Who are they gonna support if they want their Money back? :shrug:
Obama in a speech last month pointed out....."Just last week, Republican leaders in the House summoned more than 100 key lobbyists for the financial industry to a “pep rally,” and urged them to redouble their efforts to block meaningful financial reform. Not that they needed the encouragement. These industry
lobbyists have already spent more than $300 million on lobbying the debate this year.The special interests and their agents in Congress claim that reforms like the Consumer Financial Protection Agency will stifle consumer choice and that updated rules and oversight will frustrate innovation in the financial markets. But Americans don’t choose to be victimized by mysterious fees, changing terms, and pages and pages of fine print. And while innovation should be encouraged, risky schemes that threaten our entire economy should not.”
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Then, late in December, the President met with community bankers who largely support the financial regulatory package and are important to the recovery as they make up 50% of loans to small business. These small banks are also under pressure from the larger American Bankers Association for not fighting the House regulation bill.
As tensions mounted and the banking industry continued to ignore the Administration’s requests to limit excessive bonuses and spending, the President announced a bank fee would be imposed to guarantee the collection of “every single dime the American people are owed.” Word of the fee leaked out as early as Jan 12, three weeks after the President’s meeting with community bankers.
Less than a week after the Jan 14 banking fee announcement,
the President pressed on and announced his intention to implement what has come to be known as “the Volcker Rule”, separating the service and investing side of Wall Street firms. More at the linkHouse Republicans Come Out Against Administration’s Bank Fee:JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon also chimed in, saying that the fee is meant to “punish people,” which is a “bad idea.”
And now House Republicans have gone to bat for the big banks, claiming that implementing a bank fee would be “lunacy”:
Rep. Scott Garrett (R-NJ): “has said any tax or fee could hinder the economic recovery and further limit the industry’s ability to extend more loans.”Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-TX): “How you are going to tax banks and expect them to lend more is frankly lunacy.”Rep. Spencer Bachus (R-AL): “The tax will only drain capital from the financial system at a time when it’s needed to create jobs and fuel economic growth.”Rep. David Camp (R-MI): “while he and other Republicans find bonuses being paid by banks that got bailouts ‘irresponsible’ and ‘outrageous,’ they are concerned that taxing banks will hurt lending, and thus job creation. When Obama tried to encourage banks to make more loans, Republicans criticized him for doing “the exact same thing that caused the
problem.” Now that Obama wants to implement a fee on the biggest banks, though, lending is paramount!
On a more important note, all of the whining is futile, as the TARP law requires the administration to create a fee in order to recoup any of the program’s losses. The law states that some sort of revenue-raising mechanism needs to be in place by 2013, but the administration said that “the President has no intention of waiting that long.”
http://wonkroom.thinkprogress.org/2010/01/14/gop-bank-lunac/
also.....
Lobbyists Get Potent Weapon in Campaign Ruling
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/22/us/politics/22donate.html