Media Gives Obama Pass on 'Deregulation' Smear


One of Barack Obama's biggest lines, which he repeats at every campaign event and delivered in Tuesday night's Town Hall Debate in Nashville, is that the Wall Street financial crisis was created by deregulation - deregulation, he hastens to add, is the policy of George W. Bush, John McCain and the Republicans.

He made the charge in response to the first question in the debate (transcript) last night:

And I believe this is a final verdict on the failed economic policies of the last eight years, strongly promoted by President Bush and supported by Sen. McCain, that essentially said that we should strip away regulations, consumer protections, let the market run wild, and prosperity would rain down on all of us.

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Strip away regulations? Apparently Obama wants you to forget about Sarbanes-Oxley. Here's how Wikipedia describes Sarbanes-Oxley:

The legislation establishes new or enhanced standards for all U.S. public company boards, management, and public accounting firms. It does not apply to privately held companies. The Act contains 11 titles, or sections, ranging from additional Corporate Board responsibilities to criminal penalties, and requires the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to implement rulings on requirements to comply with the new law. Debate continues over the perceived benefits and costs of SOX. Supporters contend that the legislation was necessary and has played a useful role in restoring public confidence in the nation's capital markets by, among other things, strengthening corporate accounting controls. Opponents of the bill claim that it has reduced America's international competitive edge against foreign financial service providers, claiming that SOX has introduced an overly complex and regulatory environment into U.S. financial markets.

The Bush administration and a Republican-controlled Congress pass Sarbanes-Oxley in 2002, in response to the last Wall Street crisis - Enron, WorldCom, Adelphia, Tyco, etc - with overwhelming Democrat support - it passed the House 423-3 and the Senate 99-0, with McCain voting for it. Obama was still in the Illinois state Senate, voting "present."

Sarbanes-Oxkley included a new accounting rule, called "Mark to Market," which is now widely viewed as having contributed to the subprime mortgage crisis. "Mark to Market" is being suspended as part of the legislation authorizing the $700 billion Wall Street bailout.

Obama has it completely backwards on deregulation and the economic crisis. Too much wrong-headed regulatory policy designed to encourage sub-prime lending, including the Community Reinvestment Act as written by Democrats and rewritten by the Clinton administration, combined with the Democrats' rejection of proposals from the Bush administration and from John McCain to reform and reign in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, are at the root of the current crisis.

The media lets Obama push the false deregulation meme, even after McCain pointed out Obama's record of failure on Fannie and Freddie during the debate:

But you know, one of the real catalysts, really the match that lit this fire was Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. I'll bet you, you may never even have heard of them before this crisis.

But you know, they're the ones that, with the encouragement of Sen. Obama and his cronies and his friends in Washington, that went out and made all these risky loans, gave them to people that could never afford to pay back.

And you know, there were some of us that stood up two years ago and said we've got to enact legislation to fix this. We've got to stop this greed and excess.

Meanwhile, the Democrats in the Senate and some -- and some members of Congress defended what Fannie and Freddie were doing. They resisted any change.

Meanwhile, they were getting all kinds of money in campaign contributions. Sen. Obama was the second highest recipient of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac money in history -- in history.

So this rescue package means that we will stabilize markets, we will shore up these institutions. But it's not enough. That's why we're going to have to go out into the housing market and we're going to have to buy up these bad loans and we're going to have to stabilize home values, and that way, Americans, like Alan, can realize the American dream and stay in their home.

But Fannie and Freddie were the catalysts, the match that started this forest fire. There were some of us -- there were some of us that stood up against it. There were others who took a hike.

Obama's response during the debate: He said he once wrote a letter and gave a speech urging reform of Fannie and Freddie:

[T]wo years ago, I said that we've got a sub-prime lending crisis that has to be dealt with.

I wrote to Secretary Paulson, I wrote to Federal Reserve Chairman [Ben] Bernanke, and told them this is something we have to deal with, and nobody did anything about it.

A year ago, I went to Wall Street and said we've got to reregulate, and nothing happened.

Obama wrote a letter. Obama gave a speech. But Obama did not author or sponsor legislation to fix the problem. He took no action in the U.S. Senate to address the issue legislatively.

He wrote a letter. He gave a speech. And in his own words, "nobody did anything about it."

Including Obama.

The MSM loves Obama's speeches. They give him a pass on truthfulness. And they give him a pass on backing his talk with action. Obama said he foresaw crisis so he wrote a letter and gave a speech but he authored no legislation.

In the last few years, Barack Obama has found time to write two books about himself but no time to author significant legislation even when, he says, he foresaw the coming subprime mortgage crisis.

Obama gives a good speech about change and what he would do if given the chance to act. Well, the voters of Illinois gave him that chance four years ago to bring about change by sending him to the U.S. Senate. He wrote a letter. And gave a speech. And then did nothing.

While the American media gives Obama a pass for both his lie about deregulation and his inaction beyond a letter and a speech, James Antle at London's Guardian, pointed it out in his column today:

Obama even (absurdly) charged that McCain believed in "deregulation in every circumstance. That's what we've been going through for the last eight years."Sarbanes-Oxley, anyone? McCain-Feingold?

Prediction: The American media will continue to ignore the falsity of Obama's deregulation claim and pretend Sarbanes-Oxley never happened, at least until McCain himself debunks it, which McCain failed to do last night. McCain didn't do his job, but that's no excuse for the media failing in its own duty to inform the American public of the truth.

Update: U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell's office issued a statement regarding Obama's false claim regarding deregulation:

As the financial crisis continues, Democrats in Congress have become quite enamored with the tactic of trying to point fingers at their latest bogeyman, deregulation. Their narrative is that it’s been one long decade of GOP attempts to remove oversight and government involvement. But is this really a compelling argument?

To begin with, many Democrats voted for these very policies they are now decrying. Indeed, Maria Bartiromo asked former President Bill Clinton about the now-vilified Gramm-Leach-Bliley bill, which he signed in 1999 and Clinton said, “I don’t see that signing that bill had anything to do with the current crisis. Indeed, one of the things that has helped stabilize the current situation as much as it has is the purchase of Merrill Lynch by Bank of America, which was much smoother than it would have been if I hadn’t signed that bill.”

And it’s important to recall that a great deal of regulation remained. In his column for The Washington Post Monday, Sebastian Mallaby noted that the banks that bought bad mortgage products were all subject to regulation by the SEC. Not only that, The Examiner reminds Democrats that in fact Congress passed strict new corporate regulations in 2002, known as Sarbanes-Oxley.

While Democrats may enjoy their usual demagoguery of Republicans and markets, Americans would be wise to remember a bit of history in evaluating this rhetoric.

They'd be more likely to remember it if the mainstream media - and McCain - would remind them.

—Bill Hobbs is author of Who Is Fred Thompson, a blog-centric look at the presidential candidate.


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He spent the evening lying

He spent the evening lying and getting things wrong.  But he does it with such style....

This Obamedia is 10 times more pro-Obama than they were pro-Clinton in 1992 and 1996.

It's sickening.

So the question remains, why

So the question remains, why is John McCain not more forceful in making this point, both during and after these debates?  It is almost as if he is trying to lose.  Obama does not let McCain get away with anything, pointing out errors that are not even true.  Yet, McCain lets Obama prattle on about giving tax cuts to everyone under the sun, deregulation as the cause of the economic problems, etc.

McCain Not Listening, Not Thinking On His Feet

Unfortunately, McCain is so mamby-pamby he doesn't want to call Obama out on these things.  He's going to lose the election because of it. 

Last night when Obama talked about regulation, McCain should have immediately shot back that "Sarbanes-Oxley" has cost businesses millions of dollars and its not working. 

In order to be excellent in a debate, the person has to listen and I think that McCain is not listening, but too busy rehearsing what he's going to say next.

Legislators

This is why I seriously resist having legislators run for executive office. Legislators have to reach compromise. Executives don't. People who habitually skip over obstacles and controversies, because they know they have to reach a compromise with the people they're fighting, don't have the killer instinct. McCain doesn't have a killer instinct. McCain's modus operandi is to state his position, and then work the phone behind the scenes, like he did with the bailout debacle.

He can initiate attacks when he has time to plan. But because hedoesn't do it by habit, he can't counterpunch immediately.

Obama was never a legislator. He isn't an executive, either.

  • His state senate and US senate experiences were always just steps to his destination. That's why he never authored any serious legislation - he didn't want anything to come back and bite him.
  • What's also interesting (and in my opinion, revealing) is that although he's constantly pursuing ambition, this is the first time he ever sought an executive job. Isn't that kind of strange? Don't you think that someone who wants to be the chief executive would have sought executive jobs before?
  • An executive has to put himself on the line, and Obama never commits himself. He never puts himself in a position where he can be held accountable.

He has ambition. But he has no vision. He doesn't care where the country goes, only that he's seen as the leader. That's why his association with radicals is so disturbing: he can take them where they want to go, and they can give him the direction he lacks.

NY Times in 1999

The New York Times placed the blame squarely where it belongs in an article nine years ago, and even predicted this disaster would occur: 

 Fannie Mae Eases Credit To Aid Mortgage Lending

Here's the third paragraph:

"Fannie Mae, the nation's biggest underwriter of home mortgages, has been under increasing pressure from the Clinton Administration to expand mortgage loans among low and moderate income people and felt pressure from stock holders to maintain its phenomenal growth in profits."

And here's the seventh paragraph:

"In moving, even tentatively, into this new area of lending, Fannie Mae is taking on significantly more risk, which may not pose any difficulties during flush economic times. But the government-subsidized corporation may run into trouble in an economic downturn, prompting a government rescue similar to that of the savings and loan industry in the 1980's."

better link

Can you provide a better link? That site is a spy site.

McCain continues to

McCain continues to frustrate me by not growing a set and clearly refuting these claims by the Obamination camp. I am so sick of hearing the "Maverick" line and the fighting "special interests"...yes, we get it, we know your going to do that and you have in the past..... now get with the program and knock this empty suit of sweet sounding rhetoric, socialist agendas and flat out lies off his pedestal!

Personally, I'm getting a

Personally, I'm getting a little sick of "my friends".

A Very Strange Political Blog

 

Making Fun of AGW http://giovanniworld.wordpress.com/  

 

Some Democrat analyst said

Some Democrat analyst said last Spring that McCain's use of "my friends" made him sound like a candidate from an ealier era - I'm forced to agree. McCain just wasn't the candidate to go up against Obama and win - and I can't think of anyone running wo could. Maybe Giuliani - at least he's fast on his feet.

Besides the other qualities they need to possesss - Republicans need a presidential candidate who is sharper and edgier than the ones who traditionally run.

McNotObama '08

BUT we have another candidate who can not articulate ANYTHING

Can you imagine a guy like Romney, who can actually think and talk clearly going at it with Barry

Instead we have a guy who looks like an ex president who is half senile..so depressing

Thanks Huckabee, for putting this lame McCain against the Marxist

 

pol maven... Not so fast.

pol maven...

Not so fast. Have you looked into what Romney's health plan has done to Mass? They are now standing in line behind California asking for Billions from you and me. And no, I did not support Huckabee. 

A Very Strange Political Blog

 

 

Making Fun of AGW http://giovanniworld.wordpress.com/  

Romney

Romney did not shine at all when questioned by BOR on some issues. He is clearly a "free trader" and I dare say, neither he nor his family is seriously affected by the job losses or the imports. I had frogotten that he is a CFR affilate member.

At one point, I had felt he was that last best hopefor conservatives. Now I think they all s***.

 

Great Point! Obama citical of ... himself!

If McCain wasn't so lumbering and could actually think well on his feet he would have said exactly what Bill Hobbes brought up here. After Obama said that no one did anything, McCain should have jumped in with, "no one did anything about it, including Seantor Obama. If Senator Obama was so upset that no one did anything, why didn't he use the power of his office to do something about it?"

Bill, can we send you instead of McCain to the third debate?

I'd be happy to go

Obama lies with such fluidity and style that he gets away with it over and over and over again. McCain could have whacked him half a dozen times and didn't even take the swing.

Obama is an empty suit with no record of accomplishment - indeed, no real record of even trying to accomplish anything other than his own career upward mobility. His own words about his handling of the Fannie/Freddie issue indicts him. He wrote a letter. He gave a speech. And then he did NOTHING.

McCain needs to stop taking the beatings and start swinging. Hard. Fast. Now.

Hobbs

Although my antenna is not perfect, I maintain and my wife agrees, that I can detect a lie or a conjured statement 9 out of 10 times. Your:"Obama lies with such fluidity and style that he gets away with it over and over and over again." is expressed on point and correctly. I watched most of the debate and I commented, more than once to my wife that O "just made that up". He knows that even if exposed the next day, hardly anyone will know about or remember it.

I am not a McCain fan--but he did not come across as a liar--just a tired old man without the onions to go on the attack.

PS McCain needs to stop saying "my friend". He sounds exactly like the lyng dual citizen he has on staff to help win the Latino vote. (I know I am not alone in this. I got two comments today expressing the same attitude).

I am angry.

   I am angry that a guy this dangerous is this close to the Presidency of the United States.

  The McCain campaign better start hitting this guy hard. Because the word is not getting to the American people through the filter the media has thrown up.

  McCain is out there giving good speeches but like Bush, you have to go out and dig for the transcripts because we never hear any of them. 

Sincerely,

a Veteran of a 1000 psychic wars.

I started cussing right off

I started cussing right off the bat when I heard this. John McCain did not answer to this lie near enough. I think his campaign gurus need to read NB so that they will be prepared for the last debate, perhaps McCain's final chance to win this thing.

"This
liberal would be all about socialize -- uh, uh, would be about
basically taking over and the government running all of your companies."-Maxine Waters 2008

What?!

"A year ago, I went to Wall Street and said we've got to reregulate"'

What the hell does that mean?

I wondered too

I wondered too about that. I wonder if there's a YouTube or transcript of a speech Obama gave about a year ago on Wall Street in which he called for more regulation. Could that be the same private Goldman Sachs event at which Obama was interviewed
by Tom Brokaw?

Obama went to Wall Street?

Indeed Pruduematt -  

Obama went to Wall Street? No kidding - I looked at my wife when he said that (and he has said it before), and we both laughed - and said the same thing at the same time; we were trying to visualize Sen. Obama walking around Wall Street with those big signs drapped over his shoulders front and back:

Front side: 

The End is Near.

Back side: 

I've Warned You!

 

Great post...

This nails it. 

 The other big lie that Hussein told was this: 

1. We went into Iraq so Bin Laden got away.

And I didn’t hear McCain correct the record. Palin would have jumped on his skinny ass and given him a verbal beatdown.

Palin/McCain; not McCain/Palin

Disgraceful

If McCain can't even hit 'em outta the park when Obama tees them up for him, he is doomed.  I think we are at a critical turning point in the history of our nation.  If the left is successful at blaming the financial problem on the free market, it is another (big) nail in the coffin of our greatness.  McCain letting Obama get away with that affirms to me why I can't stand McCain.  This loss will be on the country-club Republican Establishment which still supports Bush and anointed McCain.