General Discussion
Showing Original Post only (View all)Barney Frank drops a bombshell: How a shocking anecdote explains the financial crisis [View all]
Barney Frank has a new autobiography out. Hes long been one of the nations most quotable politicians. And Washington lives in perpetual longing for intra-party conflict.
So why has a critical revelation from Franks book, one that implicates the most powerful Democrat in the nation, been entirely expunged from the record? The media has thus far focused on Franks wrestling with being a closeted gay congressman, or his comment that Joe Biden cant keep his mouth shut or his hands to himself. But nobody has focused on Franks allegation that Barack Obama refused to extract foreclosure relief from the nations largest banks, as a condition for their receipt of hundreds of billions of dollars in bailout money.
The anecdote comes on page 295 of Frank, a title that the former chair of the House Financial Services Committee holds true to throughout the book. The TARP legislation included specific instructions to use a section of the funds to prevent foreclosures. Without that language, TARP would not have passed; Democratic lawmakers who helped defeat TARP on its first vote cited the foreclosure mitigation piece as key to their eventual reconsideration.
TARP was doled out in two tranches of $350 billion each. The Bush administration, still in charge during TARPs passage in October 2008, used none of the first tranche on mortgage relief, nor did Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson use any leverage over firms receiving the money to persuade them to lower mortgage balances and prevent foreclosures. Frank made his anger clear over this ignoring of Congress intentions at a hearing with Paulson that November. Paulson argued in his defense, the imminent threat of financial collapse required him to focus single-mindedly on the immediate survival of financial institutions, no matter how worthy other goals were.
Whether or not you believe that sky-is-falling narrative, Frank kept pushing for action on foreclosures, which by the end of 2008 threatened one in 10 homes in America. With the first tranche of TARP funds running out by the end of the year, Frank writes, Paulson agreed to include homeowner relief in his upcoming request for a second tranche of TARP funding. But there was one condition: He would only do it if the President-elect asked him to.
http://www.salon.com/2015/03/31/barney_frank_drops_a_bombshell_how_a_shocking_anecdote_explains_the_financial_crisis/