Fiscal Conservative John McCain Talks Straight on Fan-Fred Reform

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Militant Birther
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McCain Talks Straight on Fan-Fred Reform

By Lawrence Kudlow

There will be no more business as usual for housing lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac if John McCain is elected president. That's McCain's clear message in a recent hard-hitting op-ed in the St. Petersburg Times and in various straight-talk media interviews.

Politically powerful Fannie and Freddie may be popping champagne corks in Washington, where a congressional bailout package provides full government backing for their outsized management pay packages, massive political-contribution and lobbying practices, and private portfolio hedge-fund activities. These government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) got just what they wanted, and they now have the power to pay more dividends to their shareholders without any caps on compensation.

But Big Mac is gonna put an end to this if he's elected come November.

"Americans should be outraged at the latest sweetheart deal in Washington," writes McCain. "Congress will put U.S. taxpayers on the hook for potentially hundreds of billions of dollars to bail out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It's a tribute to what these two institutions -- which most Americans have never heard of -- have bought with more than $170-million worth of lobbyists in the past decade."

Fannie and Freddie represent the worst of Washington's bailout fever. Using government power for private profit is how Wall Street Journal editor Paul Gigot puts it. Privatizing gains while socializing losses is the complaint registered by former House majority leader Dick Armey. Government semi-socialism is how I see it.

The GSEs spread political vigorish in turn for more power and more privilege. Just this year alone their portfolio caps were raised twice while their capital reserve requirements were lowered. And now, with an explicit government guarantee, unlimited credit lines, and the possibility of federal stock purchases, they'll be GSEs on steroids. All this in the name of helping housing, the most favored political sector in the American economy.

Budget assistance for homebuyers is already staggering. The Housing and Urban Development department spends $52 billion a year. The home mortgage interest deduction is worth about $80 billion yearly. A capital-gains exclusion is estimated at $29 billion. And the local property-tax deduction comes to roughly $14 billion. That's a total of $175 billion in annual assistance to the housing sector. And that's before we get to the Fannie-Freddie bailout.

Some people talk about a so-called Marshall Plan to spur American energy independence. But for years we've had a Marshall Plan for housing. It's enough already. There are other economic sectors worthy of investment.

John McCain has taken a strong reform position here, and he's totally right. :103631605

This is McCain at his very best. He argues that Fannie and Freddie employees manipulated financial reports to line the pockets of senior executives. He calls the GSEs a danger to financial markets. And he says if one dime of taxpayer money ends up in those institutions "the management and the board should immediately be replaced, multimillion dollar salaries should be cut, and bonuses and other compensation should be eliminated. They should cease all lobbying activities and drop all payments to outside lobbyists."

He also argues for strong regulation of Fan and Fred "that limits their ability to borrow, shrinks their size until they are no longer a threat to our economy, and privatizes and eliminates their links to the government."

McCain economic advisor Steve Forbes wants to breakup Fannie and Freddie into 10 or 12 companies, completely severing their ties to the government. With these private companies competing in the mortgage market, Forbes says the entire housing sector will be revived, with taxpayers off the hook for a change.

On the other hand, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is putting his reform hopes on new Fannie-Freddie regulator James Lockhart, who runs the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight. Lockhart is a reformist skeptic of Fannie and Freddie. But his term would only last until year-end. After that, his successor will be subject to Senate confirmation and a public grilling from the two banking committees, all while Fan and Fred pour money into the campaign coffers of the Democrats and Republicans serving on those committees.

Does this sound like true reform? Highly doubtful. In fact, the bailout bill should be completely rewritten to stipulate the kind of privatization program outlined by Sen. McCain.

Former Reagan Treasury official Peter Wallison has warned for years that Fannie and Freddie would blow up financial markets. Well, we just witnessed the blow-up. But now we should also blow up the Fannie-Freddie bailout. It's not real reform.

Obama won't do it. He says there must be an essential role for Fan and Fred. And Obama advisor Franklin Raines -- the former Fannie Mae CEO who was forced to resign over accounting scandals -- argues for the status quo. But McCain is talking real reform. Bravo for the Arizonan. He's the real candidate of change.

Lawrence Kudlow is a former Reagan economic advisor, a syndicated columnist, and the host of CNBC's Kudlow & Company. Visit his blog, Kudlow's Money Politics.

Page Printed from: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2008/07/mccain_talks_straight_on_fanfr.html at July 30, 2008 - 12:05:52 AM PDT

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Fiscal conservative straight-talker Sen. John McCain will balance the budget within four years with bold policies like his Fan-Fed reform. :aktion033

Sen Obama will add more than a trillion dollars to the debt, raise your taxes AND transfer billions more in hard-earned wealth from the entrepreneurial and investor classes (the engine of our economy) to the fringe 'victim' groups in the Democrat party: illegals, criminals, crack heads and hoes. :puke1:

The choice Americans face could not be more clear. :103631605
 

Militant Birther
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Btw, for the knuckleheads still mourning the loss of a blimp who ridicule McCain for not knowing enough about economics, eat this:

Steve Forbes is one of McCain's top economic advisers.

John McCain will cut wasteful govt spending and bring back fiscal conservatism to Washington.

John McCain is the real candidate of "CHANGE." :103631605
 

Banned
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But um, the Neo-Cons AREN'T conservative, they are 1/2 a trillion in the red. :think2:
 

bushman
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McCain is virtually a Liberal Joe.

Apart from his Iraq stance.

:grandmais
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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MARK proclaims yet again: Fiscal conservative straight-talker Sen. John McCain will balance the budget within four years with bold policies like his Fan-Fed reform.

SH: Following in the footsteps of Ron & Nancy who in 1983 promised us a "Drug Free America within five years!"

Comedy Gold
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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McCain is virtually a Liberal Joe.

Apart from his Iraq stance.

:grandmais

bullshit wars are liberal :grandmais

as for mccain and your highlights joe regarding FNM

funny how so many people littered through mccain's past working with his campaign or past campaigns are on the FNM payroll etc....granted if you've been around washington as long as you have.....gonna run into FNM....as its embedded in the system and allowed to snowball to the problem its become now since the libbies went on a rampage in the 30s in the mop up of the GD

i'll look it up if you like
 

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"The shortfalls Obama would produce don't approach the size of the deficits John McCain's budget threatens to bring. The Republican candidate's tax cuts alone would increase the debt by $5 trillion by 2018, compared with $3.4 trillion for Obama, says the Tax Policy Center, another nonpartisan group."


sounds like a plan
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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about only guy you won't find with people surrounding him from FNM/FRE in washington is a guy like ron paul

but he's crazy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

---------------

Both Campaigns Linked To Fannie, Freddie
Washington Post: Figures Connected To McCain, Obama Also Have Deep Ties To Mortgage Giants

When Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's stock prices plunged and rumors of their insolvency swirled, the presidential campaigns of Sens. John McCain and Barack Obama released terse statements about the mortgage giants, then went nearly silent.

Their responses made sense in political and economic terms. The risks of intervening in the firms' rescue are high, the rewards are scant, and the tentacles of the government-sponsored enterprises reach into both campaigns.

"You see a consensus developing that the current system is unsustainable," said David C. John, a senior research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation. "But actually saying what has to happen next is a little bit scary if you're in a campaign, especially if some of your most prominent supporters have such deep ties to these entities."

Rick Davis, McCain's campaign manager, was president of the Homeownership Alliance, which advocates the expansion of homeownership through low-interest mortgages funded by Fannie and Freddie. Arthur B. Culvahouse Jr., who is heading McCain's vice presidential vetting panel, was a lobbyist for Fannie Mae. Mark Buse, a longtime McCain aide, lobbied for Freddie Mac before returning to McCain's Senate staff.

And the list of Republican Fannie and Freddie lobbyists includes some of its most notable rogues -- including Tony Rudy, Edwin Buckham, Kevin Ring and David H. Safavian, all of whom were linked to the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal -- as well as some of its leading power brokers, from Reagan White House chief of staff Kenneth M. Duberstein to uberlobbyists Vin Weber and Tom Korologos. Alberto R. Cardenas, one of McCain's top fundraisers, has lobbied for Fannie Mae, as have former Montana governor Marc Racicot and tax-cut advocate Grover Norquist.

Obama also has ties to the firms. James A. Johnson, the former head of his vice presidential vetting panel, was a chief executive of Fannie Mae, as was Franklin D. Raines, who said this week that he has been consulting with the campaign on housing issues. Maria Echaveste, a top Clinton White House official whose husband, Christopher Edley Jr., is a close Obama friend and adviser, has lobbied for Freddie Mac, and former commerce secretary William M. Daley, a top Obama backer, was an in-house lobbyist.

Other Democratic luminaries who have advocated for the mortgage giants include strategist Steven Elmendorf, Rep. Doris Matsui (Calif.), former Al Gore aide Ronald A. Klain, former Clinton aide Steve Ricchetti and former congressman Harold E. Ford Jr. (Tenn.), now the head of the Democratic Leadership Council. Jamie Gorelick, a deputy attorney general in the Clinton administration, was also vice chairman of Fannie Mae.

That payroll has cost Fannie and Freddie nearly $200 million in lobbying and campaign contributions over the past decade, according to lobbying reports and Federal Election Commission disclosures. It has also won them plenty of protection from calls for greater regulation, less federal protection, and even nationalization.

With the current housing meltdown, that protection may be ending, Washington economists say, but any real changes will almost certainly happen after the election.

"I am hopeful that the extent of carnage will shake up the status quo," said Douglas W. Elmendorf, an economist at the Brookings Institution who has worked at the Federal Reserve Board and Treasury Department and is not related to Steven Elmendorf. "And if the taxpayers end up putting in a significant amount of money, which I think they will, members of Congress will realize whatever their past views were, the future cannot be a replay of the past."

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac grew huge and powerful by buying up home mortgages and consolidating them into fixed return bonds and other financial instruments with the implicit backing of the Treasury. But with so many of those mortgages going into default, investors fear that both companies lack the capital to cover the losses, and the lobbyists have helped Fannie and Freddie fend off calls to bolster their reserves.

On Sunday, Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. made that implicit federal backing more explicit, allowing the companies to borrow directly from the Federal Reserve and pledging that the government stands ready to pump money into the giants in exchange for equity if necessary.

Douglas Elmendorf argued that federal loans will minimize the personal risks to Fannie and Freddie managers and shareholders, while leaving taxpayers with all the risk. Instead, the government should be taking stakes in the companies in exchange for that cash. That way, a recovery would have some benefit to the government.

The McCain campaign has been reticent about backing anything that smacks of partial nationalization. Last week, the senator from Arizona issued what amounted to full-throated support of the Bush administration's efforts to keep the companies afloat.

"Those institutions, Fannie and Freddie, have been responsible for millions of Americans to be able to own their own homes, and they will not fail, we will not allow them to fail," he said. "They are vital to Americans' ability to own their own homes. And we will do what's necessary to make sure that they continue that function."

Obama has been slightly more skeptical, at least in tone. His initial statement put the issue of homeownership first. The senator from Illinois "has long believed we should take all necessary steps to ensure affordable homeownership for millions of American families, and that includes an essential role for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac," spokesman Bill Burton said last week.

Then on Tuesday, Obama sounded a note of skepticism: "I think it is important, with respect to Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, that we ensure there's continued liquidity in the housing market, but that we're not devoting huge sums of money to bailing out shareholders or CEOs. I mean, I think that there's got to be some recognition that you can't have those institutions with all upside but no downside," he said on PBS's "NewsHour With Jim Lehrer."

That is still a far cry from prescriptions coming from the campaigns' left and right flanks, from firing the firms' managers before offering any loans, to nationalizing them to breaking them up. But analysts in Washington say those next steps will have to wait.

"It's going to take a lot of effort, and it's going to require some real sustained activities," John said. "It won't be easy, but it can be done."
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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"Those institutions, Fannie and Freddie, have been responsible for millions of Americans to be able to own their own homes, and they will not fail, we will not allow them to fail," he said. "They are vital to Americans' ability to own their own homes. And we will do what's necessary to make sure that they continue that function."
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
Handicapper
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Joe my friend, I'm a little surprised by your dramatic swing towards McCain. I too will support and vote for him, but I can't pretend I have as much confidence in him as you do.

I hope you're right. :toast:
 

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