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Dutch: "It's not a bailout'

Dutch Ruppersberger got five minutes last night with Shepard Smith on Fox News, defended the $700 billion bailout, saying it was an investment in the nation's future, and he closed out his interview by saying, "It's not a bailout." Smith kind of snickered at that statement, saying, "Not a bailout, huh?" Dutch voted for the measure and pledged to keep working for its passage. Meanwhile, Rep. Elijah Cummings was one of two Maryland Democrats -- the other, Donna Edwards -- to vote against the package.

Here's Cummings' statement:

When I leave my home in Baltimore every morning to drive to D.C., I am struck by the disastrous effects of the last 8 years of Bush-McCain economic policy. Homes that were once occupied by families living the American Dream are now boarded up because of foreclosures. Neighborhoods are falling apart. Individuals are suffering at the gas pumps, at the grocery stores, and in line at the unemployment office.

Now, we face the largest financial crisis since the Great Depression. There is no doubt that a strong federal response is necessary, but any response must contain strong oversight and accountability measures, assistance for the families who are in jeopardy of losing their homes due to predatory lending, and safeguards against golden parachutes for Wall Street executives. Congress simply cannot bail out Wall Street while at the same time bailing on Main Street.

I do not believe that we have explored or exhausted all possible options to directly ease the pressure on financial markets without causing an undue burden to taxpayers. This legislation just does not provide enough relief and protection for the hardworking men and women who are trying to make ends meet.

“In addition to the acquisition of some of the financial system’s sound assets, any federal initiative should include federal capability to restructure mortgages for the men and women who are trying so desperately to keep their homes and salvage their families’ dreams. It must also include a substantial allocation toward initiatives that are proven to directly stimulate our economy—such as extended unemployment and food stamp benefits.

“I am deeply concerned that there is no requirement that Wall Street take responsibility for the mess it helped to create. There is no meaningful limitation on golden parachutes for executives—who are still making millions of dollars a month even as average Americans continue to struggle to stay afloat. I am concerned that the board created to oversee this bailout is not offered the power to stop any irresponsible or questionable action. I am concerned that there are no safeguards against taxpayers being overcharged to buy these assets—or any guarantees that they will profit from these investments in the future.

“While the federal government must act to keep our economy out of jeopardy, I am concerned that this proposal is lacking key provisions to protect taxpayers. Any measure we adopt must include strict oversight and safeguards against giving blank checks to corporate executives whose poor judgment has led us down this road, and that provides substantial relief to the millions of Americans who continue to suffer under the overbearing burden of our current economic state.

Here's part of Edward's statement:

“This bill was vague and contained more dressing than substance for working Americans.  It gave the Secretary of the Treasury unparalleled purchasing power of any financial instrument without adequate, enforceable oversight.  There were no guidelines in this bill directing the Secretary as to how or which troubled assets to buy.  The bill did not address how or when the government would sell the purchased assets back in the market. Despite the positive provisions of this bill that help tenants, the provisions to help homeowners were not mandatory; they were discretionary.  Finally, the Economic Stimulus bill which passed the House and included real benefits to working Americans such as extending unemployment benefits, providing additional food stamp assistance, and investing in infrastructure to create good-paying jobs is effectively dead. 
“The $700 billion allocated in this bill would have constrained us from addressing the real needs of this country such as implementing universal healthcare coverage, a clean, secure energy future, and quality education for our children.  I look forward to working to strengthen our financial markets by bringing strong regulation and oversight back to the markets.  I will work to regulate hedge funds and the credit industry.  I will fight to give bankruptcy and real foreclosure protection to homeowners. 
“I commend my colleagues for their hard work during these difficult times.  We were handed a set of bad ideas from the President and Treasury Secretary Paulson and good people have tried to make the best of it. This was not the best we could do for taxpayers, homeowners, or small businesses. "

Posted by Dan Rodricks at 6:16 AM | | Comments (4)
        

Comments

Really someone shoud call out the"honorable" Rep. Elijah Cummings for this stupid statement... I guess the dems had no roll in all of this and we should be happy he is here to save the day... This is just the type of thing that will keep this problem from being solved. Note to Mr. Cummings everyone created this mess, everyone must be a part of fixing this mess...Mr. Cummings if you had any pride you would resign, but being a politican I guess that removes any hope of you having any pride.

I agree with Cummings. I want accountability. I want everyone who supported deregulating the banks in 1999 to stand up and own it. By undoing important bank laws born out of the last great depression, they may well have doomed us to repeat it. And all the while the rich keep getting richer and congress keeps passing laws to that end. I want to see jail time. I want to see assets forfeited. I want a government that is not bought and paid for by Wall street. We did not ALL create this mess. Congress and Wall Street did it, plain and simple, all in the name of greed. Sure, a lot of people fell for bad loans and couldn't keep up with them, but I don't expect my bad judgement to be subsidized and neither should anybody. Without some measure of accountability, the country is in real trouble.

I'm glad my congressman Mr. Cummings voted against this bill. While its loss did create a rippling effect on Wall Street and markets worldwide it still does not contain the oversight and more key provisions as he said in order to protect the tax payers. Unfortunately for all of us every member of the House believes that even though they aren't Jewish they believe they should take the three day holiday also and let our market fester and continue to slump. O and Dutch, "It's not a bailout" , please get real

Sometime the best lessons are the hard ones. If this crisis gets more Americans to realize that we can no longer sit on our rear ends and let our politicians ignore us while keeping their own concerns at the forefront of every debate then maybe this is for the better.

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About Dan Rodricks
Jan. 8, 2009, marked 30 years for Dan Rodricks' column in The Baltimore Sun. Over three decades, Dan has won numerous regional and several national awards for his reporting and commentary -- in print and on the air. "I've had opportunity to write a column and work in both radio and television, never having to leave my adopted hometown of Baltimore to have those experiences," he says. "I consider myself very fortunate." In addition to writing a twice-weekly column for The Baltimore Sun and his Random Rodricks blog, Dan is currently the host of Midday, on WYPR-FM, National Public Radio in Baltimore. An artful story-teller and social critic, he has observed local, state and national political and cultural trends for three decades, and has a lot to say about almost everything.
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