[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 64 (Wednesday, April 29, 2009)]
[House]
[Pages H4980-H4987]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FISCAL ISSUES AFFECTING THE COUNTRY
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Ms. Markey of Colorado). Under the Speaker's
announced policy of January 6, 2009, the gentleman from Massachusetts
(Mr. Capuano) is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the
majority leader.
Mr. CAPUANO. Madam Speaker, I am here tonight to talk about some of
the fiscal issues that have affected this country and how they were
caused and maybe a little bit of who caused them and who didn't cause
them.
Over the last several months, obviously there has been a lot of
debate
[[Page H4981]]
about this and there have been a lot of people who want to point a lot
of fingers at other people. And that is natural. We all tend to do some
of that in our lives, and it is particularly natural here in
Washington. People love to point fingers at somebody else when there
are bad things going on, and people love to point fingers at themselves
when there is something good that goes on.
In this particular case, with the financial crisis that we have,
instead of stepping up and understanding that, I believe every single
American, including me, has some degree of blame in the current fiscal
situation. Everybody tried to get a piece of the American dream.
Everybody tried to punch up whatever retirement plans they had.
Everybody tried to get better rates on their loans. Everybody tried to
get better rates on their credit cards. Everybody tried to get more
mortgages than they could afford. Everybody tried to do it. And, of
course, some people in business were there to try to provide those
things.
So I think it is a little ludicrous to try to blame anyone in
particular, or actually any group of people. I think it is all of us
that have some degree of blame.
As I heard some of my colleagues just a few minutes ago try to blame
Fannie and Freddie or try to blame individual Members of the House or
individual Members of the Senate, I think that is ridiculous, and I
actually have more faith in the average American than to think they
would think any individual or any one group could do it.
In this particular case, let's go back just a little bit. What were
Fannie and Freddie created for? They were created to help the middle
class be able to purchase a home. That is why they were created.
Because before their creation, home ownership was limited to only about
20 to 30 percent of Americans. About 60 to 70 percent of Americans were
never able to afford a home because banks simply wouldn't make loans
unless they were absolutely guaranteed of always getting their money
back. They wouldn't take any risk whatsoever.
So Fannie and Freddie were created in order to stabilize home
ownership that was on the border. They were also created, most
importantly, to expand the availability of mortgages to working people.
And it happened slowly, over time. This country went from a place where
only 30 percent of Americans own homes, to now in today's world
approximately 70 percent of Americans own their own homes. That is in
contrast to most of Western Europe, where it is about 90 percent of
people own their own homes.
I personally think, having been raised in a middle-class, lower-
middle-class family, that home ownership is still the best way to
guarantee entry and maintenance of a middle-class lifestyle, because it
is the largest purchase any of us will ever make, most of us will ever
make. It is the most important purchase.
In the normal course of events, over time, you build up equity in a
home. And most of us have to remortgage it to send our kids to college.
That is how most of us afforded to be able to send our kids to college.
All that being said, Fannie and Freddie and their concept of a
government-sponsored enterprise have created over time an immense
number of homeowners, an immense number of people who would not
otherwise have had an opportunity to get a mortgage.
{time} 2000
I have no doubt. I totally agree that over the last 10 or so years,
like everybody else, they decided to stretch some of the definitions to
do some things that maybe were questionable, not necessarily for any
nefarious reasons, but for the same reason banks were doing it, for the
same reason hedge funds were created, for the same reason private
equity firms were created, to get a little bit better return.
Now, there were many of us at the time, now I'm talking back in 2005
and earlier, who said, you know, maybe they've gone too far; maybe
they've expanded it just a little bit too much; maybe they have to be
reined back in.
And back at that time, our friends, the Republicans on the other side
of the aisle, were in charge of the House, they were in charge of the
Senate, and they were in charge of the White House. And we worked with
them. We worked with Chairman Mike Oxley of the Financial Services
Committee to try to come up with a bill that would address some of
these very issues, and we did. We got a bill out of committee and on to
the floor of this House in a bipartisan fashion that would have reined
in some of the concerns that these people that have just talked have
about Fannie and Freddie, and not just Fannie and Freddie. I don't want
to pretend in any way that they were the only ones doing this, but they
were also the ones that we were responsible for. It would have reined
them in. And it was done in a responsible way, in a bipartisan way,
with Chairman Oxley and at that time Ranking Member Barney Frank and
the White House, the Bush White House, not the Obama White House, not
the Clinton White House, but with the Bush White House.
When the bill got out here some of the more extreme Members wanted to
shut down the whole thing, having no clue how most of their own
constituents were able to afford a home, and they raised all their
concerns, all the same ones you've heard tonight, that government
should have nothing to do with mortgage rates. Well, that's ridiculous.
That is ridiculous. And they just decided to kill it. This is back in
2003, 2004 and 2005.
And if you don't believe me, we have quotes here from Chairman Oxley
himself, who was quoted as saying--now, this is after the fact. This is
dated September 2008, talking about those times. And Chairman Oxley
himself, this is a quote from the Financial Times, not necessarily the
bastion of liberal thinking. He fumes about the criticism of his House
colleagues. This is a quote: ``All the hand-wringing and bed wetting is
going on without remembering how the House stepped up on this,'' he
says.
What did we get from the White House? We got a one-finger salute.
When we tried to rein in Fannie and Freddie, the right-wing members of
the Republican Party decided to say ``no.'' They decided to let it
ride.
Now, I understand what they were doing for political purposes. I
don't understand, still don't to this day understand what they were
trying do for financial purposes or government purposes. But ideologues
around this place never understand that sometimes doing what's right
for people is better than winning an ideological argument.
In this case, if we had simply done that one thing, according to,
again, this is the Republican chairman of the Financial Services
Committee at the time, when the House was run by Republicans, the
Senate was run by them and they had the White House. This is a direct
quote. ``We missed a golden opportunity that would have avoided a lot
of the problems we're facing now.'' That's his quote, not mine. I
happen to agree with him, obviously.
We didn't take the opportunity. And what happened? A few years after
that things got a little worse. Democrats finally took the House back.
What was one of the very first things we did? We passed a bill to
reform Fannie and Freddie. We passed a bill to reduce and restrict
subprime loans as quickly as we could. You can't put the genie back in
the bottle. This was 2007, after most of the problems had been caused.
Now, that doesn't mean, I won't pretend that myself and others don't
have some degree of blame. I am happy to accept my degree.
What did I do? What did people who agreed with me do?
I was happy to push to allow more people to qualify for mortgages. I
thought at that time, and I still believe, that that is a good goal. I
will admit, knowing what we know now, maybe we pushed a little too hard
for some people. I agree with that. I understand that. That doesn't
mean when times get better, people like me won't push again, because I
still believe that the best way into the middle class and the best way
to stay in the middle class is home ownership. And I don't know anyone
who disagrees with that, except people that are already in the higher
income brackets, who they have theirs, and they're more than happy to
pull up the ladder for the next people trying to make it to the middle
class.
People want to rewrite history. I understand that. It's not new. It's
an old political game. But facts are facts. When the government
agencies had
[[Page H4982]]
overstepped some of their boundaries, we were there to try to help
them, help get them back within those boundaries. We worked with
Republicans. We got a good bipartisan bill out of committee, and then
that bill fell into the hands of the Newt Gingriches and others of the
world who just let their ideology control everything they do and
everything they say.
And we didn't have the votes. As soon as we got the votes, we
addressed the issues, and we are still addressing them now. Yes, we're
trying to fix the mess that we inherited and we will continue to try to
do so. But we're also trying to make sure, while we're doing that, that
these things can't happen again. And we have done that already, to some
degree. We have a few more things that we have to do.
As a matter of fact, today we spent a fair amount of time in
Financial Services passing a bill that hopefully will be on the floor
next week, or the week after, that will continue that process, to make
sure that future mortgages, Number 1, are given to people who deserve
it, Number 2, can be paid back, and yet, that balance to allow people
to continue to access mortgages, to continue to build themselves up in
the middle class, and to continue to be able to stay there.
With that, Mr. Speaker, I'd like to yield as much time as she might
desire to the gentlewoman from Illinois (Ms. Bean).
Ms. BEAN. Thank you, Mr. Speaker, and thank to you my colleague,
Congressman Capuano for leading this Special Order tonight.
I wanted to just kind of go back and share with those who are
listening tonight that when I came to Congress, I was elected in 2004,
I came in 2005. I asked to serve on the Financial Services Committee. I
had no idea at that time that it would be the busiest committee in 2009
as we've worked to address the economic downturn, the likes of which we
certainly haven't seen in my lifetime.
But to reflect back on that history, what I was so pleased to
discover, because we talk a lot about partisanship in the media and
there's a feeling that there's never any working together in
Washington, is I came to the committee in 2005 under the chairmanship
of Republican Mike Oxley and Ranking Member Barney Frank, and they
demonstrated what work together really means. It was a committee that
put partisanship aside. Both leaders of both parties recognized hard
work and good ideas; it didn't matter which side of the aisle it came
from. They worked hard to find common ground. And I was very happy to
be there and learned a lot from Chairman Oxley and respect him, as I've
also come to see that Chairman Frank, as he took the gavel in 2007, has
continued in that tradition. It's exciting to see what's possible in
committees when ideas prevail over ideology.
As I mentioned, it's been a busy committee, and we haven't slowed
down. And we have a chairman that's very deliberative and consensus-
driven. Unfortunately, when Chairman Frank took the gavel in 2007, he
was faced with some serious challenges. The subprime mortgage crisis,
the issue of bringing proper oversight to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
and he really stepped up to those challenges. In fact, prior to that,
we'd already been working. In fact, prior to the recent problems with
the mortgage crisis, in 2007, we immediately passed legislation to
address the subprime crisis and, in fact, Chairman Frank made sure that
we passed robust oversight for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. That did
pass and become law.
Unfortunately, the mortgage reform went to the Senate, where it did
not move and get to the President for signature and did not become law.
And we are now, just this week in committee, and, in fact, today, we
were marking up another mortgage reform bill that we'll be bringing
forward, and we're more hopeful that the Senate and the President will
act on that and it will become law so that we can eliminate the lending
practices of the past that introduce too much risk to the system and
set up people to fail. It's not home ownership if you're only there for
a little while and ultimately can't make your payments.
We have to move beyond the lack of due diligence and proper
underwriting standards that allowed no doc, low doc loans, drive-by
appraisals, triple A rated securities that really weren't triple A that
contributed to an economic downturn of not just systemic proportions
domestically, but international ramifications. And we're continuing to
work hard on those issues.
We've worked to address foreclosure avoidance. We've worked to
address the credit crisis. And all of this has been led by a chairman
who continues to respect good ideas, regardless of which party they
come from.
I find it interesting that many have chosen to demonize particular
individuals in the Congress, or suggest that one Member, particularly
when he served in the minority, somehow could bring the downfall of
Fannie or Freddie or our system in general, when, in fact, well, for
over a decade, many on both sides of the aisle talked about the need
for proper oversight to these large institutions, Fannie and Freddie.
And yet, it wasn't until Chairman Frank had the gavel that we actually
moved from rhetoric to resolution and passed that resolution in the
House so we could bring that oversight. Unfortunately, by the time it
did pass, it was too late to preclude government takeover of these
institutions.
Let me move on to a couple of other areas that we've been working on
in committee and, again, where there's been effort to work together.
Let's talk about the TARP funding. One of the things that I was
impressed with was that when past President Bush came and Secretary
Paulson at the time came to Congress requesting funds to support
greater stabilization of our financial institutions, Chairman Frank
didn't hesitate to bring some sincere bipartisan effort to the
equation. He didn't accept the request as it was, which was,
essentially, a blank check. He demanded greater accountability and more
specific definition of the purpose of those funds, and has continued to
fight to improve that ever since.
But what he also didn't do is he didn't lay blame. He didn't step
back and say, that's another party's problem. He brought constructive
solutions forward. And that's what we all need to do in this body if
we're to address the challenges we continue to face.
We've had countless hearings, not only in the past Congress, but in
this Congress, to address issues about agency abilities and lack of
abilities; if you look, for instance, at the Madoff scandal and the
SEC's inability to have addressed that long before they finally did and
when it was too late.
We've had hearings about the AIG fallout and does that bring about
the need for a greater Federal role in insurance regulation.
We've had hearings about systemic risk and how we can bring a greater
authority to have an umbrella oversight beyond the functional regulator
so we can determine where there might be risks in the system that, in a
future downturn, could do what happened recently, affecting all of our
businesses, our families' savings for retirement and for college,
reducing the values of our homes. And we need to avoid that type of
systemic fallout when we have future downturns, which we're always
likely to have in normal cycles.
We've talked about providing resolution authority so that, as the
FDIC has been able to wind down failing banks in a way that has not
been disruptive to businesses and families who are depositors of those
banks, but to reorganize those institutions in a way that doesn't bring
further panic to the system, we don't have, and our Federal Government
doesn't have, clear authority relative to someone like an AIG or other
institutions that don't fall under FDIC's ability to do that.
So as we continue through these hearings and continue our hard work,
I think it's important that we focus on solutions and not playing the
blame game. This is my fifth year in Congress, and I've never come to
this floor to attack an individual or a party, and I don't ever intend
to do that. But I thought it was important to come, at least call it as
I see it and lay the record more clearly where there have been those
who have cast blame clearly in the wrong direction.
{time} 2015
Many economists are telling us this is the worst crisis we have seen
since the Great Depression. We have been forced to make hard choices,
and we are going to continue to make hard choices. And we are going to
make
[[Page H4983]]
some mistakes along the way, but our intent needs to be, on a
bipartisan basis, that we roll up our sleeves, we work together, and we
find the best solutions possible. I am glad that on the Financial
Services Committee we have a chairman and a ranking member who both
step up to bring that kind of leadership in the continued tradition
that was here when I came in 2005 under Chairman Oxley and then Ranking
Member Frank. I am glad to be on that committee and will continue to do
my part.
I will mention one other thing. I happen to vice chair a coalition
that's called the New Dem Coalition, which is a pro-growth caucus. And
we have been very focused on pro-growth, pro-innovation solutions to
some of the challenges that we are facing. I also happen to chair the
task force for the NDC on Financial Services regulatory reform. And I
have also appreciated the chairman's deliberative approach and feedback
to some of the suggestions we have made to him for committee
consideration relative to regulatory reform.
We are focusing on regulatory performance. Clearly, the SEC's
inability to determine that there was a problem that ultimately
resulted in the Madoff Ponzi scheme suggests that we don't need more
regulation, but better regulation, and a greater degree of best
practices in the agencies who should be accountable for it.
We are also working on addressing issues of market stability and
transparency, making sure that we bring to the table some counters, or
countercyclical mechanisms to offset the pro-cyclical nature of our
system as it occurs currently, which has contributed to repeat cycles
of booms and busts and booms and busts. And we need to be more
prescriptive in working with our regulators to ensure that they
consider and have the flexibility to weigh in on things relative to
capital requirements. So as we see a bubble in formation, maybe
increasing some of those requirements so as to encourage some
deleveraging where clearly we were overleveraged. Conversely, when we
are in a precipitous downfall, as we have all experienced recently,
that is probably the time that the regulator should have the ability to
consider easing up on those capital requirements so it doesn't require
forced selloff of other equities as it did when we had the mortgage
crisis, which created a more systemic-wide problem.
We have to improve consumer and investor protections. And so we look
at things like the credit default swap market, which has been roughly a
$62 trillion unregulated market that left many counterparties out there
and ultimately required Federal intervention to assist AIG in their
downturn.
Those are the kinds of things that we are working on. And we don't
have all the answers, but we are working together on a bipartisan basis
to find those solutions--and had a late night dinner this week. Those
are the kinds of things that we are going to have to continue to do to
bring real solutions to the table and help create an environment so
that our businesses and our families are on a solid foundation that
supports sustained growth as we turn our economy around.
Thank you. And I yield back.
Mr. CAPUANO. Mr. Speaker, I just want to take two seconds and show
this chart.
As you can see, this chart shows the number of subprime loans over a
period from 1996 to 2005. Pretty obvious what happened. Within the
first couple of years, subprime loans were reasonable, and a number of
them given out. This entire time the House was controlled by the
Republican Party, the entire time of this chart.
As you can see from this hashed section, that is when the White House
was taken by the Republican Party. And you can see what happened to
subprime loans, they skyrocketed. They skyrocketed. And they didn't
stop until 2008--actually, they didn't stop. They started slowing down
in 2008 and they stopped in 2009.
What happened in 2007 was the Democrats took over the House and they
passed legislation to deal with this. That same legislation--or
similar, I shouldn't say the same, but similar legislation was passed
through the Financial Services Committee in the year 2005 that would
have done the same things earlier. Now, it wouldn't have stopped the
problems, but it would have lessened the problems. And this chart
speaks for itself.
It is amazing to me that people can blame others when the ones on the
receiving end of that did not control this House, did not control the
Senate, did not control the administration, did not control any of the
appointments to any of the regulatory agencies, yet somehow they can be
blamed for a lack of action. That is unbelievable rewriting of history.
And I just think the people who know the facts will draw their own
conclusions.
With that, I would like to yield to the gentleman from Colorado for
as much time as he would like.
Mr. PERLMUTTER. Thank you, Mr. Capuano. And I appreciate the comments
that you have made.
I have a chart that shows exactly how much was done under the
Republican Congress and the Republican administration in terms of
reforming and revamping the GSEs, or, in other words, the Federal
National Mortgage Association or the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation, and what was done to deal with subprime lending during the
Bush administration, and at the same time when Congress was in the
hands of the Republican Party.
My friends earlier today from the other side of the aisle were
blaming everything on Democrats when they were in charge. Now, it is
nice to try to lay blame when there is a realistic argument for laying
that blame, but they can't do that. It simply is a fact that nothing
was done to try to deal with what was becoming a tremendous housing
bubble; that there were excesses in the way that lending was taking
place, that restraints didn't exist, that regulation was being
eliminated or ignored. And as a consequence, we had a tremendous burst
of a bubble.
And it is under the Democratic Congress, under the chairmanship of
Barney Frank, that there has been a real effort to try to rein this in.
So instead of having zero, this Congress, one of the very first things
it did under the Democrats and under Chairman Frank's leadership was to
begin reforming Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It was one of the very
first bills that the Congress in 2007, when I was elected, when
Congressman Ellison was elected, it was one of the very first things
that we did, knowing full well that there were excesses with Fannie
Mae, Freddie Mac, and the subprime lending. We still didn't have much
success with the Bush administration. Certainly, the Obama
administration is going to deal with this directly.
We are in the process of working on subprime loans and predatory
lending. We did finally get some Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac legislation
passed at the end of last year. And now we can start regulating these
kinds of vehicles, this kind of lending in a serious fashion, not one
that is going to bring the market to a halt, but one that respects the
fact that you can get out of control, and that is precisely what
happened.
I know my friend from Massachusetts read the quote from Mr. Oxley,
who was the Republican chairman who tried to do something but was
stalled by the Bush administration. But I think it again bears reading.
He says, this was last summer, when we actually passed the Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac legislation and all of a sudden there were a lot of
Republicans saying the Democrats should have done something about
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac earlier before there were any kinds of
financial problems. And he said something, he fumes about the criticism
of his House colleagues--this is Republican former Chairman Mike Oxley,
``All the handwringing and bedwetting is going on without remembering
how the House stepped up on this. What did we get from the White House?
We got a one-finger salute.''
So when there was an attempt, even under the Republican Congress, to
try to reform things, the White House refused to do that. So that kind
of gives you this big zero, what actually happened.
The subprime chart that Congressman Capuano showed a second ago was
another sign of the excesses that were taking place under the
Republican Congress and the Bush administration. And then you see what
we get from all of that.
My friends on the other side of the aisle were complaining about the
deficit and the debt that is being incurred
[[Page H4984]]
right now, but it is that debt that was created under the Bush
administration. The Obama administration has inherited a $1.3 trillion
deficit; that's where they start. That is where this administration
starts. And it starts with a banking crisis, a $1.3 trillion deficit,
loss of jobs, and a housing crisis.
What we are doing is to provide some funding so that people can buy
homes at an interest rate that is reasonable. We are trying to stop the
foreclosures that are occurring. So we are trying to stabilize the
housing market and we are trying to stabilize the financial market.
Now, much of what we did to try and stop the crisis or the fall of
the financial markets was done last fall, really under a bipartisan
effort of the Democratic Congress and the Bush administration, but it
was in free fall. So the Obama administration is trying to get the
financial markets on the right path again. It appears that that is
going on.
And then we really, this Congress and that administration, also under
the leadership of Barney Frank, we came up with a stimulus bill, which
is going to spur more jobs, creation of jobs, as well as a new energy
economy, revamping education, and dealing with health care costs.
Now I would like to give my friend from Minnesota an opportunity to
speak about this, and we will then have a conversation.
Mr. ELLISON. If the gentleman would yield, I want to ask the
gentleman a question. Did the stimulus package also include the
Neighborhood Stabilization Act, which is money, passed through the
Democratic Congress, that would allow the neighborhoods to get money to
help buy up some of these foreclosed properties? Did that happen?
Mr. PERLMUTTER. It has. The underlying principle of the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act, the stimulus bill, is jobs, jobs and
stabilizing the housing market, financial market. But what it does with
the Neighborhood Stabilization Act is it starts to absorb foreclosed
properties, takes those foreclosed properties, upgrades them,
rehabilitates the properties, and makes them energy-efficient homes. So
not only does it stabilize the housing market, it creates jobs by
upgrading these homes to energy-efficient standards, and then helps us
move to a new energy economy, which is one of the key points in the
stimulus bill. So it really has so many facets to it, the stimulus bill
does, to get us back on track after falling off a cliff, as you can see
what happened under the Bush administration.
I would yield back to my friend from Minnesota for any further
comments; or I know my friend from Massachusetts is to be guiding all
of us tonight, so wherever you would like to go.
Mr. ELLISON. Well, you know what, I appreciate that, but I am going
to toss it back to the gentleman from Massachusetts, who I think is
going to toss it to the gentlelady from Wisconsin. I am happy to wait
my turn in the line since I was one of the last ones here tonight.
But I do appreciate the gentleman from Colorado's comments; I think
they were dead on the mark. And I am very happy to be here tonight
sticking up for the Democratic record and the leadership of Barney
Frank on Financial Services reform.
Mr. CAPUANO. There are just a few things I want to say before I pass
it off to the gentlelady from Wisconsin.
There are a couple of things that people have to understand; yes,
Fannie and Freddie have some blame in it, like we all do, but they
didn't do anything that everybody else wasn't doing as well. They
didn't create credit default swaps. They didn't create excessive
leverage. Yes, they did invest in them heavily. Why did they invest in
them heavily? They did it because the rate of return was so high they
couldn't walk away, because that higher rate of return allowed them to
then put more money up for mortgages. They didn't do anything that
everybody else wasn't doing.
So yes, we are talking about them tonight because they are
government-sponsored entities, but a lot of this was created by people
other than them, the private market.
There is one other thing I do want to say. The other thing I have
heard an awful lot of is that somehow the CRA, Community Reinvestment
Act, is somehow to blame for all of this.
{time} 2030
The CRA was a law that was passed because banks were happy to take
money out of poor and lower income neighborhoods without putting any of
it back in. People were allowed to deposit their money, but they
weren't allowed to get mortgages. Simple law says, if you take the
money out of these communities, you have to put some of that money back
in.
Nothing in the CRA says a single loan should be given that is
inappropriate. Nothing in the CRA says a single loan should be done in
an unsafe or in an unprofitable manner. That's not what it says. As a
matter of fact, it says things just quite the opposite. It simply says,
if you want to do business in a certain community, you have to then do
business in that community. It's quite simple.
One little fact: In 2006, 84 percent of the high-cost loans were
originated by non-CRA covered banks. I'll say it again to make the
point. Eighty-four percent of the loans given that were high-cost
loans--all of these loans that mostly get a lot of people in trouble--
were not given by banks covered by the CRA. How could they possibly
then or how could that law possibly have caused this trouble if they
were only giving out 16 percent of the troubled loans? No one else is
to blame, just the ones that they don't like.
Mr. PERLMUTTER. Would the gentleman yield for just one second?
Mr. CAPUANO. Absolutely.
Mr. PERLMUTTER. I just have to go back to the quotes from Mr. Oxley,
the Republican chairman at the time, trying to deal with excesses
within the mortgage market. This is from the Financial Times, dated
September 9, 2008.
He says, ``We missed a golden opportunity that would have avoided a
lot of the problems we're facing now if we hadn't had such a firm
ideological position at the White House and the Treasury and the Fed.''
With that, I'd yield back to my friend from Massachusetts.
Mr. CAPUANO. I'd like to yield to the gentlewoman from Wisconsin for
as long as she might take.
Ms. MOORE of Wisconsin. Well, thank you so much, the gentleman from
Massachusetts, the gentleman from Colorado and the gentleman from
Minnesota. I'm very happy to participate in this Special Order tonight.
I think that, while we're talking tonight, it's really important to
raise some really uncomfortable issues. I have heard many people on the
other side of the aisle talking about CRA--the Community Reinvestment
Act--and about Freddie and Fannie as causal of our current meltdown of
the financial market. Let's get real about this. CRA and Freddie and
Fannie are all proxies for a discussion of race, so I want to talk
about race and about the whole history of the Community Reinvestment
Act.
You know, I was out there, demanding as a community organizer that
banks reinvest in communities in which they took deposits. I was one of
the people demanding that they do it. Through extensive research, I was
inspired, quite frankly, by a professor--now a professor at Georgetown
University--who was a professor at the University of Wisconsin, Greg
Squires, who found that minorities and particularly African Americans
were being discriminated against in terms of getting prime loans.
What Professor Squires found is that, even when you controlled for
income and when you controlled for other indices of creditworthiness,
African Americans were less likely to get a prime loan and that
redlining was the rule of the day and that, if you lived in a minority
community, especially in the black community, no matter what your
income, no matter what your credit score, no matter what your
creditworthiness, being black--being an African American--would either
not get you a loan at all or it would get you a subprime loan.
So the Community Reinvestment Act encouraged federally insured banks
and thrifts to meet the credit needs of the entire communities that
they served, including low- and moderate-income areas, that were
consistent with safe and sound banking practices. The law was enacted
in response to those of us who were out there who were concerned about
disinvestment, and we produced evidence that lenders were
[[Page H4985]]
systematically denying credit to certain communities, particularly to
minority and low-income communities. They were actually practicing
redlining.
As you indicated, the gentleman from Massachusetts, you were
incorrect to say it was 84 percent of the high-cost loans that were
made. It was 84.3 percent of these high-cost loans that were made in
the 15 largest metropolitan areas. So what happened?
We went from CRA, which was a very good law, and Freddie and Fannie--
these government-sponsored enterprises. We found that, in 2004, our
former President, George W. Bush, demanded that Freddie and Fannie take
on more of these mortgage-backed securities that were being produced by
these subprime lenders, the 84.3 percent who were non-CRA lenders, and
required them to buy more of these mortgage-backed securities. Now,
mind you, Freddie and Fannie didn't write one single subprime loan, but
they also became prey to the predators.
Now, why was there such a change of heart with respect to providing
loans to minority communities? Because they found that there was a
whole lot of money that could be made from these products, that there
was a lot of money--a lot of moola--that could be made from these
subprime loans. Low-income communities--minority communities--were
targeted for these subprime loans.
So they went from not lending them money at all to providing loans to
then forcing Freddie and Fannie, without getting regulation or with no
one watching, to buy these mortgage-backed securities.
So I just want to get it straight here that, indeed, there were many,
many, many loans made to African Americans and to Hispanics--people who
were creditworthy, people who deserved prime loans. They didn't deserve
these ARMs. Research and data are conclusive that African Americans, in
particular, were given subprime loans even though they were worthy of
prime loans. So I just don't want to hear it anymore.
When you hear CRA, the gentleman from Colorado; when you hear Fannie,
the gentleman from Minnesota; and when you hear Freddie, that's a proxy
for ``we loaned to all of those black people, and that's why we're
having this worldwide crisis.'' No. The reason we're having this
worldwide crisis is because of greed, because of fraud, because of lax
regulators, because of fraudulent appraisers, because of the 84.3 non-
CRA--non-Community Reinvestment Act--financial institutions in the
marketplace, and because of race.
Race was the single factor in determining over the course of the past
30 years, first of all, who would not get a loan, who would be redlined
against, and now currently who would, in fact, get a subprime loan.
I would yield to the gentleman from Massachusetts in response to
this. I know that race is extremely uncomfortable for people to talk
about, but I think it's important to keep it real.
Mr. CAPUANO. It certainly is uncomfortable for a lot of us, and it
certainly is real. I totally agree with everything the gentlewoman just
said.
By the way, if it were a race item, in reality, wouldn't everyone
losing their homes today be black? The answer is that it's not. It's
across all lines. Blacks are losing their houses. Whites are losing
their houses. Hispanics are losing their houses. Why? We've all been
victimized. I want to be clear. I want to repeat again:
Fannie and Freddie didn't do anything that everybody else wasn't
doing. I'm not saying they're not without blame. They are as I am and
as, I think, everyone is. We all have some degree of blame. Okay. At
the same time, what about those who were in charge at the time? I'll go
back to the chart of subprime loans.
During that entire time that subprime loans were charging upward,
this House was controlled by Republicans. The Senate was controlled by
Republicans almost that entire time. Particularly when they went
through the roof, that's when they took over the White House. Why? Why
did it happen overnight? Nobody sat down and said, ``Let's do subprime
loans.''
What happened is we got an administration at the White House that
said, ``We don't need regulation. Let the market do whatever it wants.
Let human greed go unregulated.'' Now, there's nothing wrong with human
greed. We're all greedy. It's what drives a lot of us--we all want
more--but unfettered greed, unregulated greed, unlimited greed always
leads to disaster. It always does. We had an administration that
believed the market could regulate itself, period. Now, the market can
regulate itself to some degree, but when you say to the SEC, ``Do
nothing. Look the other way on credit default swaps. Sit on your hands
when anybody comes up with new instrumentations and when banks have
special investment vehicles that are off the books,'' this is the
result.
Congress has some blame. No question about it. Personally, I should
have screamed louder. Now we have the votes. Those people with the
votes should have done something.
I want to point to the chart behind the gentleman from Colorado
again. During the time period when Republicans had control, they did
nothing. Nothing. Since we took over--and I'll go through the litany
later because I'd like to yield to the gentleman from Minnesota--we
have taken action. With action sometimes--there's no question about
it--the horse is out of the barn to some degree. You can only do so
much when that has happened, but we have done what we could do when we
could do it. We will continue doing it this week and again next week.
With that, I'd like to yield to the gentleman from Minnesota.
Mr. ELLISON. Well, actually, I'd like to address the question that
was raised by Congresswoman Gwen Moore from Wisconsin. I'd like to pose
a question to her, and this question is going to take a little buildup,
so bear with me.
Ms. MOORE of Wisconsin. Okay.
Mr. ELLISON. Now, if you were responsible for deregulating the
markets and if you were responsible for unleashing the wildest impulses
in human nature--greed among them--and if you presided over a
catastrophic increase in the budget deficit as you cut taxes for the
wealthiest Americans and if you let loose a war in Iraq that should
never have been fought, after it all came crashing down, wouldn't you
be looking for somebody to blame? Well, you might just blame the people
who are the most vulnerable in our economy, and that is what is at the
very root of the CRA mess.
You can't possibly expect people to accept responsibility. Look, when
you look at these crossed lines here, this is when the party opposite
ran the whole shooting match. This is when they had the White House and
this House and the other body--the Senate. They ran the whole shooting
match, and we got a big, fat, enormous, giant goose egg out of it as it
relates to any kind of financial regulation.
As soon as the 110th Congress broke out and when we finally got a
chance to do some regulation, what did we see? Through this House, we
passed the shareholder vote on executive pay, the so-called ``Say-on-
Pay.'' If you were upset, frustrated, angry or were in any way annoyed
by the AIG scandal and by the executive pay or by any of this stuff,
you can know and feel good about the fact that it was the Democratic
Congress and the Financial Services Committee, under the leadership of
Barney Frank, that passed Say-on-Pay, which said, ``You know what?
We're going to let those investors have a say-so over these executive
pay packages. We're going to do that.'' That was passed in the 110th
Congress, but it wasn't made law. It was passed through the 110th
Congress.
Not only that, we did pass legislation to bring in regulation and
oversight to the Office of the Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight.
OFHEO was moved out, and the Federal Housing Financial Agency was moved
in.
So, yes, the problems that the gentleman from Massachusetts
identified with Fannie and Freddie were there. They did buy too many of
these mortgage-backed securities. But what happened in the 110th
Congress? We responded. We did something. We did not leave it to go
unattended.
Not only that, we passed the Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights in
2008, and we passed it again, and we're going to pass it again on the
House floor tomorrow. I'm so excited about that. Let me just say
something about it as we slow down to talk about it.
While we were debating the bill on the floor today, we had a good
friend of
[[Page H4986]]
mine speak, a gentleman whom I actually quite enjoy listening to, a
gentleman from Texas. He's a fine man, but he's fond of saying, ``Okay.
You guys are talking about predatory lending, but what about predatory
borrowing?'' You've heard this phrase, right? Well, let's talk about
predatory borrowing for a minute.
{time} 2045
When somebody gets an extra amount of money called a yield spread
premium to steer you to a high cost loan and it makes them money to do
so, that's how you get people getting into loans they are not supposed
to get into. They get into loans because the people they trust, the
mortgage originators who they rely on, are incentivized to do so.
What are we doing about it in the 111th Congress? We're addressing
this practice right now to try to say no, it's your job to look out for
the borrower. You have got to look out for the borrower. You can make
more money by doing a lot of loans, you can make more money doing
bigger loans, but you can't make more money simply by steering somebody
to a high-cost loan. That is going on now.
We passed the Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights Act in 2008, and
we're going to pass it again very soon, and, God willing, it will be
law in the very near future.
But not only that, the gentleman from Colorado talked about passage
of the Neighborhood Stabilization Act. This is a bill that directed the
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development to make loans to qualified
States, metropolitan cities and urban areas in accordance with HUD
approval grants to carry out eligible housing stimulus activities,
which included greenification--is that a word? Greening. Renewable
energy. And also buying up houses so that you wouldn't have these
vacant, boarded-up places that were an attractive nuisance for
everything from arson to young people getting dragged into these places
and copper strippers and all the rest.
I submit today that the Democratic Congress, since we became the
majority, has been actively engaged in financial regulation. We have
been actively engaged in trying to look out for the American consumer.
We have been trying to bring stability and liquidity to the financial
markets. And I will submit that in the 110th Congress and the 111th
Congress, the majority has demonstrated--and some Republicans have been
smart enough to vote with us--and say yes, America is a free market
society. We believe in the generative power of markets. We believe
markets should be allowed to run, but we know human nature needs some
restraint sometimes, and we need to have some rules to this game, and
thank goodness this is happening right now.
So look forward to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act which
put real financial change in, the Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights
Act of 2009, and the Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act
which was passed in 2007 but hopefully will become law in the weeks to
come and which should be on the House floor in the very near future.
That's what I call being a good steward, that's what I call being a
financial leader, and that's what I call the leadership of Barney Frank
from Massachusetts. I am proud to be on the committee.
Mr. CAPUANO. I would like to thank the gentleman.
I would like to just read one little fact. May 25, 2005, there was a
vote in the Financial Services Committee of the House that was then
under the control of Republicans. The chairman was Mike Oxley, who's
been mentioned here a couple of times. I knew him. I served with him.
He was a good man. He was a true conservative. But he was a good man.
He fought for his ideals as we all fight for ours. And he, at that
time, had control. He won a fair number of times, but he would talk to
you openly, honestly, and didn't pull any punches.
Chairman Oxley at the head, Representative Frank as the ranking
member of the minority party, May 25, 2005, H.R. 1461, a vote of 65-5.
Every single Democrat and, obviously, most of the Republicans on that
committee voted for a reform bill of Fannie and Freddie. That bill came
out, went to the Rules Committee, and was changed. Dramatically
changed. Why was it changed? Pure ideology.
The Republicans--as the Democrats do now--if the Democrats stick
together, we can pretty much pass any bill we want out of Financial
Services or any other committee. That's the way the House works. At the
time, the Republicans were in the majority. They could have passed any
bill they wanted without a single Democratic vote if they chose to do
so. Chairman Oxley preferred to take an important issue and work hard
to get bipartisan support. And he did.
My colleagues here all serve on the Financial Service Committee. You
can't name me too many times we have a rollcall vote that we get a 65-5
vote on any issue of major importance today or almost ever. I have been
on the committee 11 years now. It almost never happens. That is hard
work. That is work that deserves credit. That is work that says it's a
serious issue that should rise above ideology of either side. The bill
wasn't perfect, in my opinion, but it was pretty good. And it was the
best we could get at the time. We were in the minority. Understand
that. Something is better than nothing.
So 65-5, the bill comes out and gets tossed aside by people that
didn't know much about the issue, yet ran this House, because of
ideological purposes. That tells you--I think it should tell you--there
was an attempt to take action even in 2005. When that happens, you send
the bill out, the committee has done its work, you think everything is
going well, you think people are in agreement; and when the leadership
of this House says, ``Forget about it. We're doing what we want to do
on an ideological basis. We don't care about this bipartisanship,''
that tells you, don't even try this again. Don't waste your time. And
there was nothing else that happened until Democrats took the House
back, and we acted quickly. Representative Ellison just listed a whole
bunch of those items, and as he said, we're doing more today.
Mr. PERLMUTTER. Would the gentleman yield?
Mr. CAPUANO. Yes, I would.
Mr. PERLMUTTER. And I think that's the important point here. We want
to explain to anybody who might be listening within this House. This is
in an effort to be bipartisan. There was in 2005. There was when we
took the control of the Congress in 2007 and 2008 and now 2009. Barney
Frank seeks that in every single vote and every single bill as we go
through this, and then so does the President of the United States,
Barack Obama. But we're not going to sit on our hands and allow the
country to just stall out.
I mean, some of my friends on the other side, their mantra is ``Just
say no. We like the status quo.'' We can't afford the status quo any
longer. So we're going to stabilize the housing market and the
financial markets, we're going to stimulate this economy, and we're
going to place back into the system reasonable regulations so that
America can really get back on track. And we see signs of that today.
It's going to be a rocky time and a steep hill for us to climb, but
we are turning the corner. I am just proud to be part of this Financial
Services Committee with my friends here under the chairmanship of
Barney Frank and under a presidency of Barack Obama.
With that, I return the message to my friend from Massachusetts.
Mr. CAPUANO. I recognize the gentlewoman from Wisconsin.
Ms. MOORE of Wisconsin. Thank you.
I really agree with your sentiments, the gentleman from Colorado,
that it's time to move forward. I only arrived here in the 109th
Congress, and I was here for one session in the minority. But what I
experienced then was Barney Frank consistently working to try to reduce
the systemic risk even before Paulson and Bush came and said, we're
having a problem.
I remember the Federal Housing Financial Reform Act, to try to
provide a good regulator for Freddie and Fannie, something that hadn't
happened under Republican control. And, of course, no action was taken
in the Senate. So thank God we've got maybe 60 votes now so that that
won't be stalled out.
I saw Barney trying to provide what we did today, the Mortgage Reform
and Anti-Predatory Lending Act of 2007. He tried to do it before today.
Of course, that stalled in the Senate. So thank God we have 60 votes
now. Maybe some of his initiatives can go forward.
[[Page H4987]]
I remember taking a codel with Barney Frank to London and Brussels
where we talked about systemic risk, worldwide, long before anyone was
owning up to the financial meltdown.
So Barney Frank has really been on point, and hopefully with a
Democratic majority and someone in the White House, his continued
efforts to rein in systemic risk will not be stalled out as they have
in the past.
Mr. ELLISON. Barney Frank with a tremendous intellect, with a
tremendous sense of humor, with a bipartisan spirit and an even hand
has shepherded great legislation to help stabilize America and begin
our ascent once again.
I want to say that even on the Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights, a
bill that I am emotionally involved in, I feel so good about, we got
nine Republican votes and a bunch of Democratic votes.
Look. Even a lot of Republicans know that we have been doing the
wrong thing by neglecting regulation. It's time for us to put all this
squabbling aside and say no matter what the party is, no matter what
party you may belong to, Democrats are just better at running the
economy. I like Republicans. Some of my best friends are Republicans.
My dad is a Republican. I think they're great.
But if you want good regulation that helps the economy grow, you can
look at the 110th and 111th Congress for an example of who knows how to
do that. It's happened successfully. It will continue to happen. And I
bet you when that Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights hits the floor of
this House and I bet you when the anti-predatory lending bill hits the
floor of this House, we're going to get a bunch of Republican votes
because even they know that the Democratic Party is a good financial
manager.
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