[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 99 (Tuesday, June 29, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H4907-H4908]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WALL STREET REFORM
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Virginia (Mr. Connolly) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CONNOLLY of Virginia. Madam Speaker, it would be unconscionable
for this Congress to fail to enact legislative protections for the
Nation's consumers after the worst economic collapse in 80 years. We
must pass Wall Street reform when it comes before the House hopefully
later this week.
We know what happened without adequate oversight. Under the Bush
administration and previous Republican Congresses, the large financial
institutions were granted free rein to undertake abusive, risky
behavior, ultimately at great public expense. In the absence of well-
enforced regulation, their reckless actions triggered the great
recession, plunging millions of American families into economic chaos.
Starting in 2007 when the mortgage and credit crises hit, the
recession accelerated in 2008 as the financial sector came perilously
close to a complete collapse. Millions of Americans acutely felt that
collapse through lost jobs, foreclosed homes, and the destruction of
their personal savings. Collectively, Americans lost $17.5 trillion
worth of aggregate household wealth during that recession: college
funds, retirement accounts, 401(k)s, and emergency nest eggs like that.
In the midst of this economic carnage, many of the financial
institutions that precipitated the collapse had the chutzpah to turn to
those same American families and ask for a bailout. For example, AIG
received $170 billion through 2008's TARP bill and the Federal Reserve,
despite having engaged in a number of risky actions that led to its own
predicament. AIG's unbridled pursuit of profit became America's pain.
We must not allow that to happen again.
I support the visionary Wall Street reform that protects consumers
from the abuses and deceptive practices that led to this crisis. It
will create a consumer financial protection bureau that will
consolidate consumer protections currently spread out inefficiently and
ineffectively over seven different Federal agencies. The bureau will
ensure transparency in financial products and transactions, providing
consumers with greater information and protections on mortgages, credit
cards, and other financial products.
Unscrupulous mortgage lenders no longer will be able to hoodwink
prospective home buyers into home loans that the home buyer cannot
afford. Not only did that practice lead to individual homeowners
suffering eventual foreclosures, but it drove down the equity in all
homes as prices sunk and mortgage failures exacerbated the financial
collapse.
I support Wall Street financial reform that properly regulates the
risky aspects of the financial sector, finally bringing transparency to
the shadowy world of derivatives. In 2006, the derivative markets
bought and sold, and often repackaged, was worth $668 trillion, that's
with a T, an astonishingly high amount, and yet all traded virtually
without oversight or regulation. The financial institutions that traded
these derivatives did so in secret, and when the underlying assets
failed, such as mortgage-backed securities, the financial sector was
unprepared for the repercussions, and American families paid the price.
I support Wall Street reform that provides an orderly liquidation for
financial institutions that fail at the institution's expense, not the
taxpayers. That means never again will big banks receive taxpayer-
funded bailouts. In the event of failure, large financial institutions
must be prepared for an orderly wind down that does not cause
additional strain to the overall economy and does not require taxpayer
assistance. This reform ensures that the firms prepare liquidation
plans ahead of time in case they are ever needed, and most importantly,
Wall Street reform clearly states that taxpayers will never again have
to fund a failing firm's bailout or liquidation costs.
Madam Speaker, the Wall Street reform before us accomplishes the
goals of protecting consumers, providing transparency to previously
unregulated markets, and ending too-big-to-fail taxpayer-funded
bailouts. It finally provides the financial protections for consumers
and homeowners that have been lacking for far too long. Wall
[[Page H4908]]
Street reform will help ensure that never again will American families
be unprotected and left footing the bill for someone else's big
mistake.
I strongly support Wall Street reform and encourage my colleagues to
do so. Never again should private risk become public responsibility.
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