LaTourette opposes Dodd-Frank financial reform bill

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

U.S. Rep. Steven C. LaTourette (R-OH0 today blasted the proposed Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, saying it makes the Wall Street bailout permanent, fails to address the failures of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, does little to avert another financial meltdown, rewards banks that are too big to fail and punishes responsible community banks and credit unions.

LaTourette said federal regulators were too chummy with Wall Street and big banks and asleep at the wheel when the housing bubble burst and caused the biggest financial meltdown since the Great Depression.  LaTourette said the financial regulatory bill, known as Dodd-Frank for its authors, does not come close to true reform.

"This bill is supposed to scare the living daylights out of Wall Street and the big banks, but Lloyd Blankfein, the head of Goldman says 'the biggest beneficiary of reform is Wall Street itself,'" LaTourette said.

LaTourette said the bill makes the Wall Street bailout permanent and is loaded with new regulations and expanded bureaucracy rather than addressing regulators' lax oversight and failures.  The cost of all the new regulations will fall to consumers, in higher fees, and less lending even to those who are credit-worthy, he said.

"Regulators ignored warning signs and treated those they were supposed to police with deference and backroom secret-handshakes," LaTourette said. "It takes a very cozy, clubby world to miss Bernie Madoff and the collapse of the housing market and our economy.  We wouldn't let BP dictate new drilling regulations, yet the fingerprints of those who caused our economic ruin are all over this bill."

LaTourette said the bill leaves us vulnerable to more financial chaos, like banks and firms too big to fail.  He said the bill is mute on the failed Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, which had a massive role in the housing collapse, yet handcuffs those with great track records for responsible lending - community banks and credit unions.

 

            "Only in Washington would community banks and credit unions face a sledgehammer while Wall Street firms and big banks get swatted with a feather duster, he said.

 

            LaTourette said Allan Sloan, Senior Editor-at-Large at Fortune, wrote that that Dodd-Frank bill should be renamed the "Toe-Nibbling Act of 2010."

 

            "The reason is that, with a rare exception or two, this 2,000-page bill nibbles at the toes of the problems that brought us the worldwide financial meltdown.  It doesn't go for the throat -- its sponsors just pretend that it does," wrote Sloan.

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