[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 117 (Saturday, July 30, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H5785-H5786]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STANDARD & POOR'S OWN RATING
(Mr. KUCINICH asked and was given permission to address the House for
1 minute.)
Mr. KUCINICH. As Congress struggles to come up with this deal over
government debt, we all know that all we have to do is raise the debt
ceiling and that the chaos the country is being thrown into is not
necessary. Simple: raise the debt ceiling, protect the credit of the
U.S., and then debate how to cut our debt afterwards.
We're trapped in a debate where there's another game going on over
our heads, and that game involves the rating services, in particular,
Standard & Poor's.
Rating agencies help put the U.S. economy in the dumper in 2008.
Dodd-Frank was the first effort to hold rating agencies accountable
when, in fact, they should have been subject to civil fraud charges as
well as revocation of their license at the SEC.
Just a few months after Dodd-Frank passed, Standard & Poor's strikes
back
[[Page H5786]]
with a threat to downgrade U.S. debt, which would cost U.S. taxpayers
billions of dollars a year in extra interest payments.
The U.S. is sovereign. Standard & Poor's is not.
When we work to raise the debt ceiling, we should also raise
questions about Standard & Poor's. Maybe it's time to downgrade
Standard & Poor's to junk status.
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