Congressmen Ask Geithner To Resign
Thursday, November 19, 2009 at 4:08PM
Talk Radio News Service (Admin) in Chinese currency pegging, Congress, Frontpage 2, Joint Economic Committee, News/Commentary, Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY.), Senator Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), U.S. Rep. Kevin Brady, U.S. Rep. Michael Burgess, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner
By Julianne LaJeunesse - University of New Mexico/Talk Radio News Service
Hopefully, no one told U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner that pitching the Obama administration’s financial reform plan to Congress was going to be painless. During a heated Joint Economic Committee hearing on Thursday, U.S. Republican Reps. Michael Burgess (Texas) and Kevin Brady (Texas) called on Geithner to step down, telling him that his work is not adequately serving Americans.
“Conservatives agree that as point person, you failed,” Brady argued. “Liberals are growing in that consensus as well. Poll after poll shows the public has lost confidence in this President’s ability to handle this economy... for the sake of our jobs, will you step down from your post?”
Geithner responded to Brady by saying he’s privileged to serve in his position, but did not give the Congressman an answer. Responding to Brady’s concerns over unemployment and the types of jobs lost, Geithner remarked, “Almost nothing in what you said represents a fair and accurate perception of where this economy is today.”
The purpose of Geithner's visit to the Hill, his second in as many days, was to encourage lawmakers to include four elements that he argued, “are critical to a strong package of [regulatory reform] legislation.”
Among them: Forcing non-banks who act as banks to be subjected to the same safeguards as recognized monetary institutions; accountability that includes a proposed council that will ensure that banks, regardless of size, work on a level playing field; a more capable financial system that will better absorb shocks and failures and adoption of a “no institution should be considered too big to fail” motto, which Geithner explained would be enforced by the government under “resolution authority.”
“This emergency authority, what we call resolution authority, has to be designed to facilitate the orderly demise of a failing firm...not ensure its survival,” he said. "Any risk of loss, must be recouped from the largest institutions, in proportion to their size. The financial industry, not the taxpayers, need to be on the hook.”
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