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Susan Estrich
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Playing With Financial Fire

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Republican senators are playing with fire. And Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is perfectly content to pile on the logs.

It's hard to see how you argue against stricter financial regulation of Wall Street risk-taking, at least outside of closed-door sessions with Wall Street leaders — like the one Republican Sens. Mitch McConnell and John Cornyn had earlier this month with about two dozen financial executives.

The purpose of that meeting, at least according to press accounts, was to figure out how to water down the Democratic financial reform bill that Republicans voted unanimously on Monday not even to allow to come to the floor.

In the meantime, the Democrats are making news by holding public hearings to showcase the lengths to which Wall Street went to make sure that while millions of Americans were losing their savings and their jobs, the big banks were making money by playing both sides of the game.

Of course, playing both sides is how investment banks operate. But the rules require that they at least disclose that to their customers, even if most of us would know where to look to find that information.

But this is about politics right now, not financial disclosure. And frankly, politics is a lot easier to decipher.

The Democrats understand that they have a winning issue right now. Goldman Sachs is making money. Bonuses are back, if they ever went away. The same folks who made obscene amounts of money taking risks that taxpayers ended up covering are still making obscene amounts of money, even as they fight against regulation that would try to prevent another collapse by providing stricter oversight and greater protection for consumers.

You can babble all you want about "big government" being bad and too much regulation squashing free enterprise, but this is not 1980. This is not about higher taxes.

This is not health care. Most Americans were pretty happy with their own health insurance plans and worried that reform could cost them more or give them less. I haven't met anyone lately who's happy with how their IRA is doing. I haven't heard anyone on Main Street singing the praises of Wall Street, defending reckless packaging of risky investments put together for the sole purpose of ensuring short-term payoffs for the people who sold them.

The Republicans are fighting an uphill battle, politically speaking. Listen carefully, and they'll say that they aren't really against reform legislation; they just want to have some closed-door meetings to change (translate: weaken) the Democratic bill before it comes to the floor. Of course, they could have an open debate and make those changes publicly. But no, they want a deal first.

Am I the only one who remembers when they were raising all kinds of heck about the Democrats meeting behind closed doors to work out a deal on health care before they brought that bill to the floor? The argument worked, by the way; it was an important piece of their successful public campaign against health care reform. Now anyone who watches Washington carefully knows that consistency is a talking point and not a principle in politics. But it's a pretty good talking point.

The Republicans' unwillingness to even have an open debate about financial reform makes them look like Wall Street really did get its money's worth from them. Sure, the Democrats get money from the bankers, too. (Who else can afford these $35,000 dinners, after all?) But the big question is not who gave what to whom, but what they got for it.

Reid has made clear that he's going to keep scheduling votes to take up financial reform, daring Republicans to keep voting as a bloc to stop it. Either one or more Republicans defect, in which case the rest of them look bad, or they all stick together, in which case they all look bad.

With thanks to my brother for correcting me: Heads they lose; tails Democrats win.

To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM


Comments

8 Comments | Post Comment
Hopefully, you are right and Republicans will suffer from blocking THIS reform. However, getting rich quick, without working for it, is the American Dream and a significant percentage of working Americans admire Wall Street wheeler-dealers who play the game and win big. What Democrats must do is differentiate the common man's dream of winning the lottery or the jackpot in Las Vegas fron the high-stakes gambling on Wall Street that can destroy the working man's assets--his job, the value of his home, his 401K and IRA and his access to credit. Claire McCaskill made a good start by casting the Goldman deals in gambling house terms, but again, Dems have to take that analogy "to the bank" by showing working Americans what's wrong with such "smart" money deals. It's not that it's criminal or even unethical or immoral. It's that it HURTS average working people where they live.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Laurie Craw
Tue Apr 27, 2010 10:30 PM
Ms. Estrich,
Once again you fail to see the real issue, that is too much power concentrated in one geographic region. Meaning, Washington DC with its politicians and bureaus possessing too much authority. While I am not a fan of the investment banking community, I cannot fault them for diverting funds to DC in order to gain a competitive advantage in the market. So as long as DC and its inhabitants feel the need to make the rules of the game, referee the game, and decide the winner, this behavior is going to continue. And, the democratic party is in no position what so ever to say that Republicans are in the pocket of Wall Street. Lets remember the Democrats did out raise them by almost a 2 -1 margin. How about letting the investment community and its failing companies die a fast death when they fail in the market. The only thing that the government should do is preside over the bankruptcy hearings. That is it and that is all!
Comment: #2
Posted by: Frankie Barbella
Wed Apr 28, 2010 6:35 AM
If Goldman Sachs are so evil, why are so many in the Obama cabinet. Why isn't Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac being held responsible for starting the fiasco. Congress (Republican andDemocrat) opened the door and Wall Street walked in. This, of course was wrong, but it isn' Wall Street alone.

This is a situation where every one responsible should be held accountable. Will the new regulations help the "Fat Cats" but harm the smaller financial institutions?

Though I agree with you often, I must disagree on this. I still have tremendous respect for you

Ron
Comment: #3
Posted by: Ron Kohl
Wed Apr 28, 2010 11:07 AM
Omitting truckloads of information must be the only way liberals can make an argument these days. Not one word about Democratic Party ties to Wall Street, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Chris Dodd, Barnie Frank, Chuck Schumer, or the many Goldman Sachs fat cats in Obama's administration? Incredible. There's plenty of blame to go around here, and I think we're all tired of the finger pointing and political grandstanding by both parties. Hang 'em ALL out to dry!
Comment: #4
Posted by: Bob
Wed Apr 28, 2010 11:45 AM
Have to agree with Ron. Until Congress includes Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in their investigations it's simple political posturing. Will this hurt the Republicans. Perhaps, but does that justify letting the corruption in the two mentioned quasi governmental financial institutions go uninvestigated?
If you'r only goal is to defeat Republicans rather than truly im,prove Wall Street accountability, then the Dems are on the right track.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Dave Kidd
Wed Apr 28, 2010 11:57 AM
Nothing Harry, Nancy and Obammma are for cannot be good for the nation.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Paul
Wed Apr 28, 2010 5:50 PM
Again - the point in being against financial reform is lost as it was in halthcare reform. Do Repblicans agree reform is necessary in both? YES. Do they agree with specific reform in each area? YES. The problem is when you look at the proposed reform and handing even more control over to the government. You see it as a Democratic win with the appearance the Republicans are the party of "NO" - but luckily people are catching on that it is perectly acceptable to say no to the government controlling more of our lives.
Comment: #7
Posted by: Lisa
Thu Apr 29, 2010 10:41 AM
oh and my keyboard is y excuse for the typos! ;-)
Comment: #8
Posted by: Lisa
Thu Apr 29, 2010 10:42 AM
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