WASHINGTON — How is it that Republican presidential
candidate Senator John McCain has been badly damaged by this
financial crisis while the Democratic presidential candidate,
Senator Barack Obama, is successfully presenting himself as a
financial genius, capable of working Christ’s miracle of the
loaves and fishes on our economy?
The financial markets froze up because the Democrats prevailed on
mortgage lenders — mainly Freddie Mac and Fannie Mac — to relax
standards against thitherto unqualified property buyers. They did
it out of an ideological commitment to their thesis that poor
people living in private homes would be better citizens. It was a
noble vision. Yet it was economically untenable. A huge real
estate bubble resulted, and now that the bubble has burst the
entire economy is imperiled.
Curiously, the Democrats have not suffered the consequences of
their “deregulation” of the mortgage market. Instead, they have
hung the “deregulation” canard on McCain. As the record makes
clear, it is McCain who signed on to a letter with 19 other
Republican senators in 2006 calling for the tightening up of
Fannie and Freddie’s loans. Even before that, in the summer of
2005, Republican Senator Richard Shelby fashioned a bill in the
Senate Banking Committee to impose stricter regulations on Fannie
and Freddie only to see it blocked from getting to the Senate
floor by a party line vote that kept it in committee. The
Republicans favored this regulation tightening. The Democrats
opposed it.
In an early example of his slipperiness, Senator Obama stood with
his fellow Democrats in opposing the bill. Then he went on record
opposing his own vote by writing the Secretary of the Treasury
that subprime mortgages are dangerous. As has been said of other
evasive politicians, Obama is a chameleon on plaid. Apparently a
chameleon on plaid can escape the media’s accountability even as
he boldly opposes stricter regulations on subprime loans while
writing the Treasury to oppose such loans. Yet how is it that the
media have given the entire Democratic Party a pass on their
advocacy of subprime loans?
As this election grinds on I am frequently reminded that voters
are not getting the whole story, that coverage is amazingly
slanted towards an inexperienced Obama who, incidentally, comes
from a very dubious background. I have been especially aware of
this since September 26. That was when The American
Spectator online
reported that Senator Obama’s longtime political supporter
and present National Finance Chair gutted a Chicagoland bank by
recklessly extending the kind of dubious loans that have caused
today’s financial crisis.
Penny Pritzker, from her position on the board of the holding
company controlling Superior Bank, approved of risky loan
practices that eventually cost depositors hundreds of millions of
dollars. Superior had been unable to make money with traditional
safe loans, so Ptitzker encouraged the bank to enter the subprime
market. Then she defied regulators who told her the bank’s
practices were reckless. After the bank failed in 2001 and
government investigators examined the corpus delicti, the wealthy
Pritzker family ended up paying $460 million in penalties over a
15-year period.
Nonetheless, when it came to selecting his finance chair,
candidate Obama chose Penny Pritzker. Now, with not a peep of
recognition from the media, he abominates Wall Street for
practices she pioneered. He claims Republican aversion to
regulation led to this financial crisis. Yet the record is clear.
In the finance sector it is the Republicans who favored
regulation and the Democrats who thwarted it. If the media remain
mum on all this, these same Democrats will control two branches
of the federal government soon. Maybe they will make Penny
Pritzker secretary of the Treasury.