Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: the consistent effort by conservative, corporate dems to try and tarnish progressive [View all]ProSense
(116,464 posts)74. Wrong,
"Obama followed Bush's lead and bailed the banks out. He also eventually sponsored a rather puny program to bail out homeowners who were in over their heads. "
...and I'm not trying to read comments that are book length and packed with inaccuracies.
The TARP program originally authorized expenditures of $700 billion. The DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act reduced the amount authorized to $475 billion.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troubled_Asset_Relief_Program
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troubled_Asset_Relief_Program
Also, since you mentioned mortgages.
Sen. Warren Praises New CFPB Mortgage Rules that Make Families, Economy Safer
Jan 7, 2014
Video of Senator Warrens Remarks Available Here
Text of Senator Warrens Remarks Available Here
WASHINGTON, DC In remarks delivered on the floor of the Senate this afternoon, United States Senator Elizabeth Warren applauded the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus (CFPB) new mortgage rules, which will go into effect on Friday, January 10.
Under the new rules, a lender must determine that a borrower has the ability to repay a mortgage before issuing the loan. The rules will also prohibit brokers from being paid by lenders to steer customers into higher-cost loans and strengthen the mortgage market by improving mortgage servicing practices.
"Thanks to the consumer agency's new rules, families will be safer, pension funds and other investors will be safer, and our whole economy will be safer," Senator Warren said in her remarks. "And the rules will reshape the mortgage market for the better. They will give people a better chance to buy homes and a better chance to keep those homes, and they will force mortgage lenders and servicers to compete by offering better rates and customer service, not by tricking and trapping people. These rules will help markets work better, and they will reduce the risk that the economy will crash again."
Senator Warren highlighted the success the CFPB already has had helping consumers, including returning more than $3 billion to consumers who were cheated and resolving tens of thousands of complaints against financial institutions. The new mortgage rules will affect millions of families who own or plan to purchase a home.
"The consumer bureau's new mortgage rules show once again that government can fix problems," said Senator Warren. "Sure, we have to work hard, we have to fight against those who benefit from the broken system, and we have to stick with it even when the odds are against us. But when we do those things, real change is possible in this country. We're seeing that up close this week."
For more information about the new mortgage rules, a fact sheet is available at the CFPB's website here.
http://www.warren.senate.gov/?p=press_release&id=309
Jan 7, 2014
Video of Senator Warrens Remarks Available Here
Text of Senator Warrens Remarks Available Here
WASHINGTON, DC In remarks delivered on the floor of the Senate this afternoon, United States Senator Elizabeth Warren applauded the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus (CFPB) new mortgage rules, which will go into effect on Friday, January 10.
Under the new rules, a lender must determine that a borrower has the ability to repay a mortgage before issuing the loan. The rules will also prohibit brokers from being paid by lenders to steer customers into higher-cost loans and strengthen the mortgage market by improving mortgage servicing practices.
"Thanks to the consumer agency's new rules, families will be safer, pension funds and other investors will be safer, and our whole economy will be safer," Senator Warren said in her remarks. "And the rules will reshape the mortgage market for the better. They will give people a better chance to buy homes and a better chance to keep those homes, and they will force mortgage lenders and servicers to compete by offering better rates and customer service, not by tricking and trapping people. These rules will help markets work better, and they will reduce the risk that the economy will crash again."
Senator Warren highlighted the success the CFPB already has had helping consumers, including returning more than $3 billion to consumers who were cheated and resolving tens of thousands of complaints against financial institutions. The new mortgage rules will affect millions of families who own or plan to purchase a home.
"The consumer bureau's new mortgage rules show once again that government can fix problems," said Senator Warren. "Sure, we have to work hard, we have to fight against those who benefit from the broken system, and we have to stick with it even when the odds are against us. But when we do those things, real change is possible in this country. We're seeing that up close this week."
For more information about the new mortgage rules, a fact sheet is available at the CFPB's website here.
http://www.warren.senate.gov/?p=press_release&id=309
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
118 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
the consistent effort by conservative, corporate dems to try and tarnish progressive [View all]
cali
Feb 2014
OP
It's obvious. Because it's clear that policies and issues are never what they talk about.
sabrina 1
Feb 2014
#82
I agree. However, they may be changing minds, inadvertently. The more we see of them
sabrina 1
Feb 2014
#89
What's more, you can't even get them to state any policy position. All they do is link to barages of
grahamhgreen
Feb 2014
#105
Yes, that is so true. Their purpose seems to be to prevent any kind of discussion regarding
sabrina 1
Feb 2014
#115
I will not cede this ground. Funny how they will not engage when you ask their position. My guess is
grahamhgreen
Feb 2014
#118
This will make very little difference in the lives of working people and families.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#29
When Obama came into office, he faced an economic crisis due to the excessive
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#73
We still need to make the too-big-too-fail banks smaller and spread the risk in the banking
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#83
The bank bailout, by comparison, was 16 to 20 TRILLION!!!! Look, are you for or against breaking up
grahamhgreen
Feb 2014
#109
Was anyone ever arrested and charged for the corruption in the mortgage business? We were
sabrina 1
Feb 2014
#117
Straw man. No one claimed that Obama hates Warren, geesh. People post blue links because they
grahamhgreen
Feb 2014
#110
And yet, as Elizabeth Warren has pointed out, the Justice Department as refused to bring
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#34
And furthermore, that's all they have, appeals to emotion and suggestive innuendoes. nt
bemildred
Feb 2014
#8
They're scared of a populist movement. The corporatists would hate to see the People have a voice.
Scuba
Feb 2014
#14
Maybe one day we'll have a President of which the David Sirota types approve.
TheMathieu
Feb 2014
#17
Or one who doesn't ignore and disapprove of the very people who elected him/her.
sabrina 1
Feb 2014
#93
As I said above, we shall see whether the carping is just way out there or whether those who
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#37
lol. what nonsense. who needs to use warren or bernie. it's in response to the coporate
cali
Feb 2014
#24
If one senator has the power to overcome the will of the Prez and majority of Denms in Congress..
Armstead
Feb 2014
#67
And DADT itself was a 'compromise' made in 1993. So ten years later, as a compromise
Bluenorthwest
Feb 2014
#72
You characterize raising situations where these folks agreed with Obama as "tarnishing" them
stevenleser
Feb 2014
#38
The message that a certain category of peope are stupid and naive is what is bothersome
Armstead
Feb 2014
#51
That is not the subject of the OP which is what I am addressing. The OP characterizes
stevenleser
Feb 2014
#53
It's a two-way street. Quotes and votes matter. Nobody is perfect. We can live with that.
pampango
Feb 2014
#43
This is true, but the converse is just as prevalent and just as lame.
Donald Ian Rankin
Feb 2014
#55