

Mystery Men of the Financial Crisis

http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/02/04/mystery-men-of-the-financial-crisis/?hp
11:40 AM on 07/01/2010
Please read Sen. Finegold's post where he explains his opposition to this do nothing bill.
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ttowse
11:21 AM on 07/01/2010
Blah blah blah blah blah. O blah ma has done nothing, still. Sure sucks to be an American.
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medici
My micro-brewery is empty.
12:33 PM on 07/01/2010
You're welcome to leave the country and renounce your citizenship, ttowse. Don't let the door hit you on the way out.
02:16 PM on 07/01/2010
Aw, I just KNEW it was going to be Obama's fault again! Did you even READ THE ARTICLE?
11:17 AM on 07/01/2010
Too bad this bill will do nothing to prevent another government bailout. Another 2000 page manifesto of poorly thought through regulations and entitlements.
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11:24 AM on 07/01/2010
truly
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
illus2003
Praying for Sanity to take back over.
11:41 AM on 07/01/2010
So what would you have done. Is it better to sit and do nothing or at least to try and do something?
12:02 PM on 07/01/2010
For starters, Glass-Steagall, include the money pits of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Credit Default Swaps/derivatives.
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BroadwayJoe
Lib-Prog Fighter & Patriot on a Mission
11:06 AM on 07/01/2010
This bill is a load of bull and I'm sick of hearing that it's going to change the way Wall St functions. It won't. Do you see any of the banks protesting this bill? No. They have it just the way they want it and their stocks went up they day the bill passed. Dems could have structured a stronger bill but, as usual, they capitulated. Even Dodd, who's retiring, couldn't locate his cojones and sold out. Same old same old. The financial interests and the banksters in Congress win and we taxpayers lose out. Read more here:

http://baselinescenario.com/2010/06/21/dead-on-arrival-financial-reform-fails/

It's no point hoping for real (healthcare, financial, energy) reform because the monied interests have already captured Congress. It doesn't matter if we have Rs or Ds in control. We'll just get more of the same -- financial bubbles, economic crashes, rising unemployment, ever-widening gap between the rich and the poor, falling wages, socio-economic stagnation etc. It's a shame but that's the nature of the corrupt governing system we now have.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FidelNegro
Disgustingly progressive and have an overblown sen
01:52 PM on 07/01/2010
My hero! Well how about I just fan you.
11:02 AM on 07/01/2010
Oh joy, MORE regulations, MORE restrictions, MORE federal agencies, MORE mandates, MORE government interfering in the financial markets, MORE government cronyism.

The lesson of federally chartered FNMA & FHLMC with their political cover from Barney Frank and pals (yes, including some Rebublicans, who if nothing else are guilty of not making them a BIGGER issue when Bushie and McCain pointed out their unsupervised activity and risky mortgages in late 90's and early 2000's), along with the FED with its monopoly control of interest rates keeping them below market and allowing huge run-up in debt, is lost on Demo-rats and their "progressive" toadies who want nothing more than to turn this country into a Harrison Bergeron of crippling Big Government mandates on our freedom, while of course they take their fat commission off the top with tenured government jobs and pensions.

Fidel and Hugo are laughing their butts off over Cuban cigars and Venezuelan oil changes.
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illus2003
Praying for Sanity to take back over.
11:45 AM on 07/01/2010
Yeah because LESS Regulation and lack of Enforcement of said Regulation got us into the mess we are in today. Freddie and Fannie may have caused the Housing Bubble problem but they did not cause the Massive Losses of Income and Wealth by the Big Banks selling toxic assets.

I am so tired of hearing The Government is so bad when it is patently obvious that Corporations left to their own devices will only do what is in the best interests of the Shareholders regardless of the risk or problems it causes real people.
12:05 PM on 07/01/2010
Unfortunate that employees of the SEC were surfing and watching porn.
12:05 PM on 07/01/2010
The more government involvement, the more cronyism, the crazier risks corporations take because they thing they have protection from failure.

Got it?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FidelNegro
Disgustingly progressive and have an overblown sen
02:05 PM on 07/01/2010
Regulations and restrictions are quite necessary in our ridiculously backwards financial system. If this were a true market economy in which kickbacks, subsidies and a befuddled tax system did not exist then maybe we could cutback on some of these regulations but that is clearly not the case. In a fair financial system the only regulations that need exist are quality standards and perhaps a few other things I can't think of at the moment. As things are now it would be nice to see someone(maybe this should be us) looking out for the better part of our population but I fear we're just getting more of the same.
05:46 PM on 07/01/2010
Ridiculous.

Our financial system is the most creative in history; taking a piece of real estate and dividing it into several parts, all priced differently based upon risk assessment. The less direct government involvement, the "truer" the economy, the quicker it moves, the quicker it adjusts to market conditions, and the quicker it recovers from any downturn, or adjusts to any overpricing, both of which happen in an open and creative market, as companies and products rise and fall.

Government's rule: enforce the law, ensure full disclosure.

The more government involvement, the more cronyism, the more unfair the market as government monopoly protects the few corporations it chooses (EG, FNMA, FHLMC), the more corporations feel like they are "too big to fail" and take outlandish risks.
AlanInGA
Why Turn Around When You Can Just Pivot
10:54 AM on 07/01/2010
The financial bill should do three things.

Limit the size of banks, audit the Federal Research each year, throw Gheitner and Bernanke in jail.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010, from thehill.com.

"The New York Times cites sources saying that the Treasury Department's 'point man' on AIG, Don Jester, was a former Goldman Sachs employee who owned stock in the bank even as he was making decisions on the bailout that ultimately channeled billions of taxpayer dollars to Goldman."
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11:25 AM on 07/01/2010
why does this not surprise me?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
10:47 AM on 07/01/2010
The Dodd-Frank Corporate Fascist Collusion and Cooperation Act of 2010 is the biggest insult to the intelligence of America that ever came down the pike...
There is no restoration of Glass-Steagall.
There is no end of the Too Big To Fail
There is no Bankster and Wall Street Fraud funding of their insurance.
There is no Consumer protections from Usery.
There is only the continued Kabuiki of Purchased Politicians selling-out America and Americans to their Corporate Fascist Masters.
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11:26 AM on 07/01/2010
Pelosi: "No longer again will recklessness on Wall Street cause joblessness on Main Street. No longer will the risky behavior of the few threaten the financial stability of our families, our businesses and our economy as a whole."
as usual Kevin, you've got it right, can't fan you agin, so I'll fave you again
12:11 PM on 07/01/2010
You have a point, but your "Corporate Fascist Masters" are a subset of government sticking its nose where it shouldn't (FNMA, FHLMC protecting sub-prime and no cash down loans under their AAA credit ratings, all covered by Barney Frank and this political pals; the FED monopolizing interest rates, keeping them low for over a decade, allowing huge run-up in debt and making any inevitable market correction for risky loans exponentially worse), which ALWAYS results in cronyism, corporations thinking they're too big to fail, will get government bailouts so take wild risks.

Very simple, if you think it through.