Elizabeth Warren, Republican Punching Bag (Video)
Mar 20, 2011 at 3:28 PM
DailyBail in Wall Street Bailout, banks, banks, cfpb, congress, congressional hearings, congressional video, elizabeth warren, elizabeth warren, video, wall street, wall street

Video - Mar. 16, 2011

Congressman Duffy questioned Elizabeth Warren, Special Advisor to the Secretary of the Treasury for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau during a Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit hearing entitled: "Oversight of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)"

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Video - Mar. 16, 2011

Rep. Ed Royce questions Warren.

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An Advocate Who Scares Republicans

By Joe Nocera

The piñata sat alone at the witness table, facing the members of the House subcommittee on financial institutions and consumer credit.

And thus the real purpose of the hearing: to allow the Republicans who now run the House to box Ms. Warren about the ears. The big banks loathe Ms. Warren, who has made a career out of pointing out all the ways they gouge financial consumers — and whose primary goal is to make such gouging more difficult. So, naturally, the Republicans loathe her too. That she might someday run this bureau terrifies the banks. So, naturally, it terrifies the Republicans.

To listen to the House Republicans, you’d think the financial crisis of 2008 was like that infamous season of the long-running soap opera “Dallas,” the one that turned out to be a season-long dream. Subprime mortgages? Too-big-to-fail banks? Unregulated derivatives? No problem! With the exception of their bête noire, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the Republicans act as if nothing needs to be done to prevent another crisis. Indeed, they act as if the crisis never happened.

It’s not just the House Republicans either. Already the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency has reverted to form, becoming once again a captive of the banks it is supposed to regulate. (It has strenuously opposed the efforts of the A.G.’s to penalize the banks and reform the mortgage modification process, for instance.) The banks themselves act as if they have a God-given right to the profit they made precrisis, and owe the country nothing for the trouble they’ve put us all through. The Justice Department has essentially given up trying to make anyone accountable for the crisis.

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