Friday, October 10, 2008 |
|
Dodd and Countrywide |
|
Posted by:
Matt Lewis at
9:44 AM |
Today's WSJ features a good column on why Sen. Chris Dodd should "take the witness stand." Here's an excerpt:
The Connecticut Senator has been out front denouncing the "companies that form the foundation of our financial markets," for "their insatiable appetite for risk." He has also decried "reckless, careless and sometimes unscrupulous actors in the mortgage lending industry" and he has proclaimed that "American taxpayers deserve to know how we arrived at this moment." To that end, we propose he take the stand -- under oath.
Former Countrywide Financial loan officer Robert Feinberg says Mr. Dodd knowingly saved thousands of dollars on his refinancing of two properties in 2003 as part of a special program the California mortgage company had for the influential. He also says he has internal company documents that prove Mr. Dodd knew he was getting preferential treatment as a friend of Angelo Mozilo, Countrywide's then-CEO.
|
|
|
Tuesday, October 07, 2008 |
|
The Government Is Going To Pay Our Mortgages? |
|
Posted by:
Jonathan Garthwaite at
11:18 PM |
I suspect a lot of conservatives would like to know more about what this means.
McCain: We've got to have a package of reforms, and it's got to lead to reform, prosperity and peace in the world. And I think that this problem has become so severe, as you know, that we're going to have to do something about home values. You know that home values of retirees continues to, to decline. And people are no longer able to afford their mortgage payments.
As president of the United States, Allen, I would order the secretary of the Treasury to immediately buy up the bad home-loan mortgages in America and renegotiate at the new value of those homes, at the diminished value of those homes, and let people make those -- be able to make those payments and stay in their homes.
Is it expensive? Yes. But we all know, my friends, until we stabilize home values in America, we're never going to start turning around and creating jobs and fixing our economy.
In addition to the bailout?
|
|
|
Monday, October 06, 2008 |
|
Bailout Bill's Top 10 List |
|
Posted by:
Michele Bachmann at
11:22 AM |
|
Last week, I voted twice against the nearly $1 trillion Wall Street bailout bill in the U.S. House. The first bill (with a $700 billion price tag for taxpayers) failed with an overwhelming bipartisan majority. Then the Senate passed a second version that was loaded with tax "sweeteners" in an attempt to attract enough lawmakers in the House who voted "Nay" the first time around to switch their vote to pass the bill. That jacked the price tag up to $810 billion. You've got to love Washington.
We were supposed to be voting on a financial bailout bill, but unfortunately we got much, much more.
Taxpayers for Common Sense have listed their Top 10 Tax Sweeteners in the recently passed Bailout Bill. As the organization notes, not all of these are outrageous on their own, but when we are supposed to be voting on a bailout package that is already putting the American people further in debt, these extras are the last thing that should be thrown into the mix as political currency to attract votes. They should have been dealt with at another time.
1.) Sec. 503. Exemption from excise tax for certain wooden arrows designed for use by children ($2 million)
2.) Sec. 317. Seven-year cost recovery period for motorsports racing track facility ($100 million)
3.) Sec. 308. Increase in limit on cover over of rum excise tax to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands ($192 million)
4.) Sec. 301. Extension and modification of research credit ($19 billion)
5.) Sec. 504. Income averaging for amounts received in connection with the Exxon Valdez litigation ($49 million)
6.) Sec. 601. Secure rural schools and community self-determination program ($3.3 billion)
7.) Sec. 201. Deduction for state and local sales taxes ($3.3 billion)
8.) Sec 502. Provisions related to film and television productions ($478 million)
9.) Sec. 325. Extension and modification of duty suspension on wool products; wool research fund; wool duty refunds ($148 million)
10.) Sec. 309. Extension of economic development credit for American Samoa ($33 million)
Check out Taxpayers for Commonsense for more information on these provisions and several others.
|
|
|
Friday, October 03, 2008 |
|
IBD Editorial: Plan Will Save Free Market, Not Destroy It |
|
Posted by:
John Campbell at
9:32 AM |
|
Below you will find an editorial I penned for Investor's Business Daily today.

Plan Will Save Free Market, Not Destroy It
By REP. JOHN CAMPBELL
This free-market, Milton Friedman devotee, conservative Republican congressman will be voting strongly in favor of the $700 billion bailout for Wall Street. What, you ask? Has the California sun fried my last brain cell?
No. I will vote for this bill because it will likely not cost anything, is not a bailout of anybody and will help every American with a bank account, a job or a retirement plan. It also will save the free market, not weaken it.
Allow me to explain.
Read More... |
|
|
Friday, October 03, 2008 |
|
The Wrong Bill For What Ails Us |
|
Posted by:
Michele Bachmann at
8:53 AM |
|
The bailout bill that the U.S. Senate passed late Wednesday night is not the remedy for what ails this nation's economy. While we are all anxious to take action to help America recover from it's current financial crisis, it does us no good to pass a bill that does not address the underlying problem before us, and that's the credit crunch.
After the defeat of the original proposal in the House on Monday, Congress had an opportunity to really address some of the shortfalls of the failed bill. Instead they loaded on millions of dollars in pork barrel spending and a couple of other "treats" to lure members of Congress who voted "Nay" the first time around to reconsider their vote. From tax incentives to mental health parity (which, by the way, deserve their time to be considered and voted upon), they should not be strategically placed into a bill of this magnitude that is supposed to specifically address the credit crunch facing our nation. It is irresponsible, and proof enough that Congress deserves its 10% approval rating. Instead of being a source of calm in the eye of a storm, a good many lawmakers have lost their good sense and jumped overboard to back a bill that does nothing to really address our current financial crisis, other than give Americans a false sense of economic security.
There are simple steps that we can take to make the problem in front of us much smaller, and much easier to handle. The Free Market Protection Act (H.R. 7223) is an alternative economic rescue plan that puts us on a better path to attack the roots of the current crisis. Among other things, it would suspend the capital gains tax, schedule the government-sponsored enterprises (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) for privatization, and suspend mark-to-market accounting requirements.
Take a look at it in more detail here .
And, there are steps that the SEC, FDIC, and FASB can take already within their regulatory authority to make a real difference.
We must be calm, and while we should work speedily, we must not work hastily. Sadly, the bill passed by the Senate that is now in the House is a result of the "urgent" need to pass "something," rather than the "right thing."
|
|
|
Thursday, October 02, 2008 |
|
Palin/Biden on the Economy |
|
Posted by:
Amanda Carpenter at
9:05 PM |
Biden says McCain is "out of touch" on the economy.
Palin says when McCain said the economy was strong, ""He was talking to and he was talking about the American workforce...and we're known for putting partisan politics aside to get the job done" while Barack Obama only votes his party line.
Both Palin and Biden are a good job keeping this to McCain and Obama so far.
|
|
|
Thursday, October 02, 2008 |
|
One Hour to Go |
|
Posted by:
Amanda Carpenter at
8:04 PM |
The countdown is officially ON.
How are we feeling here? I'm hopeful this high-pressure situation makes Palin perform stronger. She's a former athlete who sunk the winning free throw to clinch her state's basketball championship. When I look at her, I see a "gamer" and the extra adrenaline could really help her focus and hit her marks.
And by the way, I really like Philip Klein. He's not an "elitist" and his criticisms of Palin are fair. In the original post he wrote," I don't think it does Palin any favors for conservatives to cover up for her and convince the campaign that her performances in interviews have been adequate for the office she's seeking." I absolutely agree with him.
I don't think the people, like Kathleen Parker for example, criticized Palin for "publicity." She was already a wildly successful syndicated columnist before anybody even know how to pronounce Palin. You can disagree with her, but that's no reason to intone she's a publicity whore.
Let's stop this silliness.
Time for the debate!
|
|
|
Thursday, October 02, 2008 |
|
Judicial Confirmation Network's Ad on Obama |
|
Posted by:
Amanda Carpenter at
4:35 PM |
From Wendy Long, chief counsel for the Judicial Confirmation Network: “Americans do not get to choose Supreme Court Justices. In their wisdom, the Framers of the Constitution provided that the President chooses them for all of us. The next President will exercise that most important judgment, probably at least several times. JCN is educating Americans about the differences between an ‘Obama Court’ that would engage in judicial activism, acting as a super-legislature and imposing a political agenda from the bench, and a ‘McCain Court’ that would likely practice judicial restraint and fairly apply the law based on what the Constitution says and on laws passed by the representatives accountable to the American people."
Here's their new ad out below, with more than 47,000 views already.
|
|
|
Thursday, October 02, 2008 |
|
Note to GOP: Please, Please Prepare the Ads! |
|
Posted by:
Carol Platt Liebau at
12:45 PM |
Today, the Wall Street Journal has a series of pro-Freddie and pro-Fannie quotes from Democrat lawmakers (HT: commenter Joe in post below). Here's just a snippet:
This from Barney Frank: I do think I do not want the same kind of focus on safety and soundness that we have in OCC [Office of the Comptroller of the Currency] and OTS [Office of Thrift Supervision]. I want to roll the dice a little bit more in this situation towards subsidized housing."
And this, from the priceless Maxine Waters: Mr. Chairman, we do not have a crisis at Freddie Mac, and in particular at Fannie Mae, under the outstanding leadership of Mr. Frank Raines. Everything in the 1992 act has worked just fine.
Ads including this information should be ready to go the morning after the House vote.
John McCain is acting responsibly as a potential future president by refusing to engage in an orgy of blaming. That being said, if the American people aren't informed about who got us into this mess, and why -- well, they're likely to vote into office a candidate who shares the views of those that helped create the crisis. Heck, for all we know, his views may be even more extreme than theirs.
|
|
|
Wednesday, October 01, 2008 |
|
Some Perspective on $700 Billion |
|
Posted by:
Amanda Carpenter at
9:55 PM |
Do you wanna know how much $700 billion is?
A hundred billion shy of all our war spending in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere around the world over the last five years.
That's what the CBO says.
We've spent $800 billion fighting terror and protecting our nation since 2003. And the Senate's giving away $700 billion to an undeserving financial sector in a single evening.
This is Smoot-Hawley redux.
|
|
|
Wednesday, October 01, 2008 |
|
The Votes |
|
Posted by:
Amanda Carpenter at
9:14 PM |
The Dodd Amendment, which was to put the full text of the bailout into a passable legislative shell, passed 74-25.
They had to play this shell game to make the bill technically constitutional, since the Constitution mandates all revenue-raising bills generate in the House. So they made the entire $700 billion revenue-raising Paulson plan an amendment to a mental health bill filled with earmarky goodness to make it pass muster. Yes, this is craziness.
That aside, what I'm telling you is this is the vote that counts.
35 Republicans and 39 Democrats voted for it.
15 Republicans, 8 Democrats and one Independent (Sanders) voted against. Senator Ted Kennedy, who was recently rehospitalized for his brain tumor, did not vote.
Akaka - YES Alexander - YES Allard - NO Barasso- NO Baucus - YES Bayh- YES Bennett - YES Biden - YES Bingaman - YES Bond- YES Boxer - YES Brown- YES Brownback - NO Bunning - NO Burr - YES Byrd - YES Cantwell - NO Cardin - YES Carper - Casey - YES Chambliss - YES Clinton - YES Coburn - YES Cochran - NO Coleman - YES Collins - YES Conrad - YES Corker - YES Cornyn - YES Craig- YES Crapo - NO DeMint - NO Dodd - YES Dole- NO Domenici - YES Dorgan - NO Durbin - YES Ensign - YES Enzi - NO Feingold - NO Feinstein - YES Graham - YES Grassley - YES Gregg - YES Hagel - YES Harkin - YES Hatch - YES Hutchison - YES Inhofe - NO Inoye - YES Isakson - YES Johnson - NO Kennedy - Kerry - YES Klobuchar - YES Kohl - YES Kyl - YES Landrieu - NO Lautenberg - YES Leahy - YES Levin - YES Lieberman - YES Lincoln - YES Lugar - YES Martinez - YES McCain - YES McCaskill - YES McConnell - YES Menendez - YES Mikulski - YES Murkowski - YES Murray -YES Nelson, FL - NO Nelson, NE - YES Obama - YES Pryor - YES Reed - YES Reid - YES Roberts - NO Rockefeller - YES Salazar - YES Sanders - NO Schumer - YES Sessions - NO Shelby - NO Smith - YES Snowe - YES Specter - YES Stabenow - NO Stevens - YES Sununu - YES Tester - NO Thune - YES Vitter - NO Voinovich - YES Warner - YES Webb - YES Whitehouse - YES Wicker - NO Wyden - NO
|
|
|
Wednesday, October 01, 2008 |
|
A Dangerous Vote? |
|
Posted by:
Jonathan Garthwaite at
9:14 PM |
|
As Senate Republicans vote tonight and House Republicans later this week, it's worth mentioning how Townhall.com readers voted over the last 24 hours.

|
|
|
Wednesday, October 01, 2008 |
|
Senate Bailout Vote Starting Now |
|
Posted by:
Amanda Carpenter at
9:02 PM |
Who wants to bet on what the final vote will be?
I'm hearing 70-30 in favor. The need 60.
By the way, while I'm waiting for the vote I want to rant a bit. I think this FDIC insurance raise and the tax sweeteners are nothing but a political fig leaf to give senators cover to vote for a bill that is still terribly problematic
It is still $700 billion package that hands over a troubling amount of power to the current, and all future Treasury Secretaries to buy distressed assets from both for-profit and non-profit financial institutions. To the Republicans voting for this bill, tell me, how much do you like the idea of that when someone like Barack Obama is appointing people to Treasury?
Secondly, it still forces taxpayers to bailout not only domestic banks, but FOREIGN banks with toxic assets. This is a GLOBAL bailout, folks. Third, it is a rushed option of first resort, not last resort. The Asians and the Swedes did a better job dealing with their, very similar, economic crises in the 90's than we're doing now. We should take a look at their models before we start declaring ATM's won't have money and the garbage won't get picked up to scare people into supporting this thing. Yeah, I'm looking at you Judd Gregg.
And worst of all, it doesn't present real reform. It props up banks who need to be purged from the market and expands Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. These institutions are the source of the problem and need to be shut down, not given a taxpayer lifeline.
But hey, squishy senators are going to vote for it because it has a one-year patch on the AMT and because, um, it'll give some money for wooden arrows for children and wool research.
Yes. I'm bitter. Give me a Bible and a gun. I could put both to good use right now.
|
|
|
Wednesday, October 01, 2008 |
|
SEC's Recent Clarification May Help |
|
Posted by:
Matt Lewis at
10:36 AM |
If you've been reading this blog recently, you know I have been advocating we suspend mark-to-market accounting rules. This topic is getting some good attention this morning in today's WaPost:
"Some economists are attributing much of the current financial crisis to something as mundane-seeming as accounting.
... An odd-sounding accounting phrase at the heart of this is something called "mark-to-market" accounting. Many think that if this requirement were ended, the crises could be eased.
... Simply put, mark-to-market accounting requires companies to set the value for the assets they own at the price they could fetch on the open market right now. The prices must be "marked to market;" hence the phrase.
What does that have to do with the current crisis? The root problem now is that financial institutions have been caught holding value-less, or "toxic," assets on their books, such as the mortgage-backed securities based on sub-prime mortgages that have defaulted.
The government believes that those assets will be worth something soon -- that's why they want to buy them in the $700 billion Wall Street rescue plan. But under mark-to-market rules currently required, they are worth almost nothing, threatening those who hold them with insolvency."
|
|
|
|
|
|
Your Blog Postings:
|
|
Last updated 20 Minutes 46 Seconds Ago
|
|
Last updated 41 Minutes 50 Seconds Ago
|
|
Last updated 54 Minutes 53 Seconds Ago
|
|
Last updated 1 Hours 1 Minutes 22 Seconds Ago
|
|
Last updated 1 Hours 1 Minutes 24 Seconds Ago
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Archives Archives
|
|
| | | |