Washington, Aug 13
Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif. gestures during her news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Aug. 13, 2010, to discuss the House ethics committee investigation. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais) Congresswoman Waters Responds to Pending Ethics Matter{snip}
I want to be absolutely clear about one thing:
This case is not just about me.
This case is also about access.
It’s about access for those who are not heard by decision makers, whether it’s having their questions answered or their concerns addressed.
For the past 34 years I have served in elected office both at the state and national level, and I have made one of my top priorities opening doors and providing access for small, minority and women businesses.
In fact, my advocacy and assistance in providing access for the National Bankers Association is why we’re here today. The National Bankers Association consists of 103 minority banks, and I have worked with this association and the concerns of their banks for many years:
• I have spoken at their conventions on many occasions;
• I have participated in hearings about their issues; and
• I have worked with our federal agencies on their behalf, including the Treasury Department, FDIC, and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
My telephone call to then-Secretary of the Treasury Hank Paulson during the worst economic crisis this nation faced in 80 years was to provide access to the National Bankers Association, which was concerned about the fact that Treasury had placed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into conservatorship. It was represented to me that many minority banks had overleveraged their capital in Fannie and Freddie, and the association wished to know whether or not their members’ capital was lost or if the government was responsible for protecting the capital that they had invested in preferred stock. They had attempted to get a meeting with the Treasury Department, but had received no response. And so, they sought me out to assist them in setting up a meeting.
The question, at this point, should not be why I called Secretary Paulson, but why I had to. The question, at this point, should be why a trade association representing over 100 minority banks could not get a meeting at the height of the crisis.Access.
When I contacted the Treasury Secretary:
• I did not suggest any solution to the problem of the National Banker’s Association;
• I did not ask for any favors for the National Bankers Association;
• I did not ask for a meeting for any individual bank, including OneUnited Bank;
• I did not suggest who would be participants in that meeting;
• I did not attend that meeting; and
• There was no such thing as the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) at that time.
There has been a great deal of confusion over a conversation I had with Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank. The conversation I had with Chairman Frank was a conversation several weeks after this meeting had taken place and after the TARP program had been announced.
OneUnited Bank was now raising questions about assistance from TARP. Because my office’s assistance to the National Bankers Association was strictly to provide access for a discussion about the impact of the financial crisis on small and minority banks broadly, and because there was no TARP program at the time of the meeting, I did not wish to get involved with OneUnited Bank about any individual assistance or about the new TARP program. Because my husband had once served on the board of OneUnited Bank and still held investments there, I felt they should seek assistance from Chairman Frank, a Representative from the state where the bank was headquartered, and someone with a record of commitment to the health of minority banks.
It’s also important to note that no government agency or their representatives have said that I requested any special assistance or compensation for anyone or any institution, or that I influenced the TARP process in any way.
There has also been a question about whether or not I instructed my staff not to get involved with OneUnited Bank and their interest in accessing TARP funds. My staff had only been involved in understanding the impact of the financial crisis on small and minority banks broadly, and assisting in setting up the meeting with the Treasury Department for, again, the National Bankers Association. I told my Chief of Staff that:
• I had informed Chairman Frank about OneUnited Bank’s interest;
• That we were only concerned about small and minority banks broadly;
• That Chairman Frank would evaluate OneUnited’s issue and make a decision on how to proceed; and
• Given the emails that the committee has offered as evidence, we communicated with each other clearly.
So it’s not just about us.
It’s about all those who lack access.
I was honored to serve on the conference committee of the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. I’m happy to say that much of the legislation I authored – access for women and minorities; rights for shareholders; a more accountable Consumer Financial Protection Bureau; and assistance for struggling and unemployed homeowners – were included in the final legislation that was signed by President Obama. I am particularly proud of the Offices of Minority and Women Inclusion that will be set up at the federal government’s financial institutions such as the FDIC, the Treasury Department, the Federal Reserve, among others, to deal with the historic lack of access that minority and women individuals and institutions have had in hiring, decision-making, contracting and procurement opportunities.
And over the past year, I and the nine other Congressional Black Caucus Members of the Financial Services Committee have been meeting with the National Banker’s Association, the National Newspaper Publishers Association, the National Association of Black Owned Broadcasters, the National Association of Minority Auto Dealers, the National Association of Securities Professionals, and the National Bar Association, among others, discussing the plight of minority businesses, their lack of access to capital, and the lack of support from their government in banking, advertising, and consulting contracts.
Access is key to understanding the scope of this case.
read more:
http://waters.house.gov/News/DocumentSingle.aspx?DocumentID=203121