[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 56 (Tuesday, April 20, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H2649-H2650]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WASHINGTON MUTUAL--FRIENDS OF THE FAMILY NO MORE
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Connolly of Virginia). The Chair
recognizes the gentleman from Washington (Mr. Larsen) for 5 minutes.
Mr. LARSEN of Washington. Mr. Speaker, last week's Senate hearings on
the failure of Washington Mutual painted a picture of a bank that sold
risky mortgages to unsuspecting homeowners in order to rake in huge
profits. Federal regulators turned a blind eye to these risky practices
and allowed Washington Mutual to gamble with our future.
Now, when I grew up in Arlington, Washington, Washington Mutual was
known as a friend of the family. But their reckless behavior at the
expense of consumers helped bring about the greatest financial crisis
of our time. It was the largest bank failure in U.S. history and
resulted in thousands of job losses in Northwest Washington State.
Friend of the family no more.
[[Page H2650]]
Federal regulators as well were asleep at the switch while Washington
Mutual made tens of thousands of risky loans. Consumers suffered as big
banks put the interests of big profits and big bonuses ahead of working
families.
Now, last week, we hear that the Securities and Exchange Commission
filed a lawsuit against Goldman Sachs alleging misdealings in the
mortgage securities collateralized debt obligation market. And today
the House holds hearings on the fall of Lehman Brothers and the huge
negative impact on middle class families from whom the risk seemed to
be hidden.
These revelations and the Washington Mutual hearings and the
Inspectors General report provide a sobering reminder of the urgent
need for financial regulatory reform. We must prevent a crisis like
this from happening again by imposing strong oversight of financial
firms like Washington Mutual, and protecting American consumers and
American taxpayers from unfair and abusive financial products like
those in Washington Mutual's risky mortgages.
So I urge the Senate to act quickly and pass financial regulatory
reform so that the House and the Senate can get together to come up
with an even stronger bill, and so that financial firms like Washington
Mutual, that, in the future, if they want to drive off the cliff, they
may be free to do so, but no longer will American families be trapped
in the car as an innocent passenger.
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