(snip)
Ya know, that Hillary is so good with all those facts and figures...
She's a real cruncher of the details...and since the devil is in the 
details, as they say, it's good to have Hillary where she belongs:
On the Senate Floor...
Since Teddy got sick, the Lion of the Senate, as he's called, 
Hillary will act, as the Wild Boar of the Senate...so don't mess with 
her.
Ya, know what I mean?
Just get out of her way...
R.g.
>
> Anglachel's Journal Sunday, October 05, 2008 "Hillary's Senate Floor
> Statement on the Hanky Panky" http://tinyurl.com/4gousj
> "...What becomes clear in the statement is that there is at least 
one
> Democrat in the Senate who is thinking extremely concretely about 
how
> to reform the financial system from top to bottom. She opens with 
some
> straightforwardly constituent-oriented explanation for her vote: New
> York is the nation's financial center and is going to get the 
stuffing
> beaten out of it unless things can be stabilized. She doesn't sugar
> coat it..." http://tinyurl.com/4qqk3a
> 
> Senator Clinton: Thank you Mr. President. Thank you very much, and I
> appreciate the extraordinary work that has been done with respect to
> the rescue package, led in a bipartisan fashion which has certainly
> produced significant changes in the original request that came to 
the
> Congress from the Treasury Department. And tonight we will vote on
> legislation none of us wish we were considering and none of us can
> afford to see fail. The costs of inaction are far too great. We are
> already seeing the consequences of a freezing credit market that 
will
> only worsen.
> 
> I hear across my state of New York, small businesses are struggling 
to
> find affordable loans to keep their doors open and their inventory
> stocked. Even larger businesses are being pushed to the breaking 
point
> throughout the country, the impact of this credit crisis is 
beginning
> to be felt, with students who are seeing the sources of student 
loans
> drying up, interest rates on car payments rising, families who had
> saved up and acted responsibly seeing higher mortgage rates, 
shrinking
> their dream of homeownership.
> 
> Our economy runs on credit, and underlying that credit is trust. 
Both
> the credit and the trust is running out. Essentially what we are 
doing
> here in an intangible way is restoring trust and confidence in a 
very
> tangible way: helping to restore credit. Banks will refuse to lend 
to
> businesses and even to one another. Investors continue to withdraw
> into the safest if investments, treasury bills, even cash. Tens of
> thousands of jobs in New York have been lost and a study this 
morning
> projected that New York alone would lose at least 120,000 jobs.
> 
> Now I think we are here in some respects because we failed to 
tackle a
> home mortgage crisis, and now we are facing a market crisis. If we
> fail to tackle the market crisis, we risk an even deeper economic
> crisis. I don't think any of us want to see irresponsibility on Wall
> Street compounded by ineffectiveness in Washington. That's why we 
must
> act, even as we do so with regret and reservations, because we have
> little choice.
> 
> The proposal we are considering is far from perfect, but it is a far
> cry from the original plan sent over by the Treasury Department that
> installed virtually unlimited powers in the hands of the Treasury
> Secretary. As I said when we first examined that original three-page
> proposal, we needed a plan that included checks and balances, not a
> blank check.
> 
> And thanks to the leadership here in the Senate and in the House, we
> have negotiated through the Congress, on a bipartisan basis, a 
better
> alternative that installs taxpayer protections, asserts oversight, 
and
> maintains greater accountability. As is the case very often in
> effective compromises, no one is happy. But we cannot let the 
perfect
> be the enemy of the good, or in this case, the enemy of what's
> necessary. But as we vote for this proposal tonight, we must do so
> considering what steps we will take next.
> 
> On the floor at this moment are three of the leaders who shaped 
this,
> under the very able leadership of Chairman Dodd, and the chief
> Republican negotiator, Senator Gregg, and of course the Chairman of
> the Finance Committee, Chairman Baucus.
> 
> But I think we all recognize that this is not the end but the
> beginning of what we must do. And I believe there are three big 
goals
> that we will have to address even after we pass the Rescue Package
> tonight here in the Senate and send it over to the House.
> 
> First, we must address the home mortgage crisis. For two years, I 
and
> others have called for action as wave after wave of defaults and
> foreclosures crashed against communities and the broader economy. We
> are not yet through the woods. Millions of mortgages are underwater 
or
> under specter of adjustable rates set to rise.
> 
> I am proposing what we're calling The Homeowners Mortgage 
Enterprise,
> an acronym obviously spelling HOME, to rewrite mortgages and reset
> terms so that creditworthy, responsible families can keep their 
homes
> and keep making affordable payments. Through such a HOME program, 
we'd
> also be able to consider freezing adjustable mortgage rates and even
> placing short term moratoriums on foreclosures.
> 
> When our country enacted a similar program in the Great Depression, 
we
> saved one million homes without costing the taxpayers a dime. In 
fact,
> the program ended up with a surplus. And only by rewriting the terms
> of the debt held by families whose mortgages can be salvaged will we
> recoup a great deal of the value of the debt we are purchasing from
> Wall Street firms.
> 
> I also believe we need to consider a real tax credit for homebuyers 
to
> jump start the housing market. This has been an effective tool in 
the
> past and it can be an effective tool again. We have too much supply
> and too little demand, and getting the liquidity that will be 
injected
> into the credit markets to work its way through the entire economy
> will take time. I think we need not only a supply of liquidity but 
an
> increase in demand, particularly in the housing market.
> 
> Second, we must be vigilant on behalf of taxpayers, putting in place
> safeguards so the Treasury is maximizing the value of the assets
> purchased with taxpayer dollars. We need to have the flexibility to
> ensure we're not just subsidizing investors and executives, but we
> should tie this debt relief to strong recapitalization requirements
> and greater accountability.
> 
> I also want to be sure that companies do not take undue advantage of
> this program and sell securities to the Treasury with one stroke of
> the pen and claim a deduction for the losses on those assets with 
the
> other—in essence, double dipping, dumping their bad assets on
> taxpayers, and getting a tax break as well.
> 
> I'm proposing we build on a very creative provision in the bill 
before
> us, and establish an e-TRUST Program. That would stand for 
Transparent
> Rules Used to Safeguard Taxpayers. In the bill, there's a provision
> that transactions be put on the Internet. I want to ensure that the
> assets brought—bought and sold by the Treasury Department are 
reported
> online in real time, so any American can log on and see how their 
tax
> dollars are being spent. All assets bought and sold must be 
available
> on a publicly accessible website that discloses the buyers, sellers
> and values of these assets. The American people are buying these
> securities, and so the American people must have easy access to 
their
> portfolio.
> 
> It's also important for the American people to understand that lying
> behind these complex transactions, with all kinds of long names that
> you read in the newspaper—collateralized debt obligations, and 
credit
> default swaps and all the other, you know, words that are used to in
> some way explain the complex financial transactions that brought to 
us
> this place—standing behind are real assets. There are real homes 
owned
> by real people on real land in real communities across America. So 
we
> want to know how those securities that stand in for these real 
assets
> are being traded, bought, and sold, and we want to be sure that we
> realize for the taxpayer the benefit of these transactions.
> 
> And third, I think there is general agreement we must pursue broader
> reforms. That is one of the lessons of this turmoil. I know that
> Chairman Dodd and others will be holding hearings to try to untangle
> how we got to where we are. We know we have to rein in executive
> compensation by giving shareholders a greater role and eliminating
> loopholes that allow boards to conceal the value of salary packages.
> We've got to end the quarter-by-quarter mentality in which long term
> prosperity is subverted by short term stock valuations. And 
obviously,
> we have to end the culture of recklessness in our financial markets
> endorsed by an ideology of indifference in Washington.
> 
> As the American people invest in these companies, I think we should
> ask the companies to invest in the American people. I think we 
should
> consider requiring financial institutions participating in this
> Treasury plan to create an American Priorities Fund to be part of
> their portfolios, to invest in clean energy, infrastructure, mass
> transit, manufacturing, education, and other public goods and goals
> that would be well served by greater private investment.
> 
> Along with the rescue package will be a number of tax credits that
> will be passed by the Senate tonight. Again, Chairman Baucus has 
done
> yeoman's work getting these tax credits put together. The Senate
> supported them before in it as a fix for the Alternative Minimum 
Tax,
> energy production tax credits. In fact, we will be stimulating the
> economy for Main Street while we pass this rescue package for our
> credit markets. I think that's the right combination.
> 
> But we need to do more. Instead of toxic securities that nobody can
> understand, are so complex and lack all transparency and
> accountability, banks should be investing in clean energy facilities
> in Buffalo, or new auto manufacturing plants in Detroit to build 
more
> fuel-efficient cars. We should be repairing our bridges, our roads,
> our tunnels. We should investing in high-speed rail and making sure
> that Amtrak is just not a second-class railroad, but competes with 
the
> best anywhere in the world.
> 
> I think, Mr. President, that the agenda before the Congress is a 
very
> important one for our country. We cannot continue to shuttle from
> crisis to crisis. This is a sink-or-swim moment for our country and 
we
> cannot merely catch our breath. We must swim for the shores. And we
> must do so together, not only as a united Congress, but as a united
> country. There's so much work to be done in America, so many
> investments that will make us richer and stronger and safer and
> smarter, that will enable us to look into the eyes of our children 
and
> grandchildren and tell them that we're leaving our country and in as
> good, in fact, better shape than when we found it. At this moment we
> can't say that. But I am absolutely sure, based on the bipartisan
> cooperation that we saw on this bill in responding to a real crisis,
> that we will see more of that in the months ahead. Our new President
> will certainly demand it of us, but we should be demanding it of
> ourselves, and demonstrate to the American people that the United
> States Congress will lead the way into a much more confident and
> optimistic future for America.
> 
> Thank you Mr. President. I yield the floor.
>


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