Massive regulation overhaul going to President Barack Obama

 
By Adam Lyons in : Adam@Champion, News // Jul 15 2010

Politics and LegislationThe vote to end debate was 60-38, the minimum needed to overcome a filibuster. But that ensured that the bill has the votes for final passage, which could come later Thursday.

At a thud-inducing 2,300 pages, the legislation is designed to rein in big banks and protect consumers, with the aim of averting a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis. Its ultimate impact, however, will depend on the government regulators assigned to implement it.

The 2,300-page legislation, among other things:

  • Gives the government new powers to break up teetering companies which, if allowed to fail, would threaten the economy.
  • Creates a new agency to protect consumers in their financial transactions.
  • Shines a light into shadowy financial markets that have escaped the oversight of regulators.

The legislation is the result of a year’s worth of partisan struggles and delicate cross-party courtships that at times promised more votes but in the end delivered barely enough.

Three Senate Republicans voted with 55 Democrats and two independents to end debate on the bill Thursday.

Named after Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd and House financial Services Committee chairman Barney Frank, the legislation ends a trend to ease regulations and instead clamps down on the financial industry in ways unseen since the Great Depression.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid“Wall Street rigged the game,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said. “They put our money on the table. When they won, they won big. The jackpots they took home were in the billions. But when they lost and, boy did they lose big, they came crying to the taxpayers for help.”

Republicans cast the bill as vast government overreach, and were betting that the voters’ antipathy toward big government and their worries over jobs would trump their anger at Wall Street.

“We’re going to be driving jobs and business overseas with this massive piece of legislation,” said Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga.

And Sen. Richard Shelby, R-ala., who worked with Dodd on certain aspects of the bill, denounc E0-it as a “legislative monster” and took special aim at the bill’s creation of a new consumer financial protection bureau

“While a consumer protection agency may sound like a good idea,” Shelby said, “the way it is constructed in this bill will slow economic growth and kill jobs by imposing massive new regulatory burdens on businesses.”

For a president hungry for good news, passage Thursday would be a welcome achievement. The legislation has been an Obama priority, and in its final form it hews closely to the plan his administration unveiled a year ago.

But its political benefits in a heated midterm election year stand to be overshadowed by lingering high unemployment.

Speaking on the Senate floor Thursday, Dodd, D-Conn., conceded that the bill’s impact will not be evident immediately.

“It is not a perfect bill, I will be the first to admit that,” he said. “It will take the next economic crisis, as certainly it will come, to determine whether or not the provisions of this bill will actually provide this generation or the next generation of regulators with the tools necessary to minimize the effects of that crisis.”

Industry lobbyists fought feverishly against a number of restrictions in the bill, ultimately winning some concessions. In the end, the final bill was tougher than they wanted but not as restrictive as they feared.

Steve Bartlett, the president of the Financial Services Roundtable, a banking group, struck a conciliatory tone in a speech he was scheduled to deliver later Thursday.

“Core elements of the bill will contribute to a stronger, more secure financial system,” he says in a text of the speech released in advance. “Some items in the legislation we did not support and we expressed our views accordingly. Nevertheless, we are committed to making those items work as well as possible.”

SOURCE: AzCentral.comAssociated Press

Related posts:
  1. FDIC given unlimited investigative authority on banks
  2. About the Carried Interest Legislation Proposal – HR 4213
  3. First Solar Acquiring NextLight Renewable Power LLC
  4. Boeing NewGen Tanker Win Would Bring 680 Jobs, $32 Million to Arizona
  5. Sovereign Funds Show Reignited Interest in Shopping for U.S. Property

About the Author

Adam Lyons has written 32 articles for Champion Partners Commercial Real Estate.

Adam Lyons has a broad background in software engineering and management. He has held principal engineering and management roles in a variety of companies; financial, online auctioning, internet service providers, life sciences, consulting and software development firms. His diverse technical experience continues to provide innovative management methods and problem solving skills to every affiliation. Managing teams for development informatics has been his unique ability for over 15 years. In early 2007, Adam joined Champion Partners, a commercial real estate development company. Adam, as chief operating officer of Champion Partners, now manages the strategic lending and development platform at Champion, regularly embracing his significant background in development informatics with every project.

Comments are closed.

blog comments powered by Disqus