Bloomberg's Baum falsely claimed that Frank "consistently opposed stricter regulation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac"
SUMMARY: Bloomberg columnist Caroline Baum asserted that "[a]s the ranking member of the House Financial Services Committee," before he became chairman in 2007, Rep. Barney Frank "consistently opposed stricter regulation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac." In fact, Frank has supported legislation to strengthen oversight over Fannie and Freddie, both as ranking member and as chairman. Further, Frank advocated for "a bill that would have enhanced the regulatory structure for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac" during a hearing from which Baum quoted in the column.
In a February 12 column, Bloomberg columnist Caroline Baum asserted that "[a]s the ranking member of the House Financial Services Committee," before he became chairman in 2007, Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) "consistently opposed stricter regulation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac." In fact, Frank has supported legislation to strengthen oversight over Fannie and Freddie, both as the senior Democrat on the committee when the Republicans controlled the House and as chairman. Further, Frank advocated for "a bill that would have enhanced the regulatory structure for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac" during a hearing from which Baum quoted in the column.
As Media Matters for America has documented, Frank's efforts to enhance regulatory oversight on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac include:
- In 2005, Frank, then the ranking Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, worked with committee chairman Rep. Michael Oxley (R-OH) on the Federal Housing Finance Reform Act of 2005, which would have established the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) to replace the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) as overseer of the activities of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. After voting for the bill in committee, Frank voted against final passage of the bill on the House floor, stating that he was doing so because an amendment added to the bill on the House floor imposed restrictions on the kinds of nonprofit organizations that could receive funding under the bill.
- In early 2007, as chairman of the committee, Frank sponsored H.R. 1427, a bill to create the FHFA, granting that agency "general supervisory and regulatory authority over" Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and directing it to reform the companies' business practices and regulate their exposure to credit and market risk. Among other things, Frank's legislation, titled the Federal Housing Finance Reform Act of 2007, directed the FHFA director to "ensure" that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac "operate[] in a safe and sound manner, including maintenance of adequate capital and internal controls" and to establish standards for "management of credit and counterparty risk" and "management of market risk." The FHFA was eventually created after Congress incorporated provisions that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said were "similar" to those of H.R. 1427 into the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, which then-President Bush signed into law on July 30, 2008.
Baum also wrote that in 2004, Frank "received a report from the GSE [government sponsored enterprises, which Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were at the time] regulator showing that Fannie and Freddie had manipulated their earnings, enriching their senior executives in the process" and accused Frank of "look[ing] the other way" and of "sh[ooting] the messenger, Armando Falcon, director of the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, who found accounting irregularities at both companies."
In fact, at the October 6, 2004, House Financial Services committee hearing about the allegations, Frank did not "look[] the other way" when presented with Falcon's report. Of allegations of earnings manipulation, he said, "To the extent that people played games to get bonuses, I am outraged. People making that much money, let me put it this way, at the level of compensation of the top officers of Fannie Mae, they should get bonuses if they rush into a burning building to rescue a kid, maybe a cat, but not for doing their job. I think it is unseemly of them to be getting bonuses in the first place for doing what they are getting paid very well to do. To the extent that there was manipulation, that is very wrong and should be penalized."
Baum also cherry-picked a quote from Frank's questioning of Falcon in which Frank said "I don't see anything in your report that raises safeness and soundness problems" to suggest that Frank dismissed problems at the two companies. In fact, Frank did not criticize Falcon for "showing that Fannie and Freddie had manipulated their earnings" or for exposing "accounting irregularities." Rather, Frank criticized Falcon for what he said was a lack of specifics to back up Falcon's allegations of "safety and soundness" concerns with respect to the two companies. Frank said, "[I]t makes me even more disturbed that you, both in your written statement and again, sort of threw 'safety and soundness' around like kind of boilerplate," and added: "I don't see anything in your report that raises safety and soundness problems." Frank also said:
There is a quality and a quantity issue here. There are inaccuracies that can be disturbing, and if they led to inappropriate compensation, I would be very unhappy. But the notion that any inaccuracy implicates safety and soundness, I think, based on what you have said here, where you cannot even conclude -- you have said you cannot even quantify any potential amount of loss. To throw "safety and soundness" around in that thing I think really is, for a regulator, irresponsible.
Further, at the same hearing, Frank advocated for "legislation that would have enhanced the regulatory structure for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac." He said:
I believe we were well on the way, the chairman and I and the staffs, to putting together a bill that would have enhanced the regulator and could have passed. What stopped progress on a new bill was the Bush administration's determination to go beyond safety and soundness and into provisions that would have restricted the housing function.
[...]
What derailed the legislation was an insistence by the Bush administration on going beyond safety and soundness and giving the regulators, for example, particular power to say, well, they are going beyond their charter in housing; they should not do these new products. There were specific issues here that transcended safety and soundness or went under it, but the administration was seeking powers that were not related to safety and soundness. If they were to have dropped that, we would have a law already signed and in place, because on the question of safety and soundness regulation, there has not been a significant dispute.















I've finally come to realize republicans think they are Rocky Balboa. They think they can get the crap kicked out of them for 11 rounds and then miraculously pull that glory shot in the 12th round to clinch the win. Sorry guys, the only thing y'all have in common with Rocky is y'all have the kind of brain damage many fighters develop over time when ya get repeatedly hit in the head with a punch that feels like lead.
And afterwards, everything they say sounds like Sylvester Stallone:
"Mrwh rwmh rah rah mrwh rmwh rmbw"
Stallone is cool actually. I love Rambo.
Yeah,
They keep getting their asses whooped. Nothing I enjoy more than a little conservative whoop-ass.
Maybe the American people are starting to see through this conservative crap. The more they lie, the more they bloviate, the more they disgrace themselves and journalism...maybe the more they'll lose.
I just sent Baum an e-mail. If this doesn't show the sad state of journalism, I don't know what does.
This is all too easy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MGT_cSi7Rs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MGT_cSi7Rs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=usvG-s_Ssb0&feature=related
And more stuff making this easy....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9B2eLquv7_o
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9nU3fNh-PRk&feature=related
And this is what became the democrat party's 'October surprise'?
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/laland/2008/07/feds-cite-schum.html
<sigh!> Yes, it really is easy...
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/24/us/politics/24davis.html
http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2008/09/mccains-fannie-and-freddie-connections
http://www.delawareliberal.net/2008/09/28/republican-talking-point-smackdown-freddie-mac-and-fannie-mae-are-not-responsible-for-the-meltdown/
Doggmeister,
The ny times story was about payment to a member of McCain's staff, not to him directly. This is quite unlike the money given by fannie/freddie directly to democrat congresspersons on the hill.
Mother Jones?? Sorry, it's just too balanced and not unbiased enough for me to peek there.
I knew you couldn't go to an unbiased source. But staff influence members just as much as direct contributions.
Tell ya what - the best concensus you will ever get out of me is acknowledgement that freddie and fannie give to both parties, and in particular to members who sit on the House Financial Services Committee; the Senate Banking, Housing & Urban Affairs Committee; or the Senate Finance Committee. If you can't admit that then let's continue the your party is worser than mine game.
What in good God's name are you tring to prove with your links? The last link merely reports an anfair accusation made against Schummer.
Or was this the 'October surprise'' the democrat party had in mind?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_NMu1mFao3w
We had a November surpise: we kicked your ass out.
And let another ass in.
The DemocratIC party's surprise was hardly a surprise at all: WINNING!
As opposed to the repugnantan party's surprise of the irrelevant Ayers and Wright. Blah blah blah is all American heard that's all the repugnants got.
I hope a lot of people watched "House of Cards" on CNBC last night. If you missed it, they'll be showing it again this weekend. it's well worth the time.
It does a pretty good job of explaining what got us into this mess, and Freddie and Fannie were actually a small part of the real problem, though they were involved.
It's pretty clear that the often-repeated Republican bromide that Liberals were "twisting the arms" of banks to make subprime loans to minorities is total bullsh*t. The real pressure was coming from Wall Street, where these loans were being bundled into CDOs and peddled to foreign investors as fast as they could get them. It's one of the reasons the stock market went through the roof over the past few years.
On the other end, lenders were lowering their standards and writing mortgages to all comers, and people were lying about their incomes to buy houses they couldn't afford. One guy they profiled made $900 a month and bought a $500,000 house by lying about his income. Unfortunately, the lender didn't bother to check. Apparently, verifying income was no longer considered necessary, because they all assumed that the houses would go up in value indefinitely.
People were using the rising value of their homes to borrow and spend more money, which helped spur the economy and the housing industry. It was an unsustainable upward spiral, as Greenspan now admits. It seems fairly obvious that this is what caused the last economic recovery, not Bush's tax cuts.
A big problem with the CDOs is that the Bond Rating agencies were claissifying them as AAA, even though they had bad mortgages in them. I think there may be some investigations about this down the road.
Certainly there was plenty of blame to go around, but it had little to do with political correctness or liberal policies. The whole thing was fueled by good old fashioned greed on both ends, enabled by lax enforcement of regulations.
I found it interesting that mmfa headlines a story that insists that Frank supports FM/FM regulation but the very FIRST evidence of support for further regulation that mmfa produces---Frank voted against it!
Well, that simply blows mmfa's strict "falsely claimed" fact that Frank doesn't support FM/FM regulation right out the window. Obviously, using mmfa's first bit of evidence, Frank did NOT consistantly support stricter regulation of FM/FM. This is another blatant lie by mmfa. I'll be glad the the demoncats get the fairness act passed, then I won't have to read any more lies by mmfa.
Oh, I get it. If a Congressman votes against a version of a bill because there's something in it he doesn't like, that means he's against what the bill is trying to do.
Thanks for clearing that up, Phlibber. Now we can safely deduce that the Republican party is against reviving the economy.
That's good to know.
Didn't you read the story? He created the bill, babied it until the end then voted against it. Never mind, you don't actually read the stories, just whine about someone expressing an opinion.
Clearly, when banks make loans with no documentation or investigation into the borrower this is fiduciary irresponsibility. FM and FM were buying mortgages and packaging them into securities, so they are not blameless. The rating of these securities should land the rating agencies' personnel in jail and have all assets forfeited. Is it the SEC who allowed these mortgage securities, then they should be serving time as well.
I agree. The woman from a rating agency interviewed in "House of Cards" said that they simply lowered their definition of what qualified as AAA. Apparently they were under a lot of pressure to help the banks move these securities.