Commentary By Ron Beasley
The number one censored story at Project Censored this year is:
US Congress Sells Out to Wall Street
Federal lawmakers responsible for overseeing the US economy have
received millions of dollars from Wall Street firms. Since 2001, eight
of the most troubled firms have donated $64.2 million to congressional
candidates, presidential candidates and the Republican and Democratic
parties. As senators, Barack Obama and John McCain received a combined
total of $3.1 million. The donors include investment bankers Bear
Stearns, Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley,
insurer American International Group, and mortgage giants Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac.
Some of the top recipients of contributions from companies receiving
Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP) money are the same members of
Congress who chair committees charged with regulating the financial
sector and overseeing the effectiveness of this unprecedented
government program. In total, members of the Senate Committee on
Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, Senate Finance Committee and House
Financial Services Committee received $5.2 million from TARP recipients
in the 2007-2008 election cycle. President Obama collected at least
$4.3 million from employees at these companies for his presidential
campaign.Nearly every member of the House Financial Services Committee, who
in February 2009 oversaw hearings on how the $700 billion of TARP
bailout was being spent, received contributions associated with these
financial institutions during the 2008 election cycle. �You could say
that the finance industry got their money�s worth by supporting members
of Congress who were inclined to look the other way,� said Lawrence
Jacobs, the director of the University of Minnesota�s Center for the
Study of Politics and Governance.
Yes, the best government money can buy. But those contributions contributed to the financial collapse.
For instance, in 2004 when the Securities and Exchange Commission
adopted a major rule change that freed investment banks to plunge tens
of billions of dollars in borrowed money into subprime mortgages and
other risky plays, congressional banking committees held no oversight
hearings. Congressional inaction also allowed mortgage agents to earn
high fees for peddling loans to unqualified homebuyers and prevented
states from toughening regulations on predatory lending practices.
And yes it is bi-partisan:
Author Matt Taibbi writes that some of the most egregious selling of
the US government to Wall Street happened in the late nineties, when
�Democrats, tired of getting slaughtered in the fundraising arena by
Republicans, decided to throw off their old reliance on unions and
interest groups and become more �business-friendly.� Wall Street
responded by flooding Washington with money, buying allies in both
parties.� In the ten-year period beginning in 1998, financial companies
spent $1.7 billion on federal campaign contributions and another $3.4
billion on lobbyists. Wise political investments enabled the nation�s
top bankers to effectively scrap any meaningful oversight of the
financial industry.
You can call it corporatocracy or you can call it Fascism but it's only going to get worse.
Tax dollars go to banks, banks distribute them evenly among politicians... finally we have public campaign financing!
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