Posts Tagged ‘banking system’

Operation repo schedule’s banks investment financial

October 1, 2008

Petrino DiLeo looks at how politicians of both parties allowed an
unregulated shadow banking system to take shape.

IT’S UNTHINKABLE. The United States–the paragon of the “free market”
and loudest proponent of neoliberal policies such as free trade,
deregulation and privatization–has just carried out the three largest
nationalizations in world history in taking over the twin mortgage
behemoths Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and now the insurance giant AIG.

The U.S. government is now the largest guarantor of mortgages in the
world–and the largest insurance company as well.

The events that have caused the worst financial crisis since the Great
Depression are the logical conclusion of policies and legislation
implemented during the past 30 years. Lax standards and weakening of
regulation led to a free-for-all in the financial world and the
creation of a multitrillion-dollar “shadow banking system.”

Along the way, Wall Street institutions invented arcane investment
instruments called derivatives, swaps, structured financial products
and securitized debt–and investors dove headfirst into the resulting
alphabet soup of mortgage-backed securities, collateralized debt
obligations, credit default swaps, structured investment vehicles,
etc.

These investment products were sloppily hashed together, barely
monitored and never stress-tested. Rating agencies rubber-stamped
everything that Wall Street concocted. And the result is the unfolding
financial bloodbath.

“What we are witnessing is essentially the breakdown of our modern-day
banking system, a complex of leveraged lending [that is] so hard to
understand,” Bill Gross, head of the Pimco asset management group
wrote, in December of last year. “Colleagues call it the ‘shadow
banking system’ because it has lain hidden for years, untouched by
regulation, yet free to magically and mystically create and then
package sub-prime loans in [ways] that only Wall Street wizards could
explain.”

Of course, the real tragedy isn’t that Wall Street is falling. The
banks and other financial institutions like AIG gorged themselves for
years. Whatever happens, the titans of finance will remain
millionaires many times over. Few, if any, will face jail time.

The real issue is that the collapse on Wall Street is wreaking havoc
on lives around the country and around the world.

People who had no idea that their mortgages were part of Wall Street’s
slice-and-dice game are paying the price. Workers whose pensions ended
up invested in toxic bonds may not be able to retire. Cities and
states face a drying up of revenue and are cutting back on jobs and
services. And the federal government–using taxpayer money–is
swallowing Wall Street’s losses, while leaving the same people in a
position to profit when the crisis is defused.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

After the financial crisis that contributed to the Great Depression of
the 1930s, Congress enacted laws such as the Glass-Steagall Act of
1933 to separate commercial banks from investment banks.

The objective of this reform was to insulate risky deal-making by
investment banks from individuals’ deposits in commercial banks. The
Federal Reserve Bank, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
and state regulators all were charged with monitoring commercial
banks. The Securities and Exchange Commission was given purview over
monitoring the large investment banks and brokerage houses.

The traditional commercial banking model was of deposit-taking
institutions, which lent money back out as mortgage loans or other
forms of credit. Such banks were monitored and regulated, and had to
have a certain amount of capital on hand at all times.

Furthermore, deposits up to a certain dollar value were guaranteed by
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). Commercial banks
were allowed to borrow directly from the Federal Reserve Bank to
ensure their continued operation–a privilege that was only extended
to investment banks during the current crisis.

This banking model held for many years. The long economic boom after
the Second World War kept financiers pretty happy. Furthermore, the
prosperity helped keep in place an overall approach to economics that
tolerated government intervention into the economy. This approach was
known as Keynesianism, after the liberal British economist John
Maynard Keynes.

Crises in the 1970s, however, led to a revival of calls for
unregulated free markets. By the 1980s and 1990s, as part of
neoliberal restructuring, financial regulation came under attack. This
culminated in the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, signed into law by Bill
Clinton in 1999, which essentially repealed Glass-Steagall.

The Gramm in the law’s title is former Republican Sen. Phil Gramm, now
an executive at the UBS bank and John McCain’s top economic advisor.
But a key lobbyist for the law was Robert Rubin, the Citigroup
executive and former Treasury Secretary under Democratic President
Bill Clinton.

The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act allowed banks, brokerage firms and insurers
to merge once again. It also dissolved the wall between commercial
banks and investment banks.

In 2000, Congress passed legislation (again, supported by Gramm)
called the Commodity Futures Modernization Act, which effectively
helped keep the commodities market hidden and unregulated. This law is
one reason why, during the run-up in food and oil futures prices
earlier this year, no one was quite sure how big a role speculators
played in pumping up prices.

The Federal Reserve is technically not part of the government. Its
policies and decisions on the setting of interest rates were dictated
by financial interests, particularly under former Federal Reserve
Chair Alan Greenspan.

Meanwhile, as part of the employers’ offensive, workers’ wages and
benefits came under attack. This facilitated a transfer of wealth from
the bottom of society to the top and helped restore profitability
across Corporate America.

However, in order to maintain high levels of consumption within the
U.S. economy, something needed to replace wages. An explosion of
household debt was the result. The vast increase in debt helped
workers maintain their standard of living, despite stagnating or
declining wages. At the same time, debt became a huge profit vehicle
for Wall Street.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

As one example, investment banks offer “money market accounts,” which
in practice look and act like traditional checking and savings
accounts. But there’s one important difference–not one cent of the
deposits is guaranteed by the government through the FDIC. If these
investment banks go down, so do the accounts.

This is a major reason why, when institutions like Lehman Brothers and
Bear Stearns appeared to be failing, there have been massive runs by
any funds that had money in those banks. They sought to pull out
before the institutions failed.

Another phenomenon that emerged is called debt securitization. Banks
bought up different forms of debt–like mortgages. Yet rather than
simply hold them on their balance sheets and collect payments, they
created enormous pools of loans. They then created bonds based on
these massive pools of debt, and sold them to giant investors, at
varying levels of risk. The highest-rated and least-risky bonds paid
off at lower rates, while the riskier bonds–such as ones tied to sub-
prime loans–paid off at higher rates.

By the end of the first three months of 2007, the total value of all
outstanding securitized debt was $28 trillion–more than double the
figure of 10 years ago. None of this would have been possible without
deregulation.

The other components of the financial system that could be in trouble
include hedge funds, with $1.8 trillion in assets; the $2.5 trillion
overnight loan market, known as the repurchase, or repo, market; and
the commercial paper market–loans made to businesses without the
backing of collateral–worth $2.2 trillion.

Then there are derivatives–financial instruments based on an
underlying security such as a commodity, bond or currency, but
typically representing some kind of gamble about what direction the
value of the security would go in. The theoretical value of all
derivatives was a mind-boggling $596 trillion by the end of 2007.

On top of all this, the banks did all sorts of things to keep their
shady investment instruments hidden away, off company balance sheets.
As a result, no one knows how much damage could be done if these
trillions of dollars in paper assets have to be sold off at pennies on
the dollar–or become completely worthless. Fear of such a worldwide
financial meltdown drove the U.S. government to engineer the takeover
of Bear Stearns by JPMorgan Chase earlier this year.

The various components of the shadow banking system play off each
other. Hedge funds put their money in investment banks, or hire the
banks to place their investments. Commercial banks and investment
banks have merged. Investment banks operate their own hedge funds.
Banks use the “repo” market and commercial paper to fund day-to-day
operations. Financial institutions of all kinds have derivative
contracts. Many of these are so-called credit default swaps, a form of
insurance on bonds.

The whole system is based on the free flow of capital at all times.
But today, many parts of the shadow banking system aren’t functioning,
because the banks aren’t sure if the other banks they’re trading with
will be around tomorrow.

The credit-default swap market, worth an estimated $62 trillion, is a
particularly urgent problem. Because it’s totally unregulated, no one
knows which financial institutions will have to pay out how many
billions of dollars of insurance on mortgage-backed securities gone
bad–or whether they will have the money to do so.

It was this uncertainty that led to the government takeover of AIG,
which was a major provider of credit default swaps, and thus extremely
vulnerable to the collapse in the value of mortgage-backed securities.

This shadow banking system flourished under the non-watchful eye of
Alan Greenspan’s Federal Reserve. Today, it’s become clear that
Greenspan was warned repeatedly about many of the factors that led to
this catastrophe, but instead, cheered on the boom.

For example, Greenspan embraced the explosion of predatory sub-prime
lending. He applauded the emergence of securitization of mortgages. He
cheered on the technology stock bubble. He helped goad asset-price
bubbles with aggressive cuts in interest rates in the late 1990s and
after September 11, 2001. Greenspan also orchestrated an industry
bailout of the hedge fund Long Term Capital Management in 1998–the
godfather to today’s bailouts.

It’s impossible to predict how far the financial chaos will spread, or
just what the toll will be on the underlying economy.

But three things are clear already. The resulting credit crunch will
cause an already struggling economy to contract even further. The Wall
Street titans who presided over this disaster will remain personally
very comfortable. And workers will be asked–as always–to suffer the
consequences.

Operation repo schedule’s news federal reverse

October 1, 2008

NEW YORK, Sept 25 (Reuters) – The Federal Reserve Bank of New York
said that it drained $20.0 billion from the banking system on Thursday
through an overnight reverse repo operation.

To implement monetary policy, short-term repurchase and reverse
repurchase agreements are used to temporarily affect the size of the
Federal Reserve System’s portfolio and to influence day-to-day trading
in the federal funds market.

At the time that the Fed undertook its reverse repo operation on
Thursday, federal funds were trading at 1.75 percent, below the Fed’s
2 percent benchmark for the rate. (Reporting by Chris Reese; Editing
by James Dalgleish)

Thomson Reuters is the world’s largest international multimedia news
agency, providing investing news, world news, business news,
technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts,
personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available
on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms.
Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which
requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

The operation repo schedule news rate reuters

October 1, 2008

NEW YORK, Sept 30 (Reuters) – The key lending rate between U.S. banks
slipped on Tuesday after the Federal Reserve added $20 billion in
temporary reserves into the banking system via a 28-day repurchase
operation.

The interest rate on federal funds, or surplus reserves that banks
lend to each other overnight, last traded at 6 percent after opening
at 7 percent.

The fed funds rate is still well above the current 2 percent target
rate set by the Fed. (Reporting by Richard Leong; Editing by James
Dalgleish)

Thomson Reuters is the world’s largest international multimedia news
agency, providing investing news, world news, business news,
technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts,
personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available
on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms.
Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which
requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

The operation repo schedule auction rba rate

October 1, 2008

The auction attracted solid demand from market participants as the
central bank moved to help alleviate a squeeze on US dollar liquidity
in Asian markets. The RBA was able to sell all the $US10 billion ($12
billion) offered at a weighted average rate of 3.165 per cent, well
below the prevailing LIBOR rate of 3.71 per cent. The auction was
oversubscribed, attracting a bid-to-cover ratio of 1.3. The auction
was part of co-ordinated action by the world’s central banks in recent
weeks to ensure markets remain liquid amid the fallout from the worst
US banking system crisis since the Great Depression in the 1930s.
Support for the repo operation suggests the RBA was likely to hold
further US dollar repo auctions, market participants said. The RBA’s
swap line arrangements with the US Federal Reserve will remain in
place until the end of January 2009, and the RBA could well repeat the
process on a monthly basis until then. The repo auction represented
“very, very good value,” for banks looking to fund in US dollars, said
Jarrod Kerr, interest rates strategist at the Commonwealth Bank of
Australia. Sally Auld, interest rate strategist at JPMorgan, agreed,
describing the terms of the auction as “cheap money.” The cut-off rate
in the operation was 2.450 per cent and the repurchase agreements will
settle Monday. Australia’s central bank, along with those of Denmark,
Norway and Sweden, earlier this week set up US dollar swap facilities
with the US Federal Reserve. Heightened global risk aversion, due to
recent upheavals in the US banking system, has fuelled hoarding of US
dollars. The Bank of Japan yesterday injected $US29.62 billion in a
similar operation. Dow Jones Newswires

From here you can use the Social Web links to save RBA auctions
$US10bn to ease liquidity squeeze to a social bookmarking site.

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Staff writers THE Australian competition watchdog said today it would
not oppose BHP Billiton’s proposed takeover of rival mining giant Rio
Tinto.

Andrew Colley IT took a few days but Hutchison 3 Mobile customers
finally have access to popular websites such as BigPond and Hotmail.

FAST food chain McDonald’s has consolidated its $65 million
advertising account with DDB, dumping rival agency Leo Burnett.

Bernard Lane THE University of New England may move to elect a new
chancellor as early as next month in the long-running leadership
crisis.

Michael Bloomberg will seek to overturn a term limits law so he can
run New York for another four years.

Mark Dodd AN Australian delegation visiting Croatia will today meet
its leaders to press for help in resolving the fate of Britt
Lapthorne.

Paul Kelly, Editor-at-large ROSS Garnaut’s report will be anathema to
the environmental lobby but it focuses on the achievable.

Avril Groom in Milan WITH couture taking a clobbering, shoes and
accessories are now at the pointy end of fashion

Operation repo schedule’s news reverse thursday

October 1, 2008

NEW YORK, Sept 25 (Reuters) – The U.S. Federal Reserve said it
undertook a $2 billion overnight system reverse repurchase agreement
on Thursday, to further drain temporary reserves from the banking
system after doing an initial reverse repo.

Earlier on Thursday, the Fed said that it drained $20.0 billion from
the banking system through an overnight reverse repo operation,
bringing the total amount of overnight reverse repurchases on Thursday
to $22 billion.

To implement monetary policy, short-term repurchase and reverse
repurchase agreements are used to temporarily affect the size of the
Federal Reserve System’s portfolio and to influence day-to-day trading
in the federal funds market.

At the time that the Fed undertook its second reverse repo operation
on Thursday, federal funds were trading at 1.75 percent, below the
Fed’s 2 percent benchmark for the rate. (Reporting by Chris Reese;
Editing by Theodore d’Afflisio)

Thomson Reuters is the world’s largest international multimedia news
agency, providing investing news, world news, business news,
technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts,
personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available
on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms.
Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which
requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

The operation repo schedule banks u.s central

October 1, 2008

: Central banks have pushed mountains of short-term cash at banks, but
so far, the crisis has not abated — and analysts said Tuesday
that banks unwillingness to lend to each other won’t end until there
is a fundamental improvement in the entire system and faith is
restored.

“It’s a delicate time in terms of liquidity; I see central banks
pumping money into the system for at least the next three to four
months,” said Gilles Moec, an economist at Bank of America in London.

“I think they’ll have to do that until things are normalized, and that
they’re prepared to go all the way,” he said. “So far, I’ve been
impressed by their swift reactions.”

Since Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy protection two weeks ago,
the bailout of insurer AIG and the shotgun mergers and state
intervention of banks from the U.S. to Iceland to Germany, banks have
been reluctant to lend money to anyone, including each other.

That has caused central banks, including the European Central Bank, to
open the taps and provide euros and dollars so banks can operate, in
line with their role as liquidity providers of last resort.

On Monday, the ECB and the U.S. Federal Reserve took dead aim at the
financial meltdown, doubling their temporary reciprocal currency
arrangements, or swap lines for cash-hungry banks to US$240 billion.

Other central banks around the world including in Japan, Canada, the
Nordic countries and Australia also increased their dollar swaps
Monday, bringing the total swap lines to over US$600 billion.

Furthermore, central banks around the world have been providing other
short-term liquidity on almost a daily basis for weeks in an effort to
keep markets financed. On Tuesday, the ECB lent a total of €190
billion to banks for a week’s period when it had originally planned to
siphon off €40 billion from the banking system.

That’s the right thing to do, analysts said, but restored confidence
in the system probably won’t happen before more banks go broke, get
bailed out or nationalized.

“Banks aren’t going to lend to one another if there is reason to
believe that they may become insolvent,” said Luca Cazzulani, a fixed
income strategist with UniCredit in Milan.

“The recent central bank moves can help increase liquidity in the
markets, but can’t prevent uncertainty. Central bank injections can
help the demand side, but not the supply side. It seems it will be a
long, painful road until this improves.”

Cazzulani said approval of the US$700 billion U.S. Troubled Assets
Relief Program, known as the TARP bailout, could mark the “ascent from
the abyss,” and improve sentiment but predicts “The financial sector
will still be experiencing clear signs of stress 18 months from now.
There will be further problems before the horizon appears cleared up.”

On Monday, the U.S. House of Representatives narrowly rejected the
plan, and it was uncertain whether the bill would come to another vote
or what form it would take.

On Tuesday afternoon, German Chancellor Angela Merkel called on the
U.S. to pass the measure this week, saying the quick passage of a
rescue package is “the precondition for creating new confidence on the
markets — and that is of incredibly great significance.”

Cazzulani said if TARP does not win approval soon, markets will bet
hugely on a U.S. Federal Reserve rate cut from the current 2 percent
as soon as next month to spark more lending. He said he thought the
European Central Bank was better positioned to protect the European
economy and its financial system, as it has more room to maneuver its
interest rates downward from the current 4.25 percent rate if
necessary.

The ECB is expected to hold its rate steady this week, while the Bank
of England could lower its rate from the current 5 percent as soon as
Oct. 9.

Europe now faces a financial crisis almost as grave as that in the
United States — demonstrating how swiftly this contagion is
spreading around the world.

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Reference’s mccain bill pelosi

September 30, 2008

In the latest version of his stump speech on the economy, Barack Obama
is today working in a reference to John McCain’s fondness for gambling
to warn that another Republican administration would be snake eyes for
America.

“I read the other day that Senator McCain likes to gamble,” Obama
plans to say, referring to a New York Times story on Sunday about
McCain’s role in the growth of casinos on Indian reservations. “He
likes to roll those dice. And that’s OK. I enjoy a little friendly
game of poker myself every now and then.

“But one thing I know is this – we can’t afford to gamble on
four more years of the same disastrous economic policies we’ve had for
the last eight,” Obama says in remarks prepared for delivery in
Westminster, Colo. “I know that when Senator McCain says he wants to
bring the same kind of deregulation to our healthcare system that he
helped bring to our banking system – his words – well,
that’s a bet we can’t afford. We can’t afford to roll the dice by
privatizing Social Security, and wagering the nest egg of millions of
Americans on Wall Street. We can’t afford to gamble on more of the
same trickle down philosophy that showers tax breaks on big
corporations and the wealthiest few. We’ve tried that. It doesn’t
work. “With our economy at risk, and our future in the balance, the
greatest risk in this election is to repeat the same mistakes of the
past. We can’t take a chance on the same losing game.”

Obama also plans to declare that the Wall Street bailout plan being
voted on today is improved because it includes more protections for
taxpayers. He said McCain’s support for deregulation helped lead to
the crisis.

“You see, Senator McCain just doesn’t get it – he
doesn’t get that this crisis on Wall Street hit Main Street a
long time ago. That’s why his first response to the greatest
fiscal meltdown in generations was to say that the ‘fundamentals of
the economy are strong,’ and why he didn’t say the words
‘middle-class’ once in an entire 90-minute debate,” Obama said.

In a few weeks we will make a choice that will decide our future. I
follow an economist named Bob Proctor. He has called the top and
bottom of every market crash since the 70s correctly. Also, he
perfectly predicted the current real estate market meltdown and the
picture he paints about what will happen in the next couple years is
terrifying.He thinks it will be worse then the great depression. The
banks in the U.S. are going under one after the other. Countrywide the
largest morgage bank in the world,Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers and
Merrill Lynch which are 3 out of the top 5 wall street firms. Also,
Fanny and Freddy Mae which hold 50 percent of the home loans in the
United States. The government took them over because they are
essentially bankrupt.If they didn’t the entire financially system
would virtually shut down, the stock market would crash and we would
suffer beyond what any of us have seen before. McCain just like Bush ”
doesn’t understand the economy”. That not just my opinion its his own
words. Not only does he not understand how to fix it but he does not
understand exactly what is broken. It is no surprise that he doesn’t.
The people that make up these securities use complex mathematical
models very few people understand. Bush and McCain both can take the
credit for this mess since they helped deregulate the laws that were
protecting us.

Bush’s economic advisor Phil Graham wrote the deregulation bill that
allowed banks to take huge risks with all of our future. Now, Phil
Graham is the head of McCain’s economic policy.He is also McCain’s
choice for the next secretary of the treasury. No one in this country
can afford for that to happen. The last time Bush met with his
economic advisors was in March. He either didn’t care or didn’t
realize that anything was wrong. Phil Graham had the guts to say that
we are in a mental recession after he helped create the worst economy
meltdown in our lifetime. It will take the best and brightest minds in
the world to get us out of this nightmare. As bad as Bush has done,
McCain would be even more destructive because things are in much worse
shape. The next president will not inherit a surplus like Bush did but
a tanking economy and a 11,600,000,000,000 (trillion) dollars deficit.
Most of it Bush created and it will take decades to pay it back. If
you do what you have always done then you will get what you have
always got.

When it comes to policy Bush and McCain are the same 90 percent of the
time. So why are the polls even close then ?

The chairman of McCains campaign recently said that people don’t vote
on issues they vote on a personality composite. Which means he is
trying to sell you personality instead of results.

Let’s teach him we are smarter than that . Hold them accountable NOW!
while it will still help. Elect Obama Biden 2008

No to McCain, I would never vote for a traitor! Yes I said it, as
defined by Webster “one who betrays another’s trust or is false to an
obligation or duty”! That is what he did in Nam and that is what he
will continue to do to this country.

Thank you Pelosi for sinking Wall Street! You and the Democrats failed
the leadership test. You are a disgusting human being!! You can’t set
aside partisan politics for one lousy second. You are sick, sick,
sick.

Opponents said part of the reason for the opposition from Republicans
was what they termed a partisan speech by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi,
said one GOP source.

“Pelosi’s partisan speech has caused our members to go berserk and may
cost us any remaining chance to pass the bill,” the source said.

Pelosi had said that Congress needed to pass the bill, even though it
was an outgrowth of the “failed economic policies” of the last eight
years.

“When was the last time someone asked you for $700 billion?” she
asked. “It is a number that is staggering, but tells us only the costs
of the Bush administration’s failed economic policies — policies
built on budgetary recklessness, on an anything goes mentality, with
no regulation, no supervision, and no discipline in the system.”

GD DEMOCRATS CAN’T KEEP THEIR PARTISAN MOUTHS SHUT!! PELOSI NEEDS TO
LEARN LEADERSHIP SKILLS AND WORKING ACROSS THE AISLES FROM MCCAIN!!

Several Republican aides said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.,
had torpedoed any spirit of bipartisanship that surrounded the bill
with her scathing speech near the close of the debate that blamed
Bush’s policies for the economic turmoil.

Without mentioning her by name, Rep. Adam Putnam, R-Fla., No. 3
Republican, said: “The partisan tone at the end of the debate today I
think did impact the votes on our side.”

When we, the people of the United States, vote this November will be
voting for much more than the names on a ticket. It wont be just
McCain/Palin? or Obama/Biden. We will say how disgusted we are with
the use of our hard earned money by the government, how hurt we are by
the incompetent politicians in Washington, how fed up we are with the
whole system that forgets the fundamental principle of our democracy:
elected officials are elected to SERVE the people, not to serve
themselves.

..THANK YOU. From the bottom of my heart. Don’t take from Main Street
to give to Wall Street! If Nancy Pelosi killed this evil bill, then
she deserves the thanks of a grateful nation.

As for blaming George W. Bush’s policies – well, as Colin Powell told
him, “you break it…YOU BOUGHT IT”.

McCain should not be faulted for the 8 year debacle of Bush. He wants
change just as much as Obama and is a Maverick Republican, so don’t be
pushed to vote for Obama for that.

Pelosi is at fault? Are you kidding me? Americans to suffer
financially because of a speech? Feelings got hurt? The proof is in
the pudding. 66% of Dems voted for the bill 66% of Republicans did
not. I don’t care much for Pelosi, but I think it’s a damn shame that
the GOP, the party that stood for the free market intensionally caused
it to crash. That is it. I am no longer voting for McCain, you can
count this Independent now for Barack Obama.

Pathetic repugnicans now blaming Pelosi for 8 years of destruction by
the repugnicans. “Only recently has their candidate become alarmed by
the deficit” – Ronald Reagan (who would switch BACK to the democratic
party in light of all this mismanagement) – applies directly to
McSenile today.

Like it or not, Democrats have been in control of the government purse
strings for better than two years. Democrats have been in control of
all the regulatory and oversight committee’s since they took control
of Congress. How many terms are we, the people, supposed to wait
before a Democratic controlled Congress steps up and does what it’s
supposed to do? Any party who would allow our economy to fail while
waiting on a “veto proof” margin, should not be allowed any further
control in Congress, and certainly not Congress and the White House.
Neither presidential candidate represents the interests and concerns
of America’s Citizens. Voters should focus on turning out of office as
mant long-term Congressional Elites and Power Brokers as possible this
fall. By changing the balance of power and tenure in Congress, we the
people, can marginalize the damage that either an Obama or a McCain
presidency will cause. Doubtless, many voters from both party’s wish
we had another choice!

This is absolutely a silly assertion. It’s absolutely possible that
McCain might “gamble” on the economy. The reason why it’s silly is
because he CAN’T. Who would gamble right now with the economy in such
a state? If anything, the next president will have no leasure to do
anything but bail out the economy for the next four years.

I don’t like Pelosi either, but it was the house Republicans that came
out against this long before it came up for a vote. Learn to accept
responsibility and learn to accept defeat. It will make November 5
easier on all you McPalin supporters.

I honestly dont want to pay for Wall Street. Who is going to “bail” me
out when I make wrong decisions?

#6 Most likely, voters will be so disgusted that they will refuse to
vote, and only those self serving die hards who do vote will control
our democracy and our economy. To paraphrase one of the founders, “the
only thing worse than the tyranny of the majority, is the tyranny of
the minority”!

Obama, whose co-workers on the Altgeld Gardens project in Chicago,
where he claims he got his “executive experience,” stated “he was
ineffective.” Obama, whose $1 million home was bankrolled by a
convicted felon. Obama, who has spent all of 143 days in the Senate,
where his votes amounted to registering “Present” on critical issues.
This is the guy saying McCain doesn’t know anything about the
economy???? The fact that he’s even running for president is a
travesty!!! The Dems must really be desperate!

This is a tough bill from any stand point, but speed is a necessity.
The original bail out bill strategy was authored by Bush himself and
Treasury Secretary Paulson, Republicans who appear anemic politically.
It is difficult for democrats to vote for this bill because the
financial collapse was caused by Republican mismanagement and
financial deregulation policies. The irony is so deep and painful it
is staggering. Calling this a “democratic” bill is laughable. That
Pelosi put language in her speech before the bill is not surprising
because the American people would expect it. It should have been toned
down a little, but it was correct to do it. Democrats and Republicans
who did not vote for the bill are extremely selfish and self-serving
by not voting for it. They have to suck-it-up.

Obama says that Macain will gamble on our economy[ WAKE UP OBAMA] you
are for a bill in the house right now thats the bigest gamble in
americas history. No one knows if it will work and the chances are
that it wont

I am no Pelosi fan, but why blame Dems? Bush & McCain have too little
influence in their own party to get the plan passed.

Type your comment here…Well, unless we all write in “None of the
above”, the election won’t be saying much about change.

Why would you not look to Phil Graham, the champion of deregulation,
and McCain, the ugly sidekick with the demons of guilt from all his
buddies HE left behind in Nam. (We need no other proof that he lives
in a fantasy world than his choice for VP). This has been going on for
quite some time, and didn’t just start with the Bush “Regime”. The
separation of S&L;’s (Keating ring a bell, McCain?) from banks was to
blame as well.

Can’t believe these people who said that Pelosi killed the bill
because she criticized Bush economic policies.

It is like all those republicans are like small kids. It is laughable
to say that they voted against the bill that their own party’s
President put forward just because Pelosi said something. Please no
excuses, country first.

This whole “Pelosi killed the Bailout Bill” schtick is just plain
silly — grow-up and think for yourself already! If an educated
thinking adult in a position of power and influence can have their
vote swayed by some standard rhetoric, then they don’t deserve that
position — either it’s the right thing to do or it’s not, simple as
that. The Republican leadership failed to deliver the vote —
McCain/Bush/whoever-thinks-they’re-in-charge-of-the-dysfunctional-
Republican-Party failed to deliver — show some spine and quit
spinning it for once. And the thought that in a Republic that a bunch
of “Joe-Sixpacks” crying “no bailout” can drown-out every single
economist of any stature at all saying “we need a bailout” just proves
our electoral system is broken. We need some people who display
leadership, intelligence and guts in government, not just a bunch of
pandering fools…

Let nobody mistake, the true culprits in this bailout package debacle
—the House Republicans and John McCain.

I am a working mom, independent voter, and my 401K has just lost 20%
of it’s value. Many other Americans may not yet have realized what is
happening to them, but as someone who is educated on this issue, I
assure you that I will make sure they ALL understand and know who is
responsible. I will encourage ALL of my friends to contribute to the
DNC. I am not going to sit back and watch mine and my child’s future
get piddled away.

Pelosi did not kills anything. it is the GOP members like girls who
cannot take a blame.

What broke the bill is that CEO compensation stayed in; if they had a
golden parachute agreement. Did you want your money going to those
crooks?

They are too busy blaming everyone else for the crisis that they fail
to LEAD and get a bipartisan solution to the crisis.

The name of this site is a misnomer. l have seen very little
intelligence in government since the ’92 election. The gamble was
started back under Clinton when financial institutions were allowed
(?) required (?) to make housing loans to people that could not afford
them. By using ARM loans someone could get a much larger loan than he
could other wise pay back. So when the interest adjust they can no
longer afford the payments. The snowball starts to roll. Add cooking
the books so that the institutions show that they are doing well and
the CEO can get their huge bonuses, the snowball grows. The board of
directors looks the other way (did they get their cut also?) In 05
democats defended what we have now.

Why did Pelosi have to throw in cutesy zingers against Bush and pissss
off any of the Republicans?

Why? Because she can’t. She’s a typical raving lunatic far left wing
lunatic who has not clue how to reach consensus or build partnerships
across the aisle.

Who cares if Pelosi made a partisan speech? Your job is to help the
american people. Instead of focusing on a speech like some high school
teenage girls, why don’t these so-called politicians try to help the
people who are losing their jobs, homes, retirement savings, etc. What
kind of argument is this to blame it on a stupid speech?!!? Do your
job!

McCain rolled the dice at the request of his handlers in order to
grandstand the financial issue, and ended up looking like a jerk to
anyone with half a brain. Maverick! are you kidding? Rather, the yes-
man played to the worst elements of the fascist Republican Party and
his band of Republican Brown-shirts on the propadandized right-wing
radio, the only source the maverick will go to get his ques. These
collaborators and puppertiers use only lies, scandal and manipulation
to achieve their poisoned ends. Utterly disgusting humanoid debris…

Evidently Ed Weirdness is not a well informed individual. He blames
the Democrats who controlled Congress for 2 years when anyone paying
attention knows that the Republicans in the Senate filibustered at
record levels creating gridlock on anything that they didn’t agree
with. That’s right, the same GOP that in the last congress threatened
to ‘nuke’ the filibuster because it gave the minority (when they are
Democrats) too much power. But not now. No, they abused the filibuster
along with Bush’s veto pen to marginalize what the Democrats could do.

Besides holding the Dem’s at bay for two years Ed conveniently
overlooks that the Republicans controlled all three branches of
government, including their activist supreme court justices, for six
years and the Congress since 1994.

This was basically a bill that wasn’t good enough anyway, not putting
enough pressure on Wall St. and not enough benefit for Main St. I hope
that the revised bill will make those that need bailing out feel as
pain as many as the 95% of other Americans have been dealing with for
years. We more of a bailout for Main St. Because Wall St. will never
exist in a free market without a middle class being able to create
sufficient demand needed for sustaining products and services.

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About political intelligence Field reports from Boston Globe reporters
and editors covering the 2008 presidential campaign and the national
maneuvering of Bay State politicians.
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