House Republicans Undercut Bush on Rescue, Slow Talks (Update4)
By Alison Vekshin and James Rowley
Sept. 26 (Bloomberg) -- Republicans splintered over the
proposed $700 billion rescue of the U.S. financial system,
imperiling an agreement hours after a bipartisan group of
negotiators and the White House said one was near.
Lawmakers were meeting again today in Washington after some
House Republicans, led by Virginia's Eric Cantor, said they
wouldn't back a plan based on Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's
approach. A top Senate Republican said he is willing to delay any
bailout package, and let markets open next week without a relief
package in place.
``We need to get back to the drawing board,'' Alabama
Senator Richard Shelby, the top Republican on the Senate Banking
Committee, said in an interview. ``We need to consider this in a
deliberate, linear fashion.''
The stalemate came after an unprecedented meeting at the
White House with President George W. Bush, presidential nominees
Republican John McCain and Democrat Barack Obama, congressional
leaders and Cabinet officers.
The setback unnerved investors, coming after the government
closed Washington Mutual Inc., the largest U.S. savings-and-loan
institution. Standard & Poor's 500 stock index futures declined
1.3 percent in European trading and the yield on the two-year
Treasury note fell 12 basis points to 2.04 percent, just above
the Federal Reserve's target rate.
Getting on Board
``I'm hopeful the worst of the crisis may be behind us if we
can get Congress on board with the package,'' Stephen Roach,
chairman and acting chief executive of Morgan Stanley Asia Ltd.,
said in an interview in Beijing. ``The government's role is to
stop a crisis from turning into a catastrophe.''
U.S. stocks rose yesterday on the prospects for an
agreement. The S&P 500 Index closed almost 2 percent higher.
Republican lawmakers offered a plan calling for Wall Street
firms to purchase insurance on mortgage-backed securities and
advocating tax cuts and relaxed regulations. Treasury officials
had previously rejected a plan focusing on insurance in favor of
one that purchased troubled assets, Cantor said.
After the late-night meeting on Capitol Hill, House
Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank and Senate
Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd said some progress in
negotiations had been made. They said House Republicans needed to
participate for a plan to pass Congress.
`Not Serious'
The Republicans plan is ``not serious,'' Frank told CNN
today. Frank also blamed McCain for making a dramatic
announcement to suspend his campaign and return to Washington for
the talks, saying that threw off the balance of the negotiations.
The White House issued a statement saying Bush still
``supports the core of Secretary Paulson's plan.''
Frank said Democrats have been working with Paulson to
address several issues, such as executive compensation,
accountability, foreclosures, and some kind of warrants provision
to provide taxpayers an equity stake in the companies that get
rescued.
``On all of those, the secretary to his credit has now
agreed in principle, and we are working how to do it,'' Frank
told reporters after meeting Paulson last night. ``There will
ultimately be $700 billion available, but how soon and with what
other steps, are still being debated.''
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi won't push through legislation
backed by a Republican administration without Republican support,
Frank said.
Partisan Bill
``Ms. Pelosi will not bring a partisan bill to the floor,''
Frank said. ``If the House Republicans continue to reject the
president's approach then there is no bill.''
The plan circulated by Cantor calls for a mortgage-backed
security insurance fund, rather than taxpayer-funded purchases of
those securities. The plan calls on the Treasury to design a
system to charge premiums to mortgage-backed security holders to
finance this insurance, according to a fact sheet.
Republicans also seek to ``remove regulatory and tax
barriers that are currently blocking private capital formation.''
It also suggests that regulators call on financial institutions
to suspend dividends, along with other steps to address liquidity
problems.
Cantor said the House Republican proposal ``does not leave
the American taxpayers with the bag and makes sure that Wall
Street pays for this recovery.''
Representative Jeb Hensarling of Texas said it shouldn't be
``Paulson's plan or no plan.''
The Republican revolt reflects popular dissatisfaction with
Wall Street bailout.
Voter Opposition
Calls to congressional offices are ``running 50 percent
`no,' and 50 percent `hell, no,''' Democrat Paul Kanjorski told
CNBC today. ``Out of 100 calls, you are lucky if one of them is
positive.''
McCain and Obama met with Bush, Paulson and congressional
leaders at the White House earlier yesterday. Democrats blamed
McCain for initiating the meeting, which they said slowed down
the pace of negotiations.
Dodd said on CNN that the Republican plan threatens to force
negotiations to begin anew. He said the White House meeting
``looked like a rescue plan for John McCain for two hours, and it
took us away from the work we were trying to do today.''
Obama suggested the talks were damaged by politics.
``When you start injecting presidential politics into
delicate negotiations you can actually create more problems
rather than less,'' Obama said on CNN.
McCain's Campaign
McCain's campaign said more negotiations were needed to
draft legislation that would pass Congress.
``There is not yet a majority of Democrats and Republicans
who are willing to vote yes for anything,'' said Steve Schmidt, a
senior adviser to McCain's campaign.
Kevin Smith, a spokesman for House Republican Leader John
Boehner, said the speed with which Dodd's plan was put together
was designed ``to deny Senator McCain a role in trying to craft a
bipartisan solution.''
Cantor was told by Boehner to start working on an
alternative two days ago, Smith said. Pelosi was told yesterday.
Michele Davis, a spokeswoman for Paulson, said, ``Secretary
Paulson appreciates the hard work by members on both sides of the
aisle to address the threat we face to our economy,'' and urged
lawmakers to resolve their differences.
Paulson has not rejected any ideas, Davis said.
To contact the reporters on this story:
Alison Vekshin in Washington at
avekshin@bloomberg.net
;
James Rowley in Washington at
jrowley@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: September 26, 2008 09:30 EDT