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INTERMITTENT NOTESXML

Standing Up to the Unholy Alliance Between Washington and Wall Street

Statement by Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI)

crop from Good Intentions posterWASHINGTON — Wall Street and its allies have been calling the shots in Congress for decades, so they must be glad to see how things are shaping up on financial regulatory reform. Congress is about to vote on a final bill that fails to fix the key flaws in the bills passed by both the House and Senate. At the start of this process I made clear that I had a simple test for financial reform — will it stop another financial meltdown? This bill fails that test, and I won't support legislation that fails to protect the people of Wisconsin from the pain of another economic disaster. And I don't need to be lectured about this issue by people who supported the repeal of Glass-Steagall, which paved the way for this terrible recession.

I had hoped I would be able to support the legislation, given the clear need for strong reform. I cosponsored a number of critical amendments during Senate consideration of the bill including a Cantwell-McCain amendment to restore Glass-Steagall safeguards, Senator Dorgan's amendment that addressed the problem of "too big to fail" financial institutions, and another "too big to fail" reform offered by Senators Brown and Kaufman that proposed strict limits on the size of those institutions. Each of those amendments would have improved the bill significantly, and each of them either failed or was blocked from even getting a vote.

After that, it wasn't a close call for me. It would be a huge mistake to pass a bill that purports to re-regulate the financial industry but is simply too weak to protect people from the recklessness of Wall Street. That would be like building an impressive-looking dam without telling everyone that it has a few leaks in it. False security is no security at all.

Since the Senate bill passed, I have had a number of conversations with key members of the administration, Senate leadership and the conference committee that drafted the final bill. Unfortunately, not once has anyone suggested in those conversations the possibility of strengthening the bill to address my concerns and win my support. People want my vote, but they want it for a bill that, while including some positive provisions, has Wall Street's fingerprints all over it.

In fact, reports indicate that the administration and conference leaders have gone to significant lengths to avoid making the bill stronger. Rather than discussing with me ways to strengthen the bill, for example, they chose to eliminate a levy that was to be imposed on the largest banks and hedge funds in order to obtain the vote of members who prefer a weaker bill. Nothing could be more revealing of the true position of those who are crafting this legislation. They had a choice between pursuing a weaker bill or a stronger one. Their decision is clear.

On this bill, like the others that preceded it, the biggest financial interests have won.

I've seen this too many times before. When I was in the Wisconsin State Senate, I chaired the Senate Banking Committee for nearly a decade, and fought against enactment of an interstate banking law that resulted in the concentration of financial assets and most large Wisconsin banks being bought up by even larger out-of-state banks.

Shortly after I came to the U.S. Senate we considered a national interstate banking bill, the Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching Act of 1994, which accelerated the concentration of financial assets, and the creation of "too big to fail" firms. I was one of only four senators to oppose that legislation. Five years later, I was one of only eight Senators to oppose the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, the bill that repealed Glass-Steagall and paved the way for this disastrous recession, which has been an economic nightmare for so many Americans.

Those two measures — the 1994 law and the 1999 law — accelerated the trend toward increased concentration of financial assets, aggravating the problem of "too big to fail." Before those two laws were enacted, the six largest U.S. banks had assets equal to 17 percent of our GDP. Today the six largest U.S. banks have assets equal to more than 60 percent of our GDP.

Ultimately, it was the threat of the failure of the nation's largest financial institutions that spurred the Wall Street bailout. I opposed that measure as well, in part because it was not tied to any fundamental reforms of our financial system that would prevent a future crisis and the need for another bailout. We could have had a much tougher reform package if the bailout had been tied to such a measure.

Every single one of those bills caved to Wall Street and the biggest financial interests, and so does the current regulatory reform bill. Economist Dean Baker called this bill a "fig leaf," and former IMF Economist Simon Johnson has slammed the bill's failure to address "too big to fail." These experts paint an accurate picture of this bill's failings, and frankly those failings shouldn't come as a surprise. Many of the critical actors who shaped this bill were present at the creation of the financial crisis. They supported the enactment of Gramm-Leach-Bliley, deregulating derivatives, even the massive Interstate Banking bill that helped grease the "too big to fail" skids. It shouldn't be a surprise to anyone that the final version of the bill looks the way it does, or that I won't fall in line with their version of "reform."

This bill caves to Wall Street interests, it doesn't meet the test of preventing another financial crisis, and it won't get my vote.

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Comments


Hi, George (and Russ).

Isn't this the real cherry on top?:

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/30/business/economy/30leonhardt.html?ref=business

With the Obama-designed G20 pronouncements, we're descending quite a few rings into the hell of Western corporate totalitarianism. The private sector was the sole cause of the 2008 financial collapse. The private sector is the sole cause of the massive deficits now being used to exterminate what little remains of an egalitarian social structure. Chomsky always writes that one can understand what a war is about only after it is over.

The vampires design a system — with the major collusion of Western state authorities — intended to steal everything in sight — and intended to eventually collapse, whether in 2006, 2008, 2015, whenever. (Aside from the mob war aspects of what went down, Lehman in this case being the Tattaglia Family.)

The vampires know, because they now have control of the State, that when the collapse comes they will be saved by State/taxpayer funding, causing massive deficits and possible State bankruptcy.

The vampires then proclaim that all State spending not dedicated to corporate bailouts & military/police defense of the corporate prison much be seriously cut or eliminated.

Welcome to the jungle.

[Yep, that about sums it up. g.]


EJK has it down. We are screwed. "Whoever controls the money controls the world." The independent central bank spells debt peonage for the many and untold riches for a few.

Is there a solution? Well, they also have the firepower and police and the military, so I guess not. They are not interested in intellectual arguments. They want power and money, and they know how to get it. The only solution is maximal non-cooperation, but that requires courage and discernment — something mass man lacks, to say the least. For me, I'm getting out of Dodge. I can read the writing on the wall.

[Despair is not an answer. g.]


As a Wisconsinite I have always been proud of the integrity of Feingold. From the Patriot Act vote (Feingold being the only one to oppose) to the call for a timeline withdrawal in the Middle East I can't think of anyone else who has stood up for principal the way he has.

Just yesterday in interview John Kerry must have said "compromise" at least three times in his excuses as a Democrat for this legislation. Compromise and capitulation, as Feingold notes, are not the same thing.


Well, I agree that despair is not an answer for anything, but getting out of Dodge may very well be one — at least for some people. During the Nazi era, one could have "read the writing on the wall" and could have very accurately concluded it was time to leave Germany — and possibly over the protests of those who said that despair was no answer.

Personally, I think that seeing things as they are is a precondition for any sort of action, whether offensive or defensive. I think Bjorn is essentially right in that there are no societal or collective solutions any longer, but only individual ones — possibly in concert with a small group. Seeing things as they are — the truth — and saying so is in reality the most positive thing one can do.

[That's certainly what Solzhenitsyn believed. g.]


Interesting comments by Charles over at your "Regime Change Politics" interview. Closely related to the comments here. I was especially struck by the Brzezinski quotes. The recent clash of police and peaceful demonstrators in Toronto over the G-20 meetings is very significant, I think. It really looks more and more like we are living in a police state. Couple this with the people in the Obama administration — largely drawn from the big banks — and with our "imperialistic" bloated military, and you can see the big picture. It is not reassuring.

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