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Richard (RJ) Eskow

Richard (RJ) Eskow

Posted: June 25, 2010 03:53 PM

The House and Senate have reached an agreement and we have a financial reform bill. That means we'll see significant improvements over the status quo as it existed yesterday. It also means we still haven't addressed the gravest risks to the economy. And for those of us who care about this country, it means that we still have work to do. We must be the voices of reason, the ones who praise what's been accomplished but call for even deeper reforms going forward.

This bill has a number of very positive features, and progressive voices helped build the momentum for them: We'll see an audit of the Federal Reserve, which will shine a light on the hidden workings of the crony-ized banking system. A Consumer Protection Bureau will be created to protect people from bank predators. We'll see an end to the cynical speculation in food and fuel prices that have wreaked havoc on household budgets throughout the nation. We'll also have a new provision that gives the SEC authority to ensure that brokers act with "fiduciary responsibility" toward their clients (after a period of study). While this most directly benefits wealthier investors, it will help end abuses like the Goldman Sachs ABACUS program that nearly destabilized the entire economy.

Those who want to fall into cynicism and despair can find material to feed that worldview, if they're so inclined. This legislation will not stop Wall Street speculation in derivatives, and our financial system will still be dominated by a few "too big to fail" banks, which means our economy is still in danger. Auto dealers got their sleazy carve-out from the consumer protection bureau. It was a frustrating spectacle to watch elected officials on the Hill shoot down amendments that would have solved these problems. And cynics might be forgiven for believing that Treasury Undersecretary Neal Wolin's blog post yesterday, where he overpraised the bill's accomplishments and said "we don't have to wait until (the bill's done) to know what reform will look like," was a signal to Hill negotiators that they could gut the Lincoln amendment without White House objection - which they promptly did.

But, to those who would take that route, consider the words of labor leader Joe Hill: Don't mourn, organize. We've learned that elected officials in Washington will respond to eloquent and impassioned voices calling for change, whether those voices are raised on phone calls to representatives, in letters and commentary, or in voting booths in Pennsylvania and Arkansas. But remember that elected leaders are human. If they come to see the progressive movement or any other voting bloc as relentlessly negative, they'll stop listening.

And, for those who celebrate what this bill accomplishes, a Joe Hill variation: Celebrate, then organize. The two activities aren't mutually exclusive. In fact, that should be the preferred approach. Without the principled stand of some Democratic leaders in the White House and on the Hill, coupled with some surprise moves by courageous Republicans, we wouldn't have the reforms we have today. So, by all means, celebrate. Reward our leaders for what they've done right, just before we go about the business - our business, as citizens - of pushing them to do more.

What can we do to frame the argument going forward and build momentum for deeper reform? It seems to me that there are five things that must be done:

1. Create the right context

Are people saying that President Obama is no FDR? Let them know that FDR was no FDR either - at least not at first. Zach Carter is right to point out that it took years for Roosevelt to enact all his banking reforms. In an equally strong historical parallel, a conservative bank-oriented faction persuaded FDR to focus prematurely on the deficit, as Obama is being persuaded now by the "AmericaSpeaks" contingent. It took years of trial and error before FDR came to realize that this concession was undermining the recovery he had put into motion.

2. Criticize - but don't lose perspective

Let people know that the President is right when he says that this is the most significant financial reform since the 1930s. And remind them that it took several years for FDR and Hill leaders to get that right, too. Imagine how different - and how much worse - history might have been if Roosevelt and his allies had gone down to defeat in the polls because nobody bothered to balance their criticisms with recognition of their accomplishments.

FDR became a great leader because he had the capacity and the willingness to learn - from his critics, from events, and even from his own mistakes. That's the standard to which we should hold our leaders.

3. Keep framing the moral argument

Too often we forget that there are basic issues of right and wrong involved here. We're perpetrating an unethical system as long as bankers can gamble with discounted Federal Reserve money or other public subsidies, and as long as they know taxpayers will bail them out whenever they lose. When financiers can make more money speculating than they can serving consumers and smaller businesses, the system isn't working for its intended purpose.

California readers were outraged to read yesterday that welfare recipients can use the debit cards issued by the state at ATMs in casinos, making it possible to receive a public subsidy and immediately gamble with it. Isn't it ironic that more voters don't feel the same level of outrage when bankers do it? Bankers, who hardly need the money, receive far more in public funds for their gambling - and they endanger the entire system when they do it.

Concerned citizens can and must keep making the case for financial reform as a moral issue.

4. Keep pointing out the risks

Those of us who keep warning that we're still at risk must feel sometimes like Kevin McCarthy in Invasion of the Body Snatchers, screaming "they're here! they're here!" as indifferent drivers whiz past in their comfortable cars. Keep those warnings coming anyway. Our system is just as much at risk as it was before this bill was finalized. Millions of people are still victims of the last crisis. There are those who suggest another downturn may be coming soon. Historical trends suggest that crises will keep returning every seven years on average - unless and until we do something to change things. From a risk management point of view, we're flying a plane with our eyes closed and congratulating ourselves that we haven't crashed into anything ... lately.

There are political risks, too, and we shouldn't hesitate to point those out. If we experience another crisis after this bill passes, voters will be ruthless toward the incumbents who celebrated its passage. Polls show that the public despises big banks, so the concessions we've seen will be a political liability - that is, until tougher reforms are enacted.

5. Look for teachable moments

There will be a temptation to put this issue behind us now that the bill has passed. But history has a way of offering teachable moments - another economic downturn, a "flash crash" like the one Wall Street experienced a few weeks ago, or the conviction of a malefactor like Bernie Madoff. Negative events are tragic, but the hard truth is that they will keep coming until we make systemic changes . They are "teachable moments" for voters and elected officials alike, and should be opportunities to speak out. The Federal Reserve audit will provide additional opportunities to inform the public.

Activists and concerned citizens should be pushing for indictments of corrupt bankers, too. There are a number of signs of malfeasance, with so many potential crime scenes to investigate that half the buildings on Wall Street should be marked with yellow police tape. A perp walk is a very teachable moment.
___________________________

So, if someone were to ask me what to do now, I'd say keep those letters, emails, and calls coming - to your Representatives, to the White House, to newspapers and talk shows. Keep talking to people around you. Be unstinting in your praise for what's been accomplished and unhesitating in your demands for demand more. Their job is to respond to pressure. Our job is to provide pressure for the right things.

Financial reform has been passed. Long live the movement to demand financial reform. Let's pause for a moment of celebration ... and then get back to work.

___________________________

Richard (RJ) Eskow, a consultant and writer (and former insurance/finance executive), is a Senior Fellow with the Campaign for America's Future. This post was produced as part of the Curbing Wall Street project. Richard also blogs at A Night Light.

He can be reached at "rjeskow@ourfuture.org."

Website: Eskow and Associates

 

Follow Richard (RJ) Eskow on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rjeskow

 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mikyung Lim
11:10 AM on 06/30/2010
Mr. Eskow, I appreciate and am happy to read your mature wisdom on this issue.
02:51 PM on 06/28/2010
People who defend or praise this bill are democrats first and reformers second. They accept anything the corrupt leadership of the democratic party throws at them no matter how bad it is and then wonder why they have so little power within the party and why nothing changes. Rahm Emanuel has said he doesn't worry about the liberals because in the end they always accept what we do.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
marcar72
09:49 AM on 06/28/2010
Why weren't Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac included in this bill?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aripottah
Celebrating conservative ineptitude since 1776
11:54 PM on 06/27/2010
The last paragraph summarizes the state of affairs for me. Pause momentarily to be thankful it is not worse, then continue pressing for the entire reform package.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Longtimeliberal
06:45 PM on 06/27/2010
There has been more progress than I expected. It takes time to change a system and we have a solid start. We have to ignore fear mongering on the right and left
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givesflack
shrink GOP small enough to drown in bathtub
01:59 AM on 06/27/2010
Do you know that the average credit card debt for each American is 4 times that of the per capita public debt for each person in this country, and that's being generous to the banks and doesn't include compound interest. And the Republicans are always crying how we are burdening our grand children with national debt. What better way than to pay all that debt off with a Chase or Capital One card? The interest alone will multiply the compound interest into the next number group from trillion. Isn't what the ongoing Fed/Treasury bailout is about anyway? The banks are the real debt burden or am I supposed to pretend that isn't our nations real problem?
01:50 AM on 06/27/2010
The Lincoln amendment wasn't gutted. They gave banks the right to conitinue with currency and interest rate swaps, which are indeed more core elements of their self-management. Credit default swaps are what really got the pinch in this bill and that is truly something to celebrate. CDS that aren't captured by the new Volcker rule, which iteself got tighter, now won't escape Lincoln's 716. That takes the other side of the trade the investment banks exploited and at least moves it to a seperate subsidiary, where it will also be on an exchange.

Where its up to progressives within the financial community will be to see where banks immediately resume the dollar campaign to claim a need for "custom" CDS, or other derivatives, so they can get back to OTC clearing, which hides transactions and intensifies the gambling. I expect they will also soon try to up the 3% hedge fund allowance granted them, so they could keep Scott Brown's yes vote. If Scott defects, we go back to the table and grab Harry Reid by the shoulders to tell him "food safety" can wait on the Senate's calendar because public debate is what got us Lincoln and a stronger Volcker rule.

Richard Eskow is correct. The reason we are here marking progress is because people from within and outside the financial community rose up and grabbed the ears of their representatitves, who listened.
11:43 PM on 06/26/2010
The next financial meltdown will end America's status as a world superpower and will plunge the country into an economic crisis worse than that suffered by Argentina in 2000. Rewrite Glass Segal for the 21st century and enforce it. Force the TBTF into bankruptcy and restructure them. Remove the monopoly on the credit ratings agencies and actively encourage new participants into the market, fire the porn watchers at the SEC and allow shareholders a direct and binding vote on executive compensation (with mandated clawback provisions ~ 50%+ of net worth, in the event of company collapse/bankruptcy.) Failure to do this will condemn America to endless bailouts until the country is broken ala Greece, Iceland and Argentina.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mikyung Lim
11:14 AM on 06/30/2010
Whaoooo, it sounds great! I would be happy to see all these happening.

Where do you work? You sound very knowledgable.
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11:18 PM on 06/26/2010
And what exactly will be the impetus for getting the changes that are needed ? Another 'financial crisis', followed by another bailout, hand wringing, teeth gnashing and another dog and pony show for the sheep while the perpetrators get their corporate welfare checks and the rest of us 'capitalists' pay the bill.
02:07 AM on 06/27/2010
The impetus will be keeping up the chant that TBTF will remain, that Brown-Kaufman got 33 votes 2 weeks after being drafted, in a "snap" vote no less. That even Tea-Partiers are quietly sympathetic to bringing back Glass-Stegall. Yes, that once folks get over the hump of what a conflict of interest is, they will see how the combining the whole banking and insurance show under one roof was a stupid idea in 1999. How the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, another American destruction by Phil Graham, unleashed the swaps market. Most of all how todays world is much different than just 12 years ago. If the top 5 banks being worth 60% of the nations GDP doesn't grab, they will be worth GDP, or ~15tt soon enough.

The Federal Reserve came 6 years after the crash of 1907. A responsibly managed mandate for price stability and full employment was the delayed reaction to the whip-sawing the public was getting at others hands. Impetus can last a long time. Please, help carry the flame.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
jmpurser
See My micro-bio
10:27 PM on 06/26/2010
Well that's just sad.

Yet another incredible crisis blown as our political parties fight for the right to carry water for the rich and connected. And Eskow is out in front telling us we shouldn't make anyone feel bad about this.

Well next up we cut social security benefits in order to protect tax cuts for the wealthy and pointless wars.

Wanna warm the crowed up for that one Mr. Eskow?
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07:00 PM on 06/27/2010
they're trying to keep the swing voters and progressives in the tent, because they need them in November; this is after record numbers of people stayed home from voting it the primaries, proving that things can always get worse
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marianne TB
10:17 PM on 06/26/2010
heres a no brainer: cut the DOD budget by 70 percent, place huge tariffs on imported goods from multinational corps who use slave labour in third world countries, tax the hell out of the top 1 percent, and end both occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan and get us out of those other 75 countries we are sticking our nose into. and end corporate welfare, stop subsidizing huge corps.
at this point both the dems and the repubs are 2 heads of the same corporate snake.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
1murillo
Can't be neutral on a moving train - Zinn
08:47 PM on 06/26/2010
Eskow,
Very good post. Importantly, "Praise what's been accomplished but call for even deeper reforms going forward."
Nothing is 100% complete, we must always improve our situation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
diak0n0s
Do you folks have any idea what's coming?
09:33 PM on 06/26/2010
Actually. . . . the bill's sponsor, Chris Dodd, say's he won't really know what's in it until the final draft is approved.

And this is the "reform" we're suppose to be so happy about?
06:31 PM on 06/26/2010
I encourage everyone here to look up and study the Depression of 1920. (Yes, 1920).

Cj
05:23 PM on 06/26/2010
Aw,,,,you poor misguided Liberals. You couldnt contain or control the engine of the largest economy on the planet. Some of you invoke FDR, well he was as big of a socialist as MAOBama is, and the Great Depression ended the day that FDR died. His own Treasury Secretary stated to his Democrat friends that nothing was working that FDR did and all it did was bankrupt us. WWII Kensyian style economics failed back then and it will fail now. Liberals, if you cant steal it, tax it, regulate it, or discredit it, you blame others for your lack of leadership. I can only imagine that MAOBama will be blaming Bush for something that goes wrong for him soon. He is very predictable in that sense. November cant come soon enough and send you liberal communist, Van Jones loving, Chairman MAO adoring, Stalin loving, freedom hating worn out old hippies home.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dave Thinkster Paulson
A concerned American moderate
06:24 PM on 06/26/2010
Ah, did somebody take their brain out and play with it? It never ceases to amaze me how little respect conservatives have for the truth. Geez, just check out the records -- Hoover doubled the debt and drove unemployment over 20%. FDR brought in the New Deal, cut unemployment in half in his first term, and grew the economy at a compounded annual rate of 9% until conservatives got him to reduce spending in 1938, and caused the economy to immediate start to tank.

And here we are again. Bush also nearly doubled the debt and helped his bank buddies to send us into our second biggest financial collapse. Keynesian economics worked for FDR and they'll work for Obama too, so long as he can get ignorant, feed the rich above all else Republican obstructionists out of the way.

Of course those are the facts, and I like I said, I know you conservatives don’t like those pesky little details like the TRUTH to get in your way.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:59 PM on 06/27/2010
"..did somebody take their brain out and play with it..." no he let someone else take it out and wash it before reinstalling it backwards
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ADRealist
High expectations are the key to everything.
06:50 PM on 06/26/2010
Could Bush screwed up any more than what he did? I'm asking seriously, is it even possible? The only thing he succeeded at was not being condemned as a war criminal. Which if we had a less corrupt Government it would have happened in a heart beat. On live television he bragged about the torture of prisoners, and it's pretty much proven now that it was an out right lie about the weapons of mass destruction. He's in charge of a big oil company. How about the republicans just elect a member of the maffia president?

I'm not 100% for Obama even though I voted for him. I believe he is still very much in the pocket of the banks. But maybe we can turn this around. And auditing the Fed's is something I never thought could possibly happen in reality. I'm happy to be alive during this era, to be able to witness such a significant change.

You just keep spewing out hate and insults. It's all republics know how to do. Liberals aren't perfect, I wish we didn't have a 2 party system. But God, you people are nutty as a candy bar.
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givesflack
shrink GOP small enough to drown in bathtub
10:42 PM on 06/26/2010
He's channeling Reagan with that ole "ah, you liberals" crap. The R is Dead and the GOP is dying. Harrah harrah!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nypapajoe
04:10 PM on 06/26/2010
In a nation of capitalist pigs one can expect nothing more than what has been fore told months ago, placate the masses for they will believe anything cause the masses are asses!