[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 112 (Wednesday, July 25, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H5208]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IT'S TIME TO HOLD FEDERAL RESERVE ACCOUNTABLE
(Mr. KUCINICH asked and was given permission to address the House for
1 minute.)
Mr. KUCINICH. On a day Congress will decide whether to audit the Fed,
The Washington Post reports that the New York Fed ``did not communicate
in key meetings with top regulators that British bank Barclays had
admitted to Fed staffers that it was rigging Libor,'' the index which
sets interest rates worldwide.
The Fed wants to be spared a full audit. They want monetary
deliberations private. Then they use that privacy shield to keep
irregularities from regulators and from congressional view, exposing
investors and consumers to massive losses.
Of course the Fed wants to continue a system where there is no
transparency, no accountability, where they can cover up manipulations
of markets and interest rates. But should we endorse this system? When
things fall apart, who do the banks come to clean up the mess?
Congress.
The Fed creates trillions of dollars out of nothing and gives it to
banks; Congress is in the dark. The Fed sets the stage for the subprime
meltdown; Congress is in the dark. The Fed takes a dive on Libor;
Congress is in the dark. The Fed doesn't tell regulators what's going
on; Congress is in the dark.
It's time to bring the Fed into the sunshine of accountability. Vote
for the audit.
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