How should I answer my Senator’s response (below) to my plea that she vote against the bailout? ?
Dear Mr. [soMEone]
Thank you for contacting me regarding the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008. I welcome your thoughts and comments on this issue.
On September 19, 2008, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson announced a plan by the Bush Administration to stabilize the financial services sector of the economy. This plan included broad authority for the Treasury Secretary to purchase troubled financial instruments with very limited oversight and few protections for taxpayers.
In July, I voted against a similar proposed bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac because it did not provide taxpayer protection and limits on executive compensation for a government owned entity. For the same reasons, I was not willing to support the Administration’s initial proposal, and I encouraged my colleagues to continue work on a plan that would protect taxpayers, provide strict oversight, and place limits on the benefits to executives who accept taxpayer assistance.
In the days following the Treasury Secretary’s announcement, concerns about the danger to the broader economy deepened. The high-profile failure of numerous financial institutions caused the commercial lending market to accumulate and hold cash. The credit markets effectively froze, making it difficult for consumers to obtain loans for purchases such as homes and automobiles. The lack of lending in these areas began to place further pressure on the troubled housing market and threatened to spread deeper into the economy. Similarly, many small and mid-sized businesses were finding it difficult to obtain financing to meet their payroll obligations and purchase inventory. Many cities were entering the bond market and getting no bids, even with AAA ratings. The current liquidity crisis still poses a real potential for significant job losses. After consulting with numerous financial experts, small businesses, and bankers in Texas, it became clear to me that normal commercial lending activity would not resume without action by Congress.
Despite this realization, I was still not inclined to support the Paulson plan. After weeks of negotiation, however, a bi-partisan compromise was reached. While there are provisions in the bill that I do not favor and would not have drafted, overall the need for action to stabilize the market and to protect the retirement savings of millions of Americans weighed heavily on my mind. Ultimately, I supported the Senate bill along with 73 of my colleagues. The bill we passed was a major improvement over the initial plan announced by Secretary Paulson.
We increased the deposit insurance cap from 0,000 to 0,000 so that families will have added protection for savings and retirement accounts. While the initial proposal authorized up to 0 billion to purchase distressed assets, the measure we passed takes a more cautious approach, initially authorizing 0 billion and requiring the approval from Congress and the President for additional funding. Importantly, the bill we passed includes restrictions on the benefits received by executives whose companies are selling some of their distressed assets to the government. In return for purchasing the assets, taxpayers will obtain an ownership stake in the companies. Many leading economists believe that the real estate market will turn around in the foreseeable future and government owned properties and assets will be sold at a profit. A provision in this bill that I supported requires any profits realized to be placed in the nation’s treasury to reduce the deficit. If, however, after five years the government is facing a loss in the program, the President must submit a plan to Congress recommending how the money will be recouped from financial services companies. I believe that these protections are a dramatic improvement over the Administration’s initial proposal.
The bill passed by the Senate included an important package of tax policy provisions. One of these provisions is an extension of the state and local sales tax deduction, which is a matter of fairness for states like Texas that do not have a state income tax. The average Texan will save 0 when they file their federal income tax forms next year. We also shielded low and middle-income taxpayers from higher taxes associated with the flawed alternative minimum tax (AMT) and included tax incentives to spur energy production and innovation including the wind energy production tax credit and the research and development tax credit.
As Texans, we have learned to take responsibility for our actions and being asked to pay for the mistakes of others is something many, including myself, find deeply troubling. However, after careful deliberation, I believe that the risks associated with doing nothing outweighed the risk of passing a less than perfect bill that nevertheless includes important protections for taxpayers. Economic evidence clearly suggested the problems were spreading into the broader economy. That i
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[cont.]
That is why I voted for the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act.
I appreciate hearing from you. Please do not hesitate to contact me on any issue of concern to you.
Sincerely,
Kay Bailey Hutchison
United States Senator
284 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510
202-224-5922 (tel)
202-224-0776 (fax)
http://hutchison.senate.gov
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Kat: We have no choice but to drive 10 over. Our cows do eighty in their sleep!
Seriously, you’re spot on, as always. Lucky for you your Senators (unlike our Sinners) did it down.
Thanks!
(beware the Texas Cow)
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4 comments
Ruby on September 7, 2009 at 2:27 am
Write her back and tell her you will work tirelessly to see her ousted from office next time up for election.
Explain two reasons why:
1. She is either totally asleep or so stupid that she actually believes the rhetoric spewed in her letter to you,
or alternatively,
2. She has proven that she has been bought and paid for by the banksters and the power elite,
and either way, she is unfit for public office.
EDIT,
Hmmm. Did you notice this sentence in her letter
" … Despite this realization, I was still not inclined to support the Paulson plan. After weeks of negotiation, however, a bi-partisan compromise was reached. …"
When exactly did the politicians have "WEEKS" to negotiate that compromise bill? Was it all done even before it was announced to the public?
Would that not mean that the compromise bill was reached long before the public knew of the "emergency", and that the original defeat by the house was STAGED for public consumption and to cause turmoil in the markets so as to "prove" the bailout was necessary?
Block Wall on September 7, 2009 at 2:27 am
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Ranting sheeple.
Thank her for her bipartisan efforts to avoid another depression and move on.
Then, write her, again, and ask her what she is going to do to get us out of Barry’s upcoming depression.
Another one
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Set on September 7, 2009 at 2:27 am
I’d tell her that she might want to take an economics course if she and the rest of our elected reps are so stupid that they don’t understand that in passing this bill they are only buying time and making a bad situation worse. Tell her you’re mad as hell and will not support her or any of the other bought off sell outs who betrayed the American people with their irresponsible and moronic acts. Give her this quote:
“There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crises should come sooner as a result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.”
Ludwig Von Mises
Edit: Hey block wall; you should rename yourself to block head.
Edit: Hey Ruby; good catch on that observation.
kaththea s on September 7, 2009 at 2:27 am
Well, she certainly sent you a much more thorough form letter than I got from mine, although they did follow it up with a lengthier missive. Then again, both my senators voted no on the bills, both bills. My representative being a Democrat, he went along with the second, and I have yet to hear anything from him but praise for the color of my crayon. That’s okay, I’m voting against him in this election. He’s had his chances.
If she were mine, I would politely thank her for trying to make a difference, then go on to point out that, with all the pork they tacked onto the bill, I didn’t think they’d done anybody any favors, and was really expecting to see her make some significant changes to the stupid, wasteful thing once the elections were over. And I’d feel free to send her a sample to aim for. Personally, I like Dave Ramsey’s, but you can and should go with what you think would work.
In fact, I did fire off a letter along those same lines, just about a week ago. They acknowledged receipt, but then, this is a busy time of year, and they traditionally take a week or two to get back to you, so Im not ticked about it yet.
So you’re in Texas, huh? If they didn’t all drive ten MPH above the speed limit there, I’d move down, just so I could vote for you.