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"States rights" has been the divisive clarion call of the extreme right on social and civil rights issues for decades. But devolving power to the states doesn't have to be a bad thing. It can be what's known in policy circles as Progressive Federalism - an ideology whereby "governors and activist state attorneys general [are allowed to] lead the way on environmental initiatives, consumer protection and other issues," as the New York Times reported in a piece about the Obama administration's support for the idea.
But in order for Progressive Federalism to happen, the federal government has to be supportive of floors not ceilings - that is, oriented toward setting minimum progressive regulatory standards that states must at least comply with, not maximum regulatory ceilings that states are not allowed to go above and beyond. And the problem is that the Democratic Party is split on that idea - because Big Money hates it.
Case in point is the intensifying debate about Wall Street reform. During the era of deregulation, Washington policymakers passed statutes preempting (read: invalidating) many state laws that went further in regulating the banking industry than federal law. Now, a faction of Wall Street-funded "New Democrats" are trying to gut a White House proposal to change that paradigm and establish minimum floors of bank regulation that states can go beyond. According to the Wall Street Journal this Democratic congressional faction is trying to flip the proposal on its head by making the final product establish a federal ceiling whereby states cannot regulate banks any further:
Democrats are split over whether the proposal should allow states to trump federal regulations and enforce their own, often tougher consumer rules against national bank...This would permit states to bar certain fees and late charges otherwise allowed by federal regulators.
The White House proposal would create a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency with the power to write and enforce rules against a range of products. States would be allowed to write stricter rules than the CFPA, overturning existing policies under which national banks typically are immune from state regulation...
Rep. Melissa Bean (D., Ill.) is preparing an amendment that would prevent states from enforcing tougher standards against national banks than the federal entity's.
It's self-evident that what Bean and the Wall Street-funded Democrats are trying to do has nothing to do with the "public good" and everything to do with political harlotry - The New Democrats are, after all, have proven to be the Best Little Whorehouse in Washington and this just proves that truth.
Indeed, the meltdown did not happen because there were too many regulators - it happened because there weren't enough. So obviously, any "reform" bill that effectively takes more state cops off the beat isn't going to be real reform. Likewise, the Wall Street meltdown did not happen because regulatory agencies were going to far in policing the market - it happened because those agencies weren't going far enough.
Thus, it's obvious why real "reform" should set minimum standards of progressive regulation not maximum limits of such regulation, and even more obvious why that same reform should encourage (or at least permit) state regulatory institutions to go further than federal standards if their constituents (via their legislatures, etc.) want. But it is also obvious why Wall Street lobbyists and the lawmakers they have bought and paid for want to do the opposite: The more real reform becomes, the less speculative profiteering that will be allowed and hence the less six- and seven-figure lobbying contracts, and the less campaign contributions.
The good news is that, according to the Huffington Post, President Obama is sticking to his guns on this one:
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