
The president of the Tennessee Tea Party apologized for a tweet someone in his group sent out calling Barney Frank a "perverted sodomite," though she added a caveat: "While privately and inwardly I may agree with the commentary, it is completely irresponsible for any one of us to write these kinds of commentaries."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (0)Groups opposed to the open service of gay and lesbian members of the military will continue to fear-monger about gay and straight service members showering together to sexualize the open service issue, Jarrod Chlapowski of Servicemembers United told TPM in an interview.
"I see that as being a talking point to just raise fears and draw attention to their general opposition to the issue and that's not something that I think will go away anytime soon," Chlapowski said.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (0)The House ethics committee is probing why the House Financial Services Committee failed to fully comply with its promise to turn over all documents related to an investigation of subcommittee chairwoman Maxine Waters (D-CA), the Washington Post reports.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (0)After a federal judge yesterday ordered the military to stop enforcing Don't Ask, Don't Tell, Rep. Barney Frank called for the Obama administration to wait to appeal the ruling until after Congress can repeal the policy in a lame-duck session.
Frank (D-MA), who is gay, appeared on MSNBC last night to call for the Justice Department to wait to appeal the ruling.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (1)Since the House vote today to refer to the ethics committee the question of what Democratic leaders knew about former Rep. Eric Massa before news of harassment allegations broke publicly, it's worth looking at the timeline of what we know so far.
At some point in or before October 2009, Massa took out to dinner a member of Rep. Barney Frank's committee staff, Frank said in a statement today. The staffer told another Frank staffer, who in turn told Frank's co-chief of staff, Maria Giesta.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)The same Washington lobbyist who led the sub-prime mortgage industry's successful bid to shoot down government efforts to curtail risky lending is now helping pay-day lenders to water down the financial-regulatory reform bill currently before Congress.
Wright Andrews has developed a niche representing some of the least sympathetic and most predatory players in the financial industry. A veteran lawyer-lobbyist and one-time aide to Democratic senator Sam Nunn, Andrews has lobbied extensively of late for a trade association for pay-day lenders -- which offer short-term, high-interest loans to the working poor, often triggering a cycle of debt for their customers. During the last decade, Andrews ran three different trade groups for the sub-prime mortgage industry, whose home loans defaulted in massive numbers to set off the financial crisis.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) has released a statement confirming that former Congressman Eric Massa took a member of his staff to dinner, following a Washington Post report on the "date."
Frank says that a member of his personal staff believed that, "although this was not an ethical violation," she thought "it should be called to the attention of former Congressman Massa's Chief of Staff, Joe Racalto, a former colleague."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (2)We told you earlier about the spat between Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) and Wall Street Journal columnist John Fund, which was triggered by Fund's erroneous claim that Frank has been working on a "universal voter registration" bill.
As we reported, Fund is continuing to claim that Frank supports the concept of universal voter registration, which Fund says would overturn state laws and undermine safeguards designed to protect against vote fraud.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (9)Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA), and Wall Street Journal columnist John Fund are engaged in a bitter war of words stemming from an inaccurate charge made by Fund against the congressman in a speech last fall.
In an interview with TPMmuckraker, Frank called Fund "a liar and a coward," and launched a broadside at "the right-wing echo chamber" that picked up on Fund's erroneous charge against the congressman. For his part, Fund called Frank's outrage "a little sad."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (10)Momentum is building for hearings on what Tim Geithner knew and when he knew it about the New York Fed's effort to press AIG to keep secret details of its massive federal bailout.
Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA), who chairs the House Financial Services committee, told BusinessWeek: "To the extent that there were problems in that AIG situation, we have taken steps to prevent their occurrence."
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (6)A group of moderate Democrats held private meetings this fall with executives from Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase, while in the midst of pushing successfully to water down landmark legislation designed to beef up regulation of the financial industry.
In mid October, members of the New Democrat Coalition (NDC), a caucus of pro-business Democrats, traveled to New York City. According to an emailed itinerary for the trip drawn up by an event planner working for the group and obtained by TPMmuckraker, members met on October 12 with executives from Goldman, and the following day with execs from JP Morgan. Sandwiched between those events was a fundraiser for the New Dems, and a meeting with CEOs from Marsh and McLellan Companies, a consulting and insurance firm.
[SEE THE ITINERARY EMAIL HERE. SEE AN INVITATION FOR THE FUNDRAISER HERE]
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (13)Credit rating agencies are coming under fire from Congress again -- but this time it's for being too pessimistic. After Moody's issued an unprecedented across-the-board negative credit outlook on all American cities and towns yesterday, House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank issued his own negative assessment of Moody's, and scheduled a hearing to investigate:
I am troubled by the action of Moody's Investors Service to issue a negative outlook across the board on America's municipalities, which could raise the interest rates on cities and towns making it more expensive to borrow funds for infrastructure improvements.On the face of it, this seems like a perverse round of messenger shooting. But last March, as cities and towns across the country started getting flooded with demands for huge payouts rooted in arcane details of "swap" contracts they'd inked with banks that managed their bond offerings, Frank discovered something truly perverse: the public sector was being scammed on multiple fronts by the investment banks underwriting their bond offerings -- and the profits directly fed the disastrous trade of risky mortgage-linked credit default swaps that hastened the financial meltdown.
The scheme started at the credit ratings agencies, which keep two sets of standards for grading corporate and municipal bonds -- and municipalities are held to a much higher standard, as Frank explained in a hearing using Moody's own data:
I will be giving out this chart, sectoral breakdown of Moody's rated issuers and defaulters, 1970 to 2000, general obligation bonds, there it is. Number of issuers 14,775. Number of defaults, 0.PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)
Barney Frank's House Financial Services committee has released the contract that governed those AIG bonuses. We've posted it here.
No names are given, but you can see the terms of the payments.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (4)In what could be the first instance of a congressional committee citing reporting by TMZ (or maybe not!), Democrats on the House Financial Services committee, led by Rep. Barney Frank, have sent a letter to the CEO of Northern Trust bank, demanding that the bank re-pay taxpayers for a lavish spending spree -- featuring a Sheryl Crow concert and gifts of Tiffany's trinkets -- surrounding a recent golf tournament it sponsored for clients.
The splurge, which took $1.5 billion in bailout money last fall, was first reported earlier today by TMZ.com, the entertainment site.
TMZ offered a rundown of the trip's highlights:
- Wednesday, Northern Trust hosted a fancy dinner at the Ritz followed by a performance by the group Chicago.- Thursday, Northern Trust rented a private hangar at the Santa Monica Airport for dinner, followed by a performance by Earth, Wind & Fire.
- Saturday, Northern Trust had the entire House of Blues in West Hollywood shut down for its private party. We got the menu -- guests dined on seared salmon and petite Angus filet. Dinner was followed by a performance by none other than Sheryl Crow.
There was also a fabulous cocktail party at the Loews. And how's this for a nice touch: Female guests at the Chicago concert all got trinkets from ... TIFFANY AND CO.
In the letter, Frank and his colleagues wrote that the spending "demonstrates extraordinary levels of irresponsibility and arrogance," and called on Northern Trust CEO Frederick Waddell to return the money to taxpayers.
In response to the TMZ report, a spokesman for the Chicago-based bank told the Chicago Tribune that the bank had committed to sponsor the golf tournament over a year before it got bailout money. He continued: "The reason Northern Trust sponsors the Open is it's an integral part of its marketing program. It's about client relationships and showing appreciation for clients."
The full letter from the Financial Services committee Democrats follows after the jump ...
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (6)A nice moment from the hearings...
Barney Frank declares, re: bonuses:
This notion that you need some special incentive to do the right thing troubles me.
Then he asks: What is it you'd do differently if you didn't get a bonus?
It's a question Frank had been previewing all week. He throws it open to any of the CEOs.
Morgan Stanley's John Mack is the only one brave enough to hazard an answer. But all he brief historical digression about how the bonus system became established at investment banks.
But Mack acknowledges:
Without question, given the risks we take today, and the size of our bonuses ... all that has to be looked at again.
Frank's conclusion:
So if there were no bonuses, we'd still get our money's worth.
Sounds about right.
As we said, Barney Frank's committee has posted the CEOs' prepared statements on its website.
We're watching the hearings, which just began, but feel free to look through what the prepared remarks and send us anything good...
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (2)
The CEOs of the eight banks that received the most bailout money are about to testify before the House Financial Services committee, starting any minute. But the committee has already posted the CEOs' prepared statements on its website.
Here are some highlights:
Bank of America's Ken Lewis will say that executive pay and bonuses are intended "to grow our business, enhance profitability and generate returns for investors." That includes "the investors that are the focus of this hearing: U.S. taxpayers."
Citigroup's Vikram Pandit will say that he "removed the people responsible for Citi's financial distress."
JP Morgan Chase's Jamie Dimon will advocate a new bank regulatory system, which would include a "systemic risk regulator."
On compensation, Dimon will say:
Our employees worked harder than ever and performed admirably for the company and for clients under enormously challenging conditions in 2008. I believe the compensation we paid them was appropriate.
We'll be blogging the hearings as they happen, so stay tuned...
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)Remember that saying about catching more flies with honey than with vinegar?
Yesterday we wrote that the House Financial Services committee, chaired by Rep. Barney Frank, had invited the CEOs of eight big banks -- including Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, Citi, and JP Morgan -- to testify. But, we noted, the committee wouldn't say whether any of the CEOs had accepted the invitation -- leaving the possibility that they might just say no. Any thought given to issuing subpoenas, we wondered.
It looks like that won't be necessary. Steve Adamske, a spokesman for the committee, confirmed to TPMmuckraker that all eight CEOs would indeed testify. Adamske said that subpoenas weren't necessary, since the political optics of not showing up would be too harmful for the banks. He said committee staff is working with the banks to schedule the CEOs' appearances.
So it looks like we'll get to hear straight from the horses' mouths about what the banks have been doing with the bailout funds. Sometimes asking nicely gets results.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (5)Barney Frank, the chair of the House Financial Services committee, has invited the heads of the first eight banks that received bailout funds to testify at a hearing next Wednesday on the bailout, reports CNNMoney.com.
Those CEOs are:
Ken Lewis of Bank of America; Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase; Vikram Pandit of Citi; Ronald Logue of State Street; Robert Kelly of Bank of New York; John Stumpf of Wells Fargo; John Mack of Morgan Stanley; and Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs.
But notice that word "invite." It appears that the corporate titans are free to choose not to attend -- even though Frank is seeking crucial information about what their firms did with the hundreds of billions in taxpayer money we gave them.
Indeed, CNNMoney.com adds:
A press secretary declined to comment on whether any of the CEOs have accepted the invitation.
So it sounds like a real possibility that at least some of those CEOs might just go ahead and decline Frank's polite invitation.
We've contacted the committee's press office to ask whether subpoenaing the CEOs was considered, or might still be in the future. We'll let you know what we hear.
PERMALINK | COMMENTS | RECOMMEND RECOMMEND (3)
