Robert Scheer: Change We Can Bank On
President-elect Obama should put his trust in the FDIC's Sheila Bair to lead the Treasury.
This is not change we can believe in. Not if Robert Rubin or his protege, Lawrence Summers, gets to call the shots on the economy in President-elect Barack Obama‘s incoming administration. Both Bill Clinton-era Treasury secretaries deserve a great deal of the blame for the radical deregulation of the financial industry that has derailed the world economy. They both should, along with former Federal Reserve chief Alan Greenspan, perform rites of contrition and be kept at a safe distance from the leadership of our nation.

But it was Summers who most vehemently pushed for congressional passage of that drastic deregulation measure, the Financial Services Modernization Act, which eliminated the New Deal barriers against mergers of commercial and investment banks, as well as insurance companies and stock brokers. Standing at his side as President Clinton signed the legislation, Summers heralded it as “a major step forward to the 21st century” — and what a wonderful century it’s proving to be.
It was also Summers who worked in cahoots with Enron and banking lobbyists, and who backed Republican Sen. Phil Gramm‘s Commodity Futures Modernization Act, which banned any effective government regulation of the newly unleashed derivatives market. The result was not only a temporary boon to Enron, which soon collapsed under its unbridled greed, but also to the entire Wall Street financial community.
The only opposition from within the Clinton administration came from Brooksley Born, who as head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, dared defy Summers and Rubin, as well as Greenspan. In frequent appearances before Congress, she warned that the burgeoning derivatives trading “threatens our economy without any federal agency knowing about it.”
In reward for her prescience, Born, a highly regarded legal expert on derivatives, was treated to scornful attacks from the old boys’ network, led (again) by Rubin, Greenspan and Summers, who questioned her competency and insisted it was she who threatened the stability of the market.
“It was Larry Summers who called her up and screamed at her,” Amy Siskind, co-founder of the New Agenda, a women’s rights group that grew out of the Hillary Rodham Clinton presidential campaign, told the Boston Globe to support her view that Summers is a “known misogynist.”
Whatever the motives, Born was painfully right in her warnings, and Summers was totally wrong in overseeing the passage of legislation that summarily prevented any government regulation of the debt instruments that have proved so disastrous. I don’t know if Born, now retired at 68, would be interested in the Treasury secretary position, but she is certainly far more qualified than thee other candidates under consideration.
Barring that possibility, why not go with Sheila Bair, chairwoman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, who has distinguished herself by proposing a sterling alternative example of how to deal with the banking collapse? It is Bair who has most forcefully advanced the goal, advocated by Obama in his recent “60 Minutes” interview, of putting homeowners before banks. Under her leadership, the FDIC has made sure that the insured banks, which it supervises and occasionally takes over, act to prevent foreclosures rather than using government handouts to finance new bank mergers.
On Tuesday, House Democrats led by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., accused Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson of betraying congressional language authorizing the $700 billion bailout that specifically called for “mortgage foreclosure diminution.” Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., said, “We’re basically funding mergers and acquisitions, not lending.” On Friday, Bair introduced a proposal to allocate $24.4 billion of the bailout specifically to modify loans to prevent 1.5 million foreclosures, but was opposed by Paulson.
Because Geithner and Summers support Paulson’s approach, Obama should reject them and pick Bair to give us the kind of change he’s been promising.
TruthDig.com editor in chief Robert Scheer‘s new book is The Pornography of Power: How Defense Hawks Hijacked 9/11 and Weakened America. Click here for more information. He can be reached at .
» wrote on 11/21/08 @ 08:41 AM
Lower taxes, smaller government, less regulations on business, Tort reform, much lower workers comp rates. The trial lawyers are killing business and government with frivolous law suits. The time has come for change if you sue someone and you lose you pay, but the trial lawyers have paid off the Democratic leaders so they can continue to extort money from all of us.
» wrote on 11/21/08 @ 09:34 AM
Hear hear! One friend I know says you should never vote for a politician who’s a lawyer. THINK ABOUT IT.
» wrote on 11/21/08 @ 04:15 PM
Under W we lowered taxes, reduced regulations and look where it got us!! The trial lawyer issue and the costs of lawsuits is so overplayed. It only represents about 2% of total insurance costs but is consistly referred to by the right wing as the main reason for our financial problems. The real cost of insurance is the greedy people running it and extorting 30% of the total cost in lining their wallets.
Our problems have come from the destruction of the middle class over the past 8 years in favor of wealth and earnings concentration. Now we have about 95% of the population in survival mode thanks to the Free Market Greed Policies of the GOP. If the GOP has the philosophy that government is so bad then maybe they ought to stay out of it as opposed to destroying it?
Unfortunately, when you hire incompetent but loyal people you have a receipe for disaster. When the focus in America is to gain a pile of money without caring how you got it, then the system broken and needs a major overhaul.
» wrote on 11/21/08 @ 11:38 PM
The slip and fall attorney’s and the overtime and breaks attorney’s have been chasing away and destroying businesses for years in America. These lawyers would sell their mothers for a buck. China India and Mexico just love it..
» wrote on 11/22/08 @ 12:22 AM
The pile of money you talk about sounds like trial lawyers, who have paid off the Democratic party so the can continue to steal.
Tort reform is change, and needed now.

