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Obama Wants New Agency for Consumers

By ANNE FLAHERTY and JIM KUHNHENN
,
AP
posted: 164 DAYS 12 HOURS AGO
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WASHINGTON (June 16) - Setting up a certain fight with big business, President Barack Obama is proposing a new regulatory agency to police lenders and protect consumers in credit, savings and other banking transactions.
The consumer agency and a newly empowered Federal Reserve will be two of the central elements of a broad overhaul of the financial regulatory system that the president will announce on Wednesday, officials said.
Already the U.S. central bank, the Federal Reserve would supervise large financial institutions that are considered so big that their failure could undermine America's economy, according to the administration proposal.
But even as the Fed gains new powers, Obama also would transfer some banking authority that now rests with the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department to the new consumer agency — the Consumer Financial Protection Agency.
"There is going to be streamlining, consolidation and additional overlap so that you don't find people falling through the gaps, whether it's the consumer protection side, the investor protection side, the systemic risk that we need to make sure is avoided," Obama said Tuesday.
The expanded Fed role and the new consumer regulator are likely to be the two main political flash points in the administration's proposal. Many bankers oppose a new consumer protection regulator and many lawmakers in Congress worry the Fed could turn into a too-powerful and independent financial overseer. Friction over those points could slow any major overhaul of banking and market regulations.
In addition to having the Federal Reserve supervise "systemically significant" institutions, Obama will recommend a council of regulators, which would include the Fed, to monitor risk throughout the broader financial system.
The arrangement is designed to prevent any more crashes like those that felled AIG and Lehman Brothers.
The plan does not attempt major consolidation of regulatory agencies and does not inject itself in an ongoing debate over whether to bring some insurance companies under federal oversight.
Asked on TV channel CNBC whether the plan stopped short out of political concerns, Obama said: "We want to get this thing passed. We think speed is important ... but we don't want to tilt at windmills. ... We want to get the best regulatory system in place."
Obama's decision to create a consumer agency comes amid criticism that mortgage lenders and credit card companies have taken advantage of unwitting customers and saddled them with debt. The financial crisis was precipitated in part by the preponderance of securities backed by mortgages that went sour when the housing market collapsed.
Treasury spokesman Andrew Williams said lax consumer protections contributed to the financial crisis and that the recession revealed even more weaknesses in consumer protections across the spectrum of financial markets. The new agency, he said, will "help ensure that consumers have the protection and the representation they deserve."
The new regulator would have the power to impose fines and allow states to pass laws that are stricter than the federal standards — an approach favored by consumer advocates. Consumer protections are now spread among various state and federal authorities, including the Fed, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Federal Trade Commission and banking regulators.
"Tremendous problems could have been avoided had such an agency weighed in against some of the abusive practices that Congress acted on only recently," said Travis Plunkett, legislative director of the Consumer Federation of America, citing excessive bank fees and misleading practices.
But business leaders made their opposition clear.
David Hirschmann, president and CEO of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Center for Capital Markets, said the chamber will oppose a standalone agency "that cannibalizes regulatory expertise, adding yet another regulatory layer."
The administration will also have to use its political skills to strengthen the Fed. While Democrats generally agree with a need for regulatory changes, many oppose relying too heavily on the Fed.
They say its status as a politically independent organization would make it difficult to keep the newly empowered organization in check.
"What happens if the representatives of the people and the president want a certain action and it's not taken?" asked Rep. Paul Kanjorski, a senior Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee.
"You can't fire the chairman of the Federal Reserve," Kanjorski said.
Sen. Christopher Dodd, chairman of the Banking Committee, is likely to become Obama's toughest opponent in Congress.
In private deliberations with the administration, Dodd has advocated an alternative plan to strip the Fed of its regulatory role entirely. Dodd's plan would create a new consolidated bank regulator that would assume the roles that the Fed and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. now play in helping regulate state-chartered banks.
Under this scenario, the Fed would focus on its existing mission as the nation's central bank — setting monetary policy and acting as a "lender of last resort."
Lawmakers, including Dodd, also say they are open to the administration's proposal that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. be put in charge of dismantling financial institutions that the Fed and Treasury Department decide pose a threat to the economy.
Rep. Barney Frank, a Democrat who chairs the House Financial Services Committee, has not taken a position on the administration's plan to bolster the powers of the Fed. A spokesman said Frank supports the idea of monitoring risk across the financial system.
In a staff document circulated last week, House Republicans on the committee argued that expanding the Fed's responsibilities and increasing government spending pose "a far more significant source of 'systemic risk' to our nation's economy than the failure of any specific financial institution."
Associated Press writers Alan Zibel, Jeannine Aversa and Dave Carpenter contributed to this report.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-06-16 18:50:37
COMMENTS ( 28 )
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Tommytortugam
1:53AM Jun 20 2009 
Top Senate Democrat: bankers "own" the U.S. Congress

Sen. Dick Durbin, on a local Chicago radio station this week, blurted out an obvious truth about Congress that, despite being blindingly obvious, is rarely spoken: "And the banks -- hard to believe in a time when we're facing a banking crisis that many of the banks created -- are still the most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. And they frankly own the place." The blunt acknowledgment that the same banks that caused the financial crisis "own" the U.S. Congress -- according to one of that institution's most powerful members -- demonstrates just how extreme this institutional corruption is.

The ownership of the federal government by banks and other large corporations is effectuated in literally countless ways, none more effective than the endless and increasingly sleazy overlap between government and corporate officials. Here is just one random item this week announcing a couple of standard personnel moves:
Former Barney Frank staffer now top Goldman Sachs lobbyist
Goldman Sachs' new top lobbyist was recently the top staffer to Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., on the House Financial Services Committee chaired by Frank. Michael Paese, a registered lobbyist for the Securities Industries and Financial Markets Association since he left Frank's committee in September, will join Goldman as director of government affairs, a role held last year by former Tom Daschle intimate, Mark Patterson, now the chief of staff at the Treasury Department. This is not Paese's first swing through the Wall Street-Congress revolving door: he previously worked at JP Morgan and Mercantile Bankshares, and in between served as senior minority counsel at the Financial Services Committee.

So: Paese went from Chairman Frank's office to be the top lobbyist at Goldman, and shortly before that, Goldman dispatched Paese's predecessor, close Tom Daschle associate Mark Patterson, to be Chief of Staff to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, himself a protege of former Goldman CEO Robert Rubin and a virtually wholly owned subsidiary of the banking industry. That's all part of what Desmond Lachman -- American Enterprise Institute fellow, former chief emerging market strategist at Salomon Smith Barney and top IMF official (no socialist he) -- recently described as "Goldman Sachs's seeming lock on high-level U.S. Treasury jobs."

Meanwhile, the above-linked Huffington Post article which reported on Durbin's comments also notes Sen. Evan Bayh's previously-reported central role on behalf of the bankers in blocking legislation, hated by the banking industry, to allow bankruptcy judges to alter the terms of mortgages so that families can stay in their homes. Bayh is up for re-election in 2010, and here -- according to the indispensable Open Secrets site -- is Bayh's top donor:
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SGentilejr
1:40AM Jun 17 2009 
IF the politicians in Washington DC did their jobs for the past 30 years we would not need a new agency to protect consumers from banks or credit card companies. It is the politicians in BOTH political parties in DC that allowed the banks and credit card companies to do whatever they wanted to do all these years. Many decades ago each individual state government had a say in it and each state set the max. credit card interest rate and late fees. The Federal government took control away from the individual states and allowed the banks and credit card companies to do whatever they wanted to do.
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HJCKINO
1:06AM Jun 17 2009 
The "O" man must be taking lesson's from Hugo Chavez- This president has no idea what's going on (1) agancy more tax's more printed money - and more BS . How about doing something for the $50 billion lost in Tarp money- How drilling for some oil? How about not stopping nuculear energy plants - all thbis new enery BS takes money and time. We have neither. This country has got to vote out all these give-a- way politicians in 2010. Stop the "O" man he's bad for this country.
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RSLPilot
12:26AM Jun 17 2009 
Obama Lies: 1) Tax cuts for all-- the "Rich" will pay for it. Reality; Cap and Trade Tax, Value Added Tax, Health Care Benifits Tax--all stealth taxes costing the average joe $3000 to $4000 a year. 2) His "Stimulis" (85% Social Programs) will limit unemployment to 8%--Now at 9.4% and rising rapidly. 3) Will "save" (yeah right) or create 3.5 million jobs--2 million lost and counting. Will imeadiately withdraw from Iraq--Now using the same time line as Bush administration. His $1.5 Trillion (and rising rapidly) health care plan to insure 46 Million people (15 million are illegally here) will "save us money"--reality, that is over $70,000 for each person he "insures"! He is already using code talk for rationed health care and tax hikes to pay for his socialized medicine plan. This man is a dangerous, egotistical, smooth talker.
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RSLPilot
12:02AM Jun 17 2009 
Another day, another Obama Czar.
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