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The Dirty Secret of the Bailout That No One Is Talking About

Posted by Jason Linkins, Huffington Post at 1:01 PM on September 22, 2008.


"Decisions by the Secretary ... are non-reviewable ... and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency."
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A critical - and radical - component of the bailout package proposed by the Bush administration has thus far failed to garner the serious attention of anyone in the press. Section 8 (which ironically reminds one of the popular name of the portion of the 1937 Housing Act that paved the way for subsidized affordable housing ) of this legislation is just a single sentence of thirty-two words, but it represents a significant consolidation of power and an abdication of oversight authority that's so flat-out astounding that it ought to set one's hair on fire. It reads, in its entirety:

Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency.

In short, the so-called "mother of all bailouts," which will transfer $700 billion taxpayer dollars to purchase the distressed assets of several failed financial institutions, will be conducted in a manner unchallengeable by courts and ungovernable by the People's duly sworn representatives. All decision-making power will be consolidated into the Executive Branch - who, we remind you, will have the incentive to act upon this privilege as quickly as possible, before they leave office. The measure will run up the budget deficit by a significant amount, with no guarantee of recouping the outlay, and no fundamental means of holding those who fail to do so accountable.

Is this starting to sound familiar? Robert Kuttner cuts through much of the gloss in an article in today's American Prospect:

The deal proposed by Paulson is nothing short of outrageous. It includes no oversight of his own closed-door operations. It merely gives congressional blessing and funding to what he has already been doing, ad hoc. He plans to retain Wall Street firms as advisors to decide just how to cut deals to value and mop up Wall Street's dubious paper. There are to be no limits on executive compensation for the firms that get relief, and no equity share for the government in exchange for this massive infusion of capital. Both Obama and McCain have opposed the provision denying any judicial review of decisions made by Paulson -- a provision that evokes the Bush administration's suspension of normal constitutional safeguards in its conduct of foreign policy and national security. [...]

The differences between this proposed bailout and the three closest historical equivalents are immense. When the Reconstruction Finance Corporation of the 1930s pumped a total of $35 billion into U.S. corporations and financial institutions, there was close government supervision and quid pro quos at every step of the way. Much of the time, the RFC became a preferred shareholder, and often appointed board members. The Home Owners Loan Corporation, which eventually refinanced one in five mortgage loans, did not operate to bail out banks but to save homeowners. And the Resolution Trust Corporation of the 1980s, created to mop up the damage of the first speculative mortgage meltdown, the S&L collapse, did not pump in money to rescue bad investments; it sorted out good assets from bad after the fact, and made sure to purge bad executives as well as bad loans. And all three of these historic cases of public recapitalization were done without suspending judicial review.

Kuttner's opposition here is perhaps the strongest language I've seen used, pushing back on this piece of legislation, in any publication of repute, and even here, Section 8 is not cited by name or by content. McClatchy Newspapers also alludes to Section 8 with concern, citing the "unfettered authority" that Paulson would be granted, and noting that the "law also would preclude court review of steps Paulson might take, something Joshua Rosner, managing director of economic researcher Graham Fisher & Co. in New York, said could be used to mask previous illegal activity." Jack Balkin also gives the matter the sort of attention it deserves on his blog, Balkinization.

But elsewhere, the conversation is muted. The debate over whether Congress is going to pass the Paulson bailout package, or pass the Paulson bailout package really hard seems to have boiled down to a discussion of time and concessions. The White House has made it clear that they want this package passed yesterday. Congressional Democrats seem to be of different minds on the matter, with some pushing back hard, and others content to demand a small dollop of turd polish to make the package seem more aesthetically pleasing, at which point, they'll likely roll over and pass the bill. Neither candidate, John McCain or Barack Obama, seem all that amenable toward the bailout, but neither have either demonstrated that they are willing to risk their candidacies to do much more than exploit the issue for electoral purposes.

Sunday morning came and went, with Paulson traipsing dutifully from studio to studio, facing nary a question on Section 8. Front page articles in the New York Times, Washington Post, and the Wall Street Journal detail the wranglings, but make no mention of this section of the legislation. On TV, cable news networks are stuck in the fog of the ongoing presidential campaign.

Throughout the coverage, one catches a whiff of what seems like substantive pushback on this power grab, but it largely amounts to a facsimile of journalistic diligence. Most note, in general terms, that the bailout represents a set of "broad powers" that will be granted to the Department of the Treasury. Yet the coverage offsets these concerns through the constant hyping of the White House's overall message of "urgency."

But one cannot overstate this: Section 8 is a singularly transformative sentence of economic policy. It transfers a significant amount of power to the Executive Branch, while walling off any avenue for oversight, and offering no guarantees in return. And if the Democrats end up content with winning a few slight concessions, they risk not putting a stop-payment on the real "blank check" - the one in which they allow the erosion of their own powers.

Over in the Senate, Christopher Dodd has proposed a bailout legislation of his own, which critically calls for "an oversight board that not only includes the chairman of the Federal Reserve and the SEC, but congressionally appointed, non-governmental officials" and would require the President to appoint an "independent inspector general to investigate the Treasury asset program." In Dodd's legislation, Section 8 is effectively stripped from the bill.

Nevertheless, the fact that Section 8 of the Paulson plan seems to strike few as a de facto dealbreaker can and should astound. The failure of Congress to hold the line on this point would be truly embarrassing. But if we make it through this week with nobody in the press specifically informing the public about the implications of this single sentence - in the middle of a complicated bill, in the middle of a complicated time - then right there, you have the single largest media failure of this year.

Digg!

Tagged as: bush, economy, middle class, wall street, depression, economic recession, bailout

Jason Linkins is an associate editor at the Huffington Post, based in Washington, DC.


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Unconstitutional
Posted by: Kitty Lady Oregon on Sep 22, 2008 1:24 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The entire bailout is unconstitutional. Only the Congress has the authority to spend the taxpayer's money. By giving over control of the taxpayer money, the Congress will give up the balance of their duties to the executive branch since they already gave up the power to declar war. They might as well go home and let the oligarchy rule the banana republic which will ensue.
This is treason!

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» RE: Unconstitutional Posted by: chuckjs
THE PLAN WILL BE MODIFIED
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Sep 22, 2008 6:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There will be a bailout of a kind, but not a check for $700 Billion, no questions asked. Chris Dodd is working very hard to pull something together that doesn't put Paulson in charge with no oversight. The Bush style of throwing money at problems, is over. ANNA

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Petition Link
Posted by: lindajrjt on Sep 23, 2008 12:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here is a link to sign a petition against the bailout using taxpayers money. Petition

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Dictatorship!
Posted by: citizenjoe on Sep 23, 2008 7:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This increases the power of Executive dictatorship very considerably. The Congress is entirely cowed by the Executive already. This bill will completely subordinate the Congress and finish the job of demolishing the Constitution-- without a peep from Hoyer and Pelosi.They represent corporate power which wants the Executive to be free to do its bidding without interference from "the peoples representatives." Yes, Mr. Jones this is the corporate state and the corporate state is fascism. --

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Bailing out A.I.G.
Posted by: AJWeishar on Sep 23, 2008 9:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why are we bailing out a company that has assets in Europe, including tons of gold? Check out the writings of Israel Shamir and anything on the Gold Warriors.

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Burning of the Reichstag Equivalent
Posted by: Gretchen on Sep 23, 2008 9:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The US is being taken over from the inside. If this passes as is, Congress and the Courts and we the people they are supposed to represent would essentially be dissolved as they would have no power to stop the wholesale theft of our entire financial infrastructure/funds and the gifting of it to the wealthy, completely submitting to a dictatorial rule by the Secretary of Treasury and the President. Is cancelling the elections next? Martial Law anyone?

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Whose friends are they?
Posted by: modeler on Sep 23, 2008 10:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Paulson made 40 Million a year at Goldman Sachs. Who do you think he hung out with? Certainly not with John Doe who has to toil to eke out as living. I would not trust him or the clown who appointed him. Does Enron ring a bell? Some of their executives were close advisors to Dubya. 700 000 000 000 Dollar, how long would you have to work for a sum like that to support those who screwed you in the first place?

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Part of the Plan
Posted by: schiffer on Sep 23, 2008 4:48 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Much smarter people than I have noticed that bankrupting the government is a major part of the republican plan since at least Reagan. Keep this in mind.
Enslavement has always been the goal.

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