Saturday, April 11, 2009

Wall St. Reform Doesn't Go Far Enough

Dianne Feinstein, member of the United States ...

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THE WORLD FROM WASHINGTON

Michael Hirsh

Not long ago, a group of skeptical Democratic senators met at the White House with President Obama, his chief economic adviser, Larry Summers, and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner. The six senators—most of them centrists, joined by one left-leaning independent, Vermont's Bernie Sanders—said that while they supported Obama, they were worried. The financial reform policies the president was pursuing were not going far enough, they told him, and the people Obama was choosing as his regulators were not going to change things fundamentally enough. His appointed officials and nominees were products of the very system that brought us all this economic grief; they would tinker with the system but in the end leave Wall Street, and its practices, mostly intact, the senators suggested politely. In addition to Sanders, the senators at the meeting were Maria Cantwell, Byron Dorgan, Dianne Feinstein, Carl Levin and Jim Webb.

Hirsh: Wall St. Reform Doesn't Go Far Enough | Newsweek Voices - Michael Hirsh | Newsweek.com

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