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Financial Reform: Republicans Fight To Dilute Wall Street Regulations

ALAN FRAM   07/ 5/11 01:15 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Congressional Republicans are greeting the one-year anniversary of President Barack Obama's financial overhaul law by trying to weaken it, nibble by nibble.

Wary of attempting to dismantle the entire statute and being portrayed as Wall Street's allies – banks are among the nation's most unpopular institutions – GOP lawmakers are attacking corners of it. They can't prevail because they don't control the White House or Senate, but they may be able to force some compromises on agency budgets, pressure regulators and influence some of Obama's nominations.

Days ago, one Republican-run House committee approved bills diluting parts of the law requiring reports on corporate salaries and exempting some investment advisers from registering with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Another House panel voted to slice $200 million from Obama's $1.4 billion budget request for the SEC, which has a major enforcement role.

Meanwhile, Senate Republicans are continuing a procedural blockade that has helped prevent Obama from putting Elizabeth Warren or anyone else in charge of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which opens its doors in two weeks.

The law hurts "the formation of capital, the cost of capital and access to capital, and you can't have capitalism without capital," said Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, a leader of the House Financial Services Committee. "So Republicans in the House will be examining each and every one of the 2,000-plus pages" of the law, which he called "a job creator's nightmare."

Confident that Obama and the Democratic-controlled Senate can prevent the House from doing major damage, Democrats view the Republican drive as a political exercise – for now.

"It's mostly setting a marker for the election. And it helps with their campaign contributions," said Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., who chaired the Financial Services Committee last year and was a chief author of the law. "But it also tells people in the financial community that if they win the next election, they'll be able to undo it all."

The financial industry leans Republican in its campaign contributions but not overwhelmingly. Sixty-one percent of the $9 million that commercial banks gave federal candidates for the 2010 elections went to Republicans, while 54 percent of the securities and investment industry's $9 million went to Democrats, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.

Democrats are using the GOP drive for their own fundraising.

In one email sent last week under Frank's name soliciting money for House candidates, the party wrote that Republicans want to "bring back the days of unrestrained excess, deception and de-regulation of Wall Street." The mailing called it "payback to their big contributors in the financial services industry."

Obama signed the banking and consumer protection measure last July 21, a keystone achievement that responded to the biggest financial crisis and most severe recession since the 1930s. It passed Congress with solid Democratic support and near-uniform GOP opposition.

Among its provisions, the law:

_ Created the consumer protection agency to oversee mortgages, credit cards and other financial products.

_ Established a body of regulators to scan the economy for threats to the financial system.

_ Required banks to hold back money for protection against losses.

_ Curbed the trading of derivatives, speculative investments partly blamed for the 2008 financial crisis.

_ Gave the Federal Reserve powers to oversee huge companies whose failures could jeopardize the entire financial system.

Yet the law was just a start, since it ordered federal agencies to craft rules to enforce it. As of July 1, out of an estimated 400 regulations to be written, 38 are complete. That leaves 362 proposed, facing a future deadline or having missed due dates for completion, according to the law firm Davis Polk.

Republicans say the overhaul went too far and has saddled banks and other companies with requirements that harm their competitiveness. The House Financial Services panel alone has held more than a dozen hearings on the law, in part to underscore to administration witnesses that some provisions – like forcing banks to hold back capital as a hedge against losses – will hurt business, according to the committee's chairman, Rep. Spencer Bachus, R-Ala.

"What we are doing is rational, it is sensible, it is entirely practical, it is compassionate," said Rep. Nan Hayworth, R-N.Y., a tea party-backed freshman on that panel. "So we are doing the right thing, and it behooves the Senate and the administration to follow suit."

The highest-profile fight has been over Warren, picked by Obama to set up the new consumer bureau. Many Democrats and liberal groups want her to become its first director.

Following a May clash between Warren and a House subcommittee chairman, House Oversight Committee Chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif., plans to question the Harvard law professor and long-time consumer activist at a July 14 hearing about her role shaping the new agency.

Meanwhile, 44 GOP senators have promised to block a vote on any nominee unless the bureau is made "accountable to the American people" by replacing the director with a board of directors and giving Congress control over its budget. Forty-one senators can prevent a nomination from coming to a vote.

"You try to get leverage where you can. In the Senate, nominations are your leverage," said Mark A. Calabria, who monitors financial regulation at the conservative-leaning Cato Institute.

On another front, Republicans want to cut the budgets of agencies that are supposed to enforce the overhaul.

Besides denying the SEC extra money next year, the House Appropriations Committee would limit the consumer protection bureau to $200 million, well below the $329 million Obama wants. The full House has voted to hold the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which oversees derivatives, to $171 million, short of this year's total and less than two-thirds of what Obama wanted.

Republicans cast the cuts as part of their deficit-cutting drive, but Democrats say the reductions are designed to obstruct the new law.

SEC Chairwoman Mary Schapiro said in a speech this spring that budget cuts would mean "an investor protection effort hobbled."

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WASHINGTON — Congressional Republicans are greeting the one-year anniversary of President Barack Obama's financial overhaul law by trying to weaken it, nibble by nibble. Wary of attempting to d...
WASHINGTON — Congressional Republicans are greeting the one-year anniversary of President Barack Obama's financial overhaul law by trying to weaken it, nibble by nibble. Wary of attempting to d...
WASHINGTON — Congressional Republicans are greeting the one-year anniversary of President Barack Obama's financial overhaul law by trying to weaken it, nibble by nibble. Wary of attempting to d...
WASHINGTON — Congressional Republicans are greeting the one-year anniversary of President Barack Obama's financial overhaul law by trying to weaken it, nibble by nibble. Wary of attempting to d...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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OnTopicOffTopic 11:38 AM on 07/05/2011
Why was this deleted? WhichCoard deleted this post?
It is not in any way against Hufffyfluffy policy.
-->>
Both party's have been writing and passing legislatio n which led to the financial-meltdown.

The fact is Republican s have written the bulk (Phil Gramm is the biggest culprit with the repeal of Glass Steagal and The Commodity Modernization Act) if not all deregulati on legislatio  Read More...
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michaellovesnyc
12:38 PM on 07/11/2011
According to OpenSecrets.org, the top 16 of 20 political PACS support Democrats, usually with involuntary contributions by Union members. The American Medical Association (AMA) is a top donor to both political parties and cares only for making its members rich at the expense of everyone else. Don't worry about Wall Street, it is gone. Wall Street was overregulated and is why it was destroyed by foreign competition. The economic problems we have are a result of Socialism, not of the Free Market.
11:53 AM on 07/06/2011
Why are there no true investigative journalists anymore? Someone should be following the money going to the Republican candidates and elected officials. It is time to expose the greed and corruption.
12:33 PM on 07/06/2011
opensecrets.org
also followthemoney.org

The investigators are no longer journalists - they're NGO workers.
11:51 AM on 07/06/2011
Republicans wage war on common sense.

Their deregulation mantra has gone to far. It has brought us the Financial collapse, the BP disaster and the Massey coal mine disaster. We need sensible regulation for business. The greed is good gang does not know how to self police their greed.

The Republicans want to give more tax cuts to the top 2% and cut medicare and social security. Another take from the poor give to the rich Republican scheme.
09:41 AM on 07/06/2011
Campaign finance reform anyone? Lawyers, lobbyist, hedge funds and bankers are big financial supporters of our congressional delegations. Our lawmakers need to distance themselves from their oil masters. The speculators at banks and hedge funds make money by playing the futures market in oil. They horde oil in supertankers and oil storage facilities and have armies of oil traders whose only mission in life is to raise the price of oil. They also have currency traders who try to lower the value of the dollar. If the value of the dollar goes down then it will cost more dollars to buy that barrel of oil. By this market manipulation they have taken oil to $100 plus dollars a barrel and predict that it will go much higher. These vultures have taken our taxpayer bank bailout money and have created record profits for their banks, big oil and OPEC, while all the time draining our pockets. Drilling and opening up the reserves won’t work and will only enrich these bad actors. We need to get off oil asap, but do we have to be fleeced while we transition? Repeal the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 and the Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999.
01:49 PM on 07/07/2011
Please run for office!
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Nina Platter
,
04:12 AM on 07/09/2011
Isnt there a law against Speculators, esp. as you have explained perfectly those people who manipulate the price of oil.
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mgrant33301
08:56 AM on 07/06/2011
progressive: progress
republican: republic

"take our country back" (ward) and return it to what it was when wally and the beaver were on in the afternoon.
08:33 AM on 07/06/2011
Traders are fond of saying that speculation is not manipulation. In some cases they are correct. But not now! When you trade commodities to achieve a higher price and a profit for your company; that's ok. But when you also trade currencies under the same roof (bank/ hedge fund etc) to drive the dollar down to enhance your commodity positions, then that is manipulation. This type of manipulation must be illegal. To make this worse the banks and hedge funds hoard oil on supertankers and in oil storage farms. All of this hoarding and manipulation needs to end. Repeal the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 and The Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999 and get speculators out of the oil market!
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mdmccormick
I am tired of this BS
06:44 AM on 07/06/2011
RICO charges are totally appropriate for the Republican Party, start with Mitch and work your way down. We can take the fines and use them to build a special Prison just for these traitors, and a special wing for the gang of five over at the Supreme Court.
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davegstein
07:33 AM on 07/06/2011
Yes,there are plenty of empty factory floors and warehouses.Just string some barb wire and presto,instant holding pens for all these anti-American con men.In fact,the entire GOP should be rounded up,stripped of their ill-gotten gains and made to work on repairing our crumbling infrastructure.
Give them striped jumpsuits........a fitting reward......
09:12 AM on 07/06/2011
GOP obstruction should be held as a treasonous act.
06:04 AM on 07/06/2011
Tell me something I don't already know...................
03:49 AM on 07/06/2011
Is this lady for real? I doubt it. Sorry, but to me its all a shell game. I see this in corporations all the time. Good cop bad cop. She is the good cop and the republican's are the bad cops. From my experience its all a joke. I really doubt she isn't in with the people in power. I'm sure this is all a game. Why? Because i was in these board meeting, watching these executives play their games. First they are very very bright. From Obama on down. Here is how you judge this. Ignore the words. COMPLETELY. See if anything really changes.

Probably not. People in power don't allow fair play if they can manipulate the system. I'm sure they made billions off this crisis and they can hardly wait for the next one.

I hope I'm wrong but I doubt it.
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Mummyscurse
What happens if we can't afford embalming fluid?
06:31 AM on 07/06/2011
"Republican­'s are the bad cops"... That's being not only too kind, but excessively generous. Republicans are more than just "bad cops", they're vicious DEMONS FROM HELL! And that's where I pray that they all rot, for Eternity! If any of them ever had a soul, they sold it for a nickle, a long time ago.
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Eris23Skidoo
Dischordian Keynesian
04:44 PM on 07/06/2011
Eric Cantor is betting short on the US Economy and he has some say in which direction it goes. Corruption at its finest.
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SitandStay
Lorenzo&BushH8ter
03:47 AM on 07/06/2011
"The propaganda has been fairly effective. Walker can count on at least a large minority to support his brazen effort to destroy the unions. Invoking the deficit as an excuse is pure farce.

In different ways, the fate of democracy is at stake in Madison, Wis., no less than it is in Tahrir Square."

Noam Chomsky
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SitandStay
Lorenzo&BushH8ter
03:35 AM on 07/06/2011
"As working people won basic rights in the 1930s, business leaders warned of "the hazard facing industrialists in the rising political power of the masses," and called for urgent measures to beat back the threat, according to scholar Alex Carey in "Taking the Risk Out of Democracy." They understood as well as Mubarak did that unions are a leading force in advancing rights and democracy. In the U.S., unions are the primary counterforce to corporate tyranny.
By now, U.S. private-sector unions have been severely weakened. Public-sector unions have recently come under sharp attack from right-wing opponents who cynically exploit the economic crisis caused primarily by the finance industry and its associates in government.

Popular anger must be diverted from the agents of the financial crisis, who are profiting from it; for example, Goldman Sachs, "on track to pay out $17.5 billion in compensation for last year," the business press reports, with CEO Lloyd Blankfein receiving a $12.6 million bonus while his base salary more than triples to $2 million."
"Instead, propaganda must blame teachers and other public-sector workers with their fat salaries and exorbitant pensions -- all a fabrication, on a model that is all too familiar. To Wisconsin's Gov. Scott Walker, to other Republicans and many Democrats, the slogan is that austerity must be shared -- with some notable exceptions."

Noam Chomsky
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SitandStay
Lorenzo&BushH8ter
03:27 AM on 07/06/2011
"The Court was split, with the four reactionary judges (misleadingly called "conservative") joined by Justice Kennedy in a 5-4 decision. Chief Justice Roberts selected a case that could easily have been settled on narrow grounds, and maneuvered the Court into using it for a far-reaching decision that overturned precedents going back a century that restrict corporate contributions to federal campaigns.

In effect, the decision permits corporate managers to buy elections directly, instead of using more complex indirect means, though it is likely that to avoid negative publicity they will choose to do so through trade organizations. It is well-known that corporate campaign contributions, sometimes packaged in complex ways, are a major factor determining the outcome of elections. This alone is a significant factor in policy decisions, reinforced by the enormous power of corporate lobbies, greatly enhanced by the Court's decision, and other conditions imposed by the very small sector of the population that dominates the economy. "

Noam Chomsky
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OldBear
We Have Met The Enemy and He Is Us
03:21 AM on 07/06/2011
Banks are out to destroy the middle class, they are running wild and destroying lives. Congress is doing nothing more than looking away as the destruction heightens daily. How many credit lines have been cancelled, how many credit cards have been downgraded, how many loans have been turned down? Banks have become the killer epidemic of the middle class. If Congress won’t control them, citizens should. Close down the Big Banks. All banking should be local.
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davegstein
07:39 AM on 07/06/2011
Agreed.The banks have gotten to big and need to be split up.They should never have been allowed to merge and swallow up the little guy in the first place.Like the way ATT was split up,so should these guys.
These guys no longer help our economy and produce growth.They are just manipulating numbers,creating money for the sake of having more money....
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Eris23Skidoo
Dischordian Keynesian
04:45 PM on 07/06/2011
To fix this problem is simple. All like minded people (those who are sick of banks trying to destroy us) should take their money OUT of the banks and put it in credit unions.
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TOOMUCHTlME
We could sure use a man like Huey P. Long today.
02:07 AM on 07/06/2011
What has happened to common decency in America? What has happened to the innate goodness and the genuine pride we used to feel at the very thought of being American? Today's America pales in comparison with the America of even 20 years ago. There is a certain meanness of spirit and intolerance that I don't remember even during the darkest period of the civil rights movement.

Today the dark cloud that hangs over us creating a bleak sense of futility is not one of racism, but one of classism and religious intolerance. In the halls of congress a movement is afoot to drive the middle and working class back into the stone age. They seek to remove any and all social programs that have benefitted so many millions over the past 60-70 years. And probably most agregious of all, they seek to make us all slaves to a banking system that enslaves us form the time of young adulthood to our grave.

Institutionalized loan sharking. How these people are not seen as the traitors they are is mystifying. If they were to do the same damage for the sake of foreign interests, they would be branded as traitors. The fact that they do it for profit through wealthy banking interests somehow puts them on the right side of the law.

This is nothing but evil in the most vile definition of the word. And these are people elected by Americans. To serve Americans.

The joke is on us.
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02:31 AM on 07/06/2011
"I can hire one half of the working class to kill the other half." -- Jay Gould
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TOOMUCHTlME
We could sure use a man like Huey P. Long today.
03:16 AM on 07/06/2011
I wouldn't sell them quite so short. Too many died and had their heads stove in fighting for workers rights. Sometimes the call to do what's right overrides greed. Evidence the military in Egypt abandoning their ranks to side with the people. Conscience often leads the way when confusion and evil emit smokescreens. I'll choose to stand with the common man.
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davegstein
07:48 AM on 07/06/2011
Money.Money is to blame.Our campaign finance system has degraded into legislative bribery and we no longer practice true democracy here.Add to that the media,which has been a co-conspirator,and helped divide the people and shield the real issues in their quest for ratings and dollars....
It;s all so shortsighted.Besides the more obvious outcomes,such as a population no longer able to add to the prosperity of the nation through purchasing power and disposable income,but also the possibility of civil disorder.
Poverty and impoverishment lead to revolt and possibly revolution.The masses will not just quietly lay down and die in the streets,nor watch their children become nothing more than indentured slaves....
Continuing on this path is inviting big trouble.Considering how broken and corrupt our political system has become,perhaps something drastic is necessary to purge the currant merchants of greed and injustice from our society.
12:31 AM on 07/06/2011
The new buzz word appears to be "job creator"! Maybe I am late in noticing that the GOP thesaurus has added this phrase as a synonym for "the highest income earners" or "U.S. households with the top 2% of Annual income".

Not sure of the origin of the phrase (although it does sound strangely 'Randian'), but when it is heard being spewed out on the same day from Sen.John Cornyn and Rep. Jeb Hensarling, it is a cinch it is out of the GOP hymnal -- at least the Texas version.