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Think Progress

June 17, 2009

by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, Ryan Powers, Nate Carlile, and Pat Garofalo

ECONOMY

Rethinking Financial Regulation

Today, the Obama administration is rolling out its plan for reforming the financial regulation system. In an effort "likely to result in the most sweeping overhaul since the 1930s," the administration intends to address some of the regulatory gaps and oversights that contributed to the current economic crisis. "The goal is to integrate the system, make sure that there are not any gaps, and to make sure that we have a[n] updating of the regulatory system that worked back in the 1930s, but doesn't work with the kinds of financial instruments and the kinds of global capital markets that exist today," President Obama told Bloomberg News. The plan will, among other things, set up a structure to monitor systemic risk, develop a new resolution authority for winding down complex non-bank financial institutions, and establish a new consumer protection agency to police financial products. It will also mandate the regulation of derivatives and require financial institutions to retain part of any asset that they securitize and sell. Of course, the banking lobby is gearing up to oppose some of the reforms. "Wall Street seems to maybe have a shorter memory about how close we were to the abyss than I would have expected," Obama said yesterday. "All we're doing is cleaning up after the mess that was made." And even with all of these reforms, the administration will need to ensure that regulators follow through on their responsibilities, which is something that did not occur under the Bush administration.

REGULATING SYSTEMIC RISK: A key part of the Obama administration's plan is the creation of a system for monitoring firms and activities that are large enough to pose a threat to the entire financial system. As the administration explained in a draft of its plan obtained by the Washington Post, "no regulator saw its job as protecting the economy and financial system as a whole. Existing approaches to bank holding company regulation focus on protecting the subsidiary bank, not on comprehensive regulation of the whole firm." To address this, the Federal Reserve would be charged with ultimate responsibility for policing large firms, while other regulators -- including the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and the Federal Housing Finance Agency -- would be given "broader coordinating responsibility across the financial system." But there are concerns about burdening the Fed with such a huge additional workload or concentrating too much power in one agency. "We must ensure that we continue to increase our expertise so it is properly matched with the problems and challenges we will face in both our bank supervisory role and in meeting our traditional financial stability mandate," acknowledged Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke. While the plan does call for the elimination of the Office of Thrift Supervision, it otherwise forgoes consolidating regulatory agencies.

ENSURING CONSUMER PROTECTION: A second facet of the plan entails the creation of a new agency that will be tasked with protecting consumers "from deceptive or dangerous mortgages, credit cards and other financial products." The proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency will have broad powers to regulate the relationship between financial companies and consumers, "including writing rules, policing compliance and penalizing delinquent firms." Currently, regulators are simply too far removed from consumers to get an adequate sense of how financial products are being marketed on the ground level, a problem this council will seek to address. As Professor Elizabeth Warren -- a longtime advocate of a consumer protection council -- said, "[A]ll these lousy mortgages got sold, one family at a time...If we had had just basic safety standards in place from the beginning, then we never would have fed these into the front end of the financial system." But, the banking lobby has already made its opposition to the new agency clear. "It's bad for the consumers," said Steve Bartlett, president of the Financial Services Roundtable, a lobbying group for banks. "Give the power for consumer protection to the agencies that have real power."

WAIT 'TILL NEXT YEAR?: Bloomberg reported yesterday that the financial regulation plan "may be stalled into next year as Congress and the president set health-care reform and climate control as domestic priorities." The Senate reportedly won't even begin to consider the plan until after the August recess. As the Washington Post's Ezra Klein noted, waiting a year means "a solid eight to 12 months in which the broader public can lose interest in financial regulation and the financial industry can ramp up its lobbying effort in the Congress." The Atlantic's Derek Thompson posits that the delay "won't kill the will for financial reform, but it could turn the will into mush." In fact, Obama's regulatory proposals may already have been scaled back "because lawmakers and the public perceive the financial crisis has abated and support for more aggressive options has faded," said Peter Solomon, an investment banker and counselor to the U.S. Treasury in the Carter administration. But in an interview yesterday with the New York Times and CNBC, Obama reiterated that "we want to get this thing passed, and, you know, we think that speed is important. We want to do it right. We want to do it carefully. But we don't want to tilt at windmills." Obama reportedly wants to sign a bill this year.

UNDER THE RADAR

HEALTH CARE -- BLUE DOGS MEET SECRETLY WITH CENTRIST REPUBLICANS TO WORK ON 'MIDDLE-OF-THE-ROAD' HEALTH PLAN: Citing the expected high cost of comprehensive health care reform as planned by Democrats in the Senate, fiscally conservative Democrats in the House, known as the Blue Dogs, have been meeting in secret with centrist Republicans to work out a "middle-of-the-road" health care reform package. When asked last Friday about conversations between the two centrist groups, Blue Dog Rep. Lincoln Davis (D-TN) confirmed that his colleagues are "actively working on compromises" on a number of issues. Rep. Mike Castle (R-DE) confirmed that he has had talks with a number of conservative Democrats, including Rep. Ron Kind (D-WI). The centrists are reportedly discussing "including the option of forming insurance cooperatives," but will not offer a public insurance option. According to Dean Barker, the co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, the relationship between the insurance industry and many Blue Dog members is proving to be a significant road block to reform. Baker explained, "The biggest obstacle to reform is obviously the corruption of Congress. The insurance and pharmaceutical companies, the hospitals and medical supply industry and other beneficiaries of the enormous waste in the system all have powerful congressional lobbies. This gives them enormous influence in Congress, especially among Blue Dog Democrats, who are heavily dependent on special-interest contributions." Rep. Patrick Tiberi (R-OH) appraised the Blue Dog influence, commenting that the Blue Dogs have "a lot of leverage" at the moment.


THINK FAST

In an interview with Bloomberg, President Obama predicted the unemployment rate would reach 10 percent by the end of the year. He also defended his regulatory reforms for Wall Street. "Wall Street seems to maybe have a shorter memory about how close we were to the abyss than I would have expected," Obama said, referring to criticism of the government's growing role in the economy and markets.

Iran's Revolutionary Guard "has warned online media of a crackdown over their coverage of the country's election crisis." It "said through the state news service that Iranian Web sites and bloggers must remove any materials that 'create tension' or face legal action." "Iranian authorities appear to have successfully blocked all access to Facebook, MySpace and Twitter Wednesday morning."

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO) chided President Obama yesterday for not following protocol in firing the inspector general of AmeriCorps. "The White House has failed to follow the proper procedure in notifying Congress as to the removal," McCaskill said. The White House responded by releasing a letter offering more detailed reasons for the dismissal.

"The number of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people killed in bias-motivated incidents increased by 28 percent in 2008 compared to a year ago," according to the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs. Last year's 29 killings represented the highest number recorded since 1999, with the debates over LGBT issues being "possible flash points" that are sparking a "backlash."

In a 2003 lecture at Indiana University law school, Judge Sonia Sotomayor expressed skepticism about "the expanded government surveillance powers in the USA Patriot Act. In particular, Sotomayor cited "what she referred to as its broader authority 'to impose nationwide wiretaps with little judicial supervision' and to monitor Internet use in search of terrorists."

Members of Congress are increasingly concerned about that the NSA's "recent intercepts of the private telephone calls and e-mail messages of Americans are broader than previously acknowledged." In an interview with the New York Times, Rep. Rush Holt (D-NJ) disputed claims that the overreach was inadvertent. "Some actions are so flagrant that they can't be accidental," said Holt.

"The CIA is urging the suppression" of portions of a May 2004 inspector general report that describe "in graphic detail how the agency handled its detainees." The CIA argues "that the material could damage ongoing counterterrorism operations by laying bare sensitive intelligence procedures and methods." The White House is supposed to to release any additional portions of the report by Friday.

A new report from the State Department finds that "the global economic crisis is boosting the demand for human trafficking because of a growing demand for cheap goods and services. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton writes today in the Washington Post, "The United States is committed to building partnerships with governments and organizations around the world, to finding new and more effective ways to take on the scourge of human trafficking."

And finally: Tonight is the 48th Annual Roll Call Congressional Baseball Game, and Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) expects to be the only woman to suit up. "I'm proud to be representing my gender this year, but the only way I'll get to play is if the GOP team is 30 runs ahead," she joked to Roll Call. Rep. Linda Sanchez (D-CA), "the most notable female player in Congressional baseball history," won't be on the field tonight, but instead watching from the stands with her husband and infant son. She said that she's tried to recruit other women for the game, but hasn't had any "takers."



BLOG WATCH

Pat Buchanan was for affirmative action before he was against it.

Rep. Steve King (R-IA) claims that the innocent Uighur detainees released from Guantanamo Bay are "wasting away in MargaUigurville."

Lessons from the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Rep. Leonard Boswell (D-IA) needs to hear from Al Gore.

Iowa still being devastated by extreme floods.

President Clinton says that President Obama should be bold on health care and stand firm on a strong public option.

Rep. Mike Pence's (R-IN) Iran resolution undermines the Iranian people

Why the right wing is attacking ABC News.

DAILY GRILL

"He has no credibility left."
-- Sen. John Ensign (R-NV), 9/28/98, calling on President Clinton to resign
after he admitted to an affair with a White House intern 

VERSUS

"Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) has acknowledged an extramarital affair with a campaign staffer in a statement released by his office."
-- The Washington Post, 6/16/09


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