Evans Liberal Politics
June 15, 2010
The President’s Address,
With Analysis: 5 Videos
President Obama’s Oval Office
Address on BP Oil Spill & Energy
| |
|---|---|
| |
|---|---|
![]() | Evans Liberal PoliticsThe Best in Liberal Christian News and US Politics | Loading |
Congress Begins the Final Push on Financial Regulation, Truthout, May 31, 2010, by David Lightman and Kevin G. Hall of McClatchy Newspapers, excerpt quoted verbatim:
Washington – The fate of the biggest overhaul of the nation’s financial regulatory system in generations now rests with a small group of Capitol Hill lawmakers who are known for their ability to compromise.
In early June, negotiators from the Senate and the House of Representatives are expected to begin work on merging two competing but similar visions for revamping the way the government regulates banks and financial markets.
Sen. Sanders: Deregulation Lead to |
|---|
The Senate passed its version of the legislation on May 20; the House approved its bill last December.
“This is one of the rare occasions when the two bills are really very close to each other. There’s not a great deal of difference,” said Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, D-Conn.
Even if they’re in the ballpark on the big issues, the two bills have some significant differences.
For example, while both chambers favor the creation of an equivalent of the Consumer Product Safety Commission for consumer credit products such as mortgages, student loans and credit cards, they’d go about it differently.
The House would create a new, standalone agency called the Consumer Financial Protection Agency; the Senate envisions a Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection within the Federal Reserve.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce hopes to weaken the bill during the negotiations, arguing that the new consumer panel’s leader would have powers beyond those of other government agency heads.
“I don’t know that I’m going to persuade people that my approach to consumer protection is the right way, but we should have a debate about having this much power concentrated in one individual,” said David Hirschmann, senior vice president at the Chamber.
Assistant Treasury Secretary Michael Barr, an intellectual author of the consumer panel, countered that there are numerous checks built into the creation of the new independent agency. It’ll have public rulemaking, must conduct cost-benefit analyses on measures it proposes, and the agency head would serve at the pleasure of the president and require Senate confirmation.
“We’re in fundamental disagreement with the Chamber on this point,” Barr said.
Also contentious is whether auto dealers should be subjected to the consumer panel’s rules. Consumer advocates argue that some auto dealers make more money from lending than they do from selling cars.
“The whole point of this agency is to make sure that lenders have to play by better rules and be fairer,” said Travis Plunkett, legislative director for the Consumer Federation of America.
Pointing to support from the Pentagon, which thinks that auto lenders have preyed on servicemen and servicewomen, Plunkett added that resolving the dealer exemption “is going to be all about raw political power.”
House and Senate lawmakers agree with the auto dealers, who argue that they didn’t cause the financial crisis and aren’t financial institutions. The House bill exempted car dealers; the Senate bill didn’t, but a majority of senators have voiced support for the exemption.
Another battle will be over complex financial instruments called derivatives, which helped cause the near meltdown of financial markets in 2008. The Senate bill would force banks to spin off their derivatives businesses, but the Obama administration and House lawmakers think that goes too far and could prove disruptive.
The Senate language came out of the Agriculture Committee, where Arkansas Democrat Blanche Lincoln, the chairman, faced a primary challenge and wanted to show voters she was tough on Wall Street. Lincoln now faces a June 8 runoff, a day after the Senate returns from its Memorial Day recess — freeing her, and Democrats, from having to keep up the appeal to Arkansas liberals.
Congressional leaders, with the help of the White House, have chosen a bipartisan team of negotiators, called conferees, who’re likely to find common ground on these issues quickly.
…SNIP…
Among the reasons for the unusually conciliatory mood surrounding the talks:
_ Politics: “If I were a Republican, I’d be hard pressed to vote against financial regulation,” said Burdett Loomis, professor of political science at the University of Kansas, especially less than six months before congressional elections. Politicians must show they can get tough with Wall Street, erasing voters’ memories of the unpopular 2008 bailouts of troubled financial firms.
_ Bipartisanship: Dodd and Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama, the top committee Republican, made sure during this month’s debate that the two parties alternated offering amendments. As a result, some major GOP changes were accepted, such as Florida Sen. George LeMieux’s plan to instruct government agencies to stop relying solely on credit ratings when measuring creditworthiness.
_ The Players: Dodd and Frank will lead the committee, and both have a long history of working with Republicans on major legislation. Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., will participate, even though it’s unusual for a junior member of the Senate to be included in such talks. Corker was involved earlier this year in compromise efforts, complaining later that his views were largely ignored.
Check out our new page of specially selected liberal movies, available for instant download from Amazon.com, with reviews.
*****
To make a Word or .pdf document of an article, or share or email it, simply load the individual article by clicking the dark blue title at the very top.
We know, if you come here repeatedly,
you like Evans Liberal Politics. So, all we ask is that you
Tell Your Friends About Evans Liberal Politics!
Have You Listened to Us Lately?
| |
|---|---|
| |
|---|---|
*****
We know, if you come here repeatedly,
you like Evans Liberal Politics. So, all we ask is that you
Tell Your Friends About Evans Liberal Politics!

MEXICO CITY – First Lady Michelle Obama’s plane landed in Mexico’s capital city just after sunset on Tuesday, in a day that included a surprise stop in Haiti with Second Lady Jill Biden. It is a trip that will put on display Mrs. Obama’s diplomatic chops.
Mrs. Obama and Mrs. Biden teamed up for a tour of Port-au-Prince, which was flattened along with much of the rest of the nation in the devastating Jan. 12 earthquake. After a helicopter tour of the city, the two women met with Haitian President Rene Preval and his wife, Elizabeth. They saw schools, children’s camps, UN workers, and U.S. military personnel helping a nation trying to bring itself back to life. Speaking to reporters in Haiti before flying to Mexico, Mrs. Obama summed up her experience: “This has been an emotional but important day for Jill and I.”
![]() |
|---|
The concern among relief specialists is that the enormous international attention showered on Haiti after the earthquake will diminish while giant needs still exist. Mrs. Obama said, “I think it was important for Jill and I to come now because we’re at the point where the relief efforts are underway but the attention of the world starts to wane a bit.
“And as we enter the rainy season and the hurricane season, you know, the issues are just going to become more compounded. And I think it was important for us to come and shed a light.”
After spending about five hours in Haiti, Mrs. Obama flew to Mexico City, landing at the presidential hangar of the Benito Juarez International Airport. She stepped off the plane to Mexican and U.S. broadcast and print press, VIPs, 37 boys and girls who were Red Cross volunteers, and about 50 members of “Las Guias,” sort of like the girl scouts. Mrs. Obama’s long motorcade, consisting of more than 20 vehicles, emptied the highway and streets between the airport and her downtown hotel; almost no one was on the sidewalks to see the U.S. first lady come to town. But every major Mexican daily newspaper Web site was leading Tuesday night with the news of Mrs. Obama’s arrival and with pictures of her hugging and greeting youths. The headline on La Cronica de Hoy splashed “Michelle Obama arrives to Mexico. “El Universal took note that Mrs. Obama was greeted by the U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, Carlos Pascual, and the Mexican Ambassador to the U.S., Arturo Sarukhan. The young people on the tarmac fit in the centerpiece theme of Mrs. Obama’s mission here. She will debut on Wednesday what White House advisers called her “international agenda” of “youth engagement” in a major speech at a university.
If the phrase “youth engagement” sounds amorphous to you, it does to me. But much of Mrs. Obama’s past serves as prologue. I take the “youth engagement” theme to be an extension of some of her work back in the early 1990s as the founding executive director of Public Allies Chicago, an organization devoted to the development of youth leadership, especially young people coming from disadvantaged backgrounds. While Mrs. Obama has almost 100 percent name recognition in the U.S. — whether for fashion, her White House garden, or work combating childhood obesity — her image is less defined here.
Read the full story, here.
Read the Wikipedia article on Michelle Obama, here.
Read about first lady Michelle Obama at the White House website, here.
President Barack Obama called on Congress to schedule a final up-or-down vote on health reform in the next few weeks, saying the time for talking is done and making clear that’s he’s prepared to pass reform on a party-line vote.
“Now is the time to make a decision about how to finally reform health care so that it works, not just for the insurance companies, but for America’s families and businesses,” Obama said at the White House, kicking off what he promised would be a full-on campaign to pass reform.
And without saying the word “reconciliation,” Obama signaled that he’ll pass reform with Democratic votes only if necessary – all but daring the Republican to get on board or watch Congress go ahead without them, using the parliamentary tactics that would require just 51 votes in the Senate.
He laid down a timetable – which would wrap up the bill before the Easter break in Congress – and a Democratic line of attack: we’re not passing this in a backroom deal, we’ve already passed it in both the House and the Senate under the traditional rules. All that’s left now is the clean-up.
“No matter which approach you favor, I believe the United States Congress owes the American people a final vote on health care reform. We have debated this issue thoroughly, not just for a year, but for decades,” Obama said.
The White House announced that Obama would travel to Philadelphia Monday and St. Louis on Wednesday to stump for reform – his most hands-on pitch for health care since last summer, when Obama was doing events daily to make the case for his plan.
Obama signaled that part of his pro-reform push would be an attack on Washington ways, the theme he rode to the presidency.
“I know there’s a fascination, bordering on obsession, in the media and in this town about what passing health insurance reform would mean for the next election and the one after that. Well, I’ll leave others to sift through the politics. Because that’s not what this is about. That’s not why we’re here,” Obama said.
Republicans have already given Obama their answer – a resounding no – to his offer to add GOP ideas to his bill in hopes of getting their votes. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said after the speech that the president is calling on members of Congress “to ignore the wishes of the American people” and said November midterms could turn into a referendum on health care reform.
…..
For a president who Democrats grumbled didn’t do enough early on to guide them, Obama couldn’t have been more clear in the 15-minute address, giving Democrats a calendar, a campaign plan and talking points to sell reform to skeptical voters. And he pledged his own involvement as well.
Read the full article, here.
See Updated: Obama’s final march for health reform (and more good news), Daily Kos, March 3, 2009 ,by Blackwaterdog.
Healthcare Reform Now!