Here is the Hill article:
"Senate Finance members from both parties on Tuesday repeatedly questioned a notion espoused by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner that the availability of credit, such as to start-up companies or individuals, would not be restricted by the bank tax.
Geithner argued that most institutions serving small businesses and individuals would not subjected to the tax. He also said that institutions subjected to the levy would likely lose customers if they passed the cost of the tax on to end users.
<snip, Geitner also said that 99% of firms giving SB loans were not affected>
Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) countered the Secretary's rationale by noting a report from the Congressional Budget Office that found that the availability of credit would be restricted by creating a tax on banks that take extraordinary risks.
"I'm concerned that however it works in practice it may not be that clean cut," Kerry said. "And the result could be that small business may have an impact."
<followed by a sentence with Roberts speaking of $1 trillion!>
http://thehill.com/blogs/on-the-money/domestic-taxes/95885-capital-would-not-be-limited-by-bank-tax-geithner-saidSeeing this, I was stunned as this is a Republican argument. Now, before posting this luckily I decided to look at the hearing. The fact is that this is pretty distorted article, even though the Kerry quote is accurate. What is missing is the context.
John Kerry's interaction with Geitner was not confrontational at all. His first several questions dealt with getting greater clarity in terms of which financial organizations were impacted and which weren't. The intent seemed to be to prevent some unintended consequences of firms being affected that were never meant to be. The response to both questions was that Geitner people would work with the Senate people to insure complete clarity - and one of Kerry's examples was something that Geitner said had not been figured out yet, but it had to be done. (If anything, Kerry seemed to be working to help Geitner strengthen his answer to Grassley and to insure that he knew where the CBO estimate came from and possibly how to fix it. )
Then at the very end of his time, Kerry referenced Grassley's comments that small businesses would be hurt. Kerry noted that the CBO said that small businesses could SLIGHTLY be hurt. Kerry emphasizes the word "slightly". Kerry spoke of wanting Geitner's analysis of how the CBO's conclusion was made - something Kerry spoke of wanting to look at as well. Geitner agreed with Kerry that that should be done and said he shared that objective.
Kerry's time was then up and Olymphia Snowe followed on the same topic. The article by jumping from Kerry's comment to Robert's statement speaking of $1 trillion dollars completely leads to a very wrong impression of Kerry's positions here.
In case anyone picks up on what is a strange spin here, here is a link to the hearing - Kerry and Snowe are about 1/3rd of the way through -
http://finance.senate.gov/hearings/watch/?id=8e5b624f-5056-a032-52e9-12425ef455f8(unlike the SFRC, you can't see minutes.)