It's Time for the "Deregulators" Like McCain to Step Aside and Shut Up
How can a guy like John Boehner, who got us into this mess in the first place, have the unmitigated nerve to try and dictate the terms of how to fix things?
How can a guy like John Boehner, who got us into this mess in the first place, have the unmitigated nerve to try and dictate the terms of how to fix things?
Sunil Chacko | Posted 10.23.2008 | Business
Zoellick would have to comply with Congressional subpoenas to explain having headed the lobbying activities for Fannie Mae.
Andy Stern | Posted 10.23.2008 | Business
It's not enough to talk about foreclosures. It's not enough to acknowledge the impact on ordinary people without addressing the root cause of the crisis: basic inequality.
Raymond J. Learsy | Posted 10.22.2008 | Business
As the outlines of the "bailout" package come into focus, initially limiting the bailout to redeeming assets from American institutions, the fine hand of the influence peddlers are already all over the program.
AP | Posted 10.21.2008 | Business
WASHINGTON — Mortgage finance giant Fannie Mae, taken over by the government earlier this month, announced Friday the resignations of four senio...
MSNC | Posted 10.20.2008 | Politics
On the campaign trail in Minnesota today, McCain incorrectly suggested that the executive pay that former Fannie Mae CEOs Frank Raines and Jim Johnson...
David M. Abromowitz | Posted 10.20.2008 | Business
Why do Republicans point to Fannie and Freddie when asked about the current housing crisis? Only to change the subject and point away from the inevitable outcome of pervasive underregulation.
HuffingtonPost.com | Sam Stein | Posted 10.20.2008 | Politics
The tussle between the campaigns over economic matters has turned into a back-and-forth over friends and advisers. On Friday morning, the McCain cam...
Jim Wallis | Posted 10.19.2008 | Business
Our financial collapse is the fiscal consequence of the economic philosophy that markets are always good and government is always bad. But it is also the moral consequence of greed.
Fortune | Geoff Colvin | Posted 10.19.2008 | Business
(Fortune Magazine) -- The recession is no doubt hurting you, perhaps badly. Your sales may well be down. Maybe you've even lost your job. Whatever you...
Donnie Fowler | Posted 10.18.2008 | Business
Why won't anyone (anyone!) among our nation's leaders call this government bailout business what it is -- corporate socialism?
Robert Weissman | Posted 10.18.2008 | Business
If the Fed and Treasury succeed in controlling the situation and avoiding a collapse of the global financial system, then it is a near certainty that Big Finance will rally itself to oppose new regulatory standards.
Hale "Bonddad" Stewart | Posted 10.18.2008 | Politics
Think about that for a minute. $900 billion dollars, racked-up before your very eyes. This at a time when the federal government is already bleeding money.
Bob Barr | Posted 10.18.2008 | Politics
No one on Capitol Hill or in the White House will be held accountable for designing a system that enriched the housing industry at public expense.
Cenk Uygur | Posted 10.17.2008 | Politics
What happened, I thought the government was unnecessary? I thought "unfettered" markets would do their magic if you just deregulated them. Why are you fettering?
Robert Creamer | Posted 10.17.2008 | Politics
The American mortgage market now provides us with another clear example of how the fundamental premise of right-wing economic thought is dead wrong.
Raymond J. Learsy | Posted 10.16.2008 | Business
No matter the cost, no matter the damage to the public weal, there are always some who through access and sheer financial wherewithal will turn a national disaster to profitable gain.
Charles Karel Bouley | Posted 10.15.2008 | Politics
Not one person on the campaign trail can really say what is becoming painfully clear: for the near future, for the next decade or so, we're all screwed.
Jonathan Tasini | Posted 10.12.2008 | Business
Since we are now on the hook for hundreds of billions of dollars to bail out Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae the management of those two institutions should now be handed over to the public.
Mother Jones | Posted 10.11.2008 | Politics
John McCain railed against Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on the campaign trail today, saying that the CEOs that led the lenders to ruin "deserve nothing"...
Wall Street Journal | Heidi N. Moore | Posted 10.11.2008 | Business
Is it time for the government to help out Lehman Brothers Holdings? It has been all of two days since the Fannie Mae-Freddie Mac bailout was announce...
Robert Scheer | Posted 10.10.2008 | Politics
Ignorance is bliss, which perhaps explains Gov. Sarah Palin being so confidently wrong about the root cause of the federalization of most of the nation's mortgage market. But what is McCain's excuse?
Scott Bittle and Jean Johnson | Posted 10.10.2008 | Business
Rather than facing a $200 billion deficit to do something really important, the U.S. is now heading toward a whopping $10 trillion dollar debt.
Jim Randel | Posted 10.10.2008 | Business
Today's (September 9) editorial in The New York Times, titled "The Bailout's Big Lessons" claims that one of the reasons the government had to act to ...
David M. Abromowitz | Posted 10.10.2008 | Business
The dramatic semi-nationalization of America's primary home mortgage companies is justified under the circumstances given that nearly 1 in 10 home mortgage borrowers today are in trouble.
Mitchell Bard | Posted 10.23.2008 | Politics