Maximizing McCain's Flip-Flop on Financial Regulation

by: David Sirota

Wed Sep 17, 2008 at 13:24


Last night on MSNBC, Rachel Maddow and I discussed John McCain's new rhetoric claiming he supports better financial regulation. But instead of focusing only on McCain's words, we examined the Arizona senator's career as a public official - and took a look at an issue that, until Sen. Sherrod Brown's statements today, no major elected Democrats have been willing to touch: the issue of McCain's formative regulatory experience coming as a member of the Keating Five pressing federal financial regulators to stop doing their job in advance of the S&L crisis. Though that crisis is the most analogous economic event to today's Wall Street meltdown, it is an issue that, until Sen. Sherrod Brown's statements today, no major elected Democrats have really touched.

McCain, as the S&L scandal first suggested, is no run-of-the-mill free-market fundamentalist. Yes, he voted for the ill-advised repeal of the key Depression-era law that might have prevented the rampant consolidation and speculation that brought on today's emergency. But, then again, Bill Clinton and his DLC Democrats supported it too. Yes, McCain's top economic adviser is Phil Gramm, the UBS investment banker who pushed through so much deregulatory legislation as a senator. But then again, Barack Obama's top economic adviser is Robert Wolf, Gramm's UBS boss.

Where McCain really leaps to the fringe and differentiates his extremism from others is in his use of the deregulatory label to publicly define himself. That's how you can really tell what a politician believes in.

David Sirota :: Maximizing McCain's Flip-Flop on Financial Regulation
This is not a guy who just votes for the corrupt legislation his Wall Street friends tell him to vote for - this is a guy who has staked his name on being "fundamentally a deregulator," as he recently described himself.

On 11/19/93, McCain took to the Senate floor to support an early financial deregulation bill and decry what he called "the tremendous regulatory burden imposed on financial institutions." The guy who now claims to be the trustbusting Teddy Roosevelt back then lamented "the rapidly increasing regulatory burden imposed on banks is to cause them to devote substantial time, energy and money to compliance rather than meeting the credit needs of the community."

Ten years later, McCain was bragging to the Associated Press that "I have a long voting record in support of deregulation," and to CNN that "I am a deregulator. I believe in deregulation."

And, during this year's presidential campaign taking place in the shadow of financial meltdown, McCain was only months ago insisting on PBS that "we need less government [and] less regulation" and that "I'm always for less regulation."

Of course, there's plenty of good news for both Democratic partisans and ideological progressives about McCain's about-face.

For partisans concerned only about Obama winning the election, McCain's 180 on regulation opens up an obvious chance for Democrats to label him a against-it-before-I-was-for-it, say-anything-to-get-elected hypocrite - and Obama is (finally) moving to seize that opportunity.

For ideological progressives long fighting the good fight to resurrect the common-good regulatory agenda of the New Deal, McCain's shift reflects a broader shift in the public debate. Suddenly, regulation isn't a four-letter word anymore. Suddenly, even John "I'm always for less regulation" McCain is for regulation. That rhetorical shift could help create an election mandate forcing whoever wins the presidential contest to actually move away from Reagan-style extremism for the first time since, well, Reagan.

But as I told Maddow (and as I will examine further in my upcoming newspaper column on Friday), we have to all follow the money and the actions. Both Obama and McCain have taken huge sums of cash from the industries that caused this crisis. Both Obama and McCain continue to rely on Wall Streeters who engineered the meltdown as their top economic advisers (though only McCain employs lobbyists intimately involved in the crisis). That kind of influence doesn't just slink away with a boom-bust crisis - it fights hard to make sure nothing concrete comes out of the situation (think the weak Sarbanes-Oxley after Enron).

Whether we get the kind of populist reforms will be decided by how much grassroots pressure is put on either of these potential presidents when they reach the Oval Office. The talk right now from both candidates may be good - and Obama is smart to point out McCain's absurdly dishonest rhetoric. But talk is cheap when it comes time to write legislation.


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Excellent segment on Maddow's show last night (0.00 / 0)
I hope to see even more focus put on McCain's recent flip on regulation, one in which he himself cannot track.

Via Think Progress:

- Deregulation: McCain issued a statement Monday morning saying that "we cannot tolerate a system that handicaps our markets and our banks."

- Regulation: McCain's campaign then put out an ad calling for "tougher rules on Wall Street."

- Deregulation: This morning, on NBC's Today Show, McCain said, "Of course, I don't like excessive and unnecessary government regulation."

- Regulation: Then, on CBS's The Early Show, McCain said, "Do I believe in excess government regulation? Yes."

- Both: On CNBC's Squawk Box, McCain said, "We don't want to burden average citizens with over-regulation and government bureaucracy...And I'm proud to be a Teddy Roosevelt Republican, who said, 'unfettered capitalism leads to corruption,' and we've got to fix this."




I would have thought (0.00 / 0)
you would have mentioned that Biden was one of 9 votes against the repeal of Glass Stegall.  

Holistic analysis (4.00 / 1)
You did a fine job yesterday!

I think that a key is to look at McCain's economic team more holistically. In addition to Graham, you have Jack Kemp, who is the man who talked Ronald Reagan into embracing supply side economics in the 1970s.  You have Carly Fiorina, who is the queen of the 'Golden Parachute."  In other words, his influences are to deregulate, cut taxes for the wealthy, trickle down, avoid accountability for no good CEOs, etc.


Why are Democrats (0.00 / 0)
being so tentative about attacking the starry-eyed sycophant McCain over his involvement in the S&L crisis, particularly when they can draw a straight line from that mess to the way we live now?



Wasn't McCain… (0.00 / 0)
...the only Republican member of the Keating 5? And wasn't he the only one who got, like, a slap on the wrist? Might that be an explanation for Dem reticence? Calling all historians...

"This ain't for the underground. This here is for the sun." -Saul Williams

[ Parent ]
All those other Democrats (0.00 / 0)
are out of politics if not dead.  McCain's involvement proved critical to Keating getting what he wanted, and his role should be used to further expose the old man's fraudulence.

[ Parent ]
McCain's hypocracy knows no bounds (0.00 / 0)
   He was one of the Keating 5.
  He was a long-time champion of deregulation.
  For 36 years, he was NOT a flip-flopper, he was incredibly consistent. He was always in favor of less regulation.
  And now... calling him a "flip-flopper" would be kind. It would imply that his recent (last few days?) pro-regulation position is as much a part of him as his 36-year record of opposing regulation.
  "McBush wants less regulation, more Enrons". There is our slogan. Run with it.

1 Corinthians 13:1 (KJV) - "Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal."/ GOP = Greedy Old Privatizers or Greedy Old Privateers?

not only does (0.00 / 0)
mccain believe in less regulation but if you give him enough money or perks he will intervene and strong arm the regulators there are into not doing their appointed duties of protecting mr & mrs mainstreet, to mccain that might seem like a person supporting regulation, to me thats just another unethical politician feeding at the trough of power like all the other elites in wash.  

Thanks for this, David (0.00 / 0)
I used it in a post over at Kos.

http://www.dailykos.com/story/...


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