Login  /  Register  | 3 premium articles left before you must register.
TheDay.com <h1>Preparing to introduce finance reform, Dodd aiming for center</h1> Southeastern Connecticut News, Sports, Weather and Video The Day newspaper

Preparing to introduce finance reform, Dodd aiming for center

By Ted Mann

Publication: TheDay.com

Published 03/11/2010 12:00 AM
Updated 03/12/2010 11:43 AM

Sen. Chris Dodd, on the cell phone and on the move, made no secret Thursday that he has heard the liberal criticisms of his effort to cut a deal with Republicans in crafting a reform of financial regulations.

And he had also clearly heard the umbrage on the right, including from Banking Committee colleagues like Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., that his decision to introduce his bill next week and mark it up roughly one week later would be too hasty a pace for a major package of reforms.

Striving to strike a deal on the bill that will deliver enough votes to overcome Republican filibusters, and soon enough to avoid conflicting with senators' all-important reelection plans, Dodd, the retiring Democrat, plans to disappoint both camps.

Those who complain the financial reform would be rushed if he unveils his bill next week misread the legislative calendar, the senator said. Only about 35 to 40 working days remain in which to debate and pass a Senate financial reform bill, Dodd said, given the Senate's calendar of recesses and holidays. And that bill would still have to be reconciled with the bill already passed in the House before becoming law.

"When you start adding up the actual working days here, it's maybe 35, 40 days to reform a financial service sector that hasn't been touched since 1934," the senator said in an interview on Thursday.

Meanwhile, Dodd pushed back against commenators who have said that his efforts to win Republican votes and to appease the banking lobby -- which is fighting efforts at new regulation and the implementation of a new watchdog agency to protect consumers of financial products -- will water the bill down.

For reasons of legislative math, with Republicans determined to block Democratic initiatives by use of the filibuster, "this has to be a bipartisan bill," Dodd said.

"If this is strictly a Democratic bill, it fails. If it's a good bill, people love it, great editorials, the consumer groups will cheer wildly, but nothing will have happened."

To hear some critics, he said, "It's like I'm not for it. Of course I'm for it. I'm the chairman of a committee with one quarter of the United States (Senate) sitting on it, almost equally divided between Democrats and Republicans. Now, what I would write, were I king for day and what I can write as a chairman of a committee in a highly divided institution in a politically acrimonious environment..." He trailed off into a chuckle.

The senator went on, saying he and the committee have to avoid punitive measures against banks that precipitated a massive recession, in favor of a prospective attitude aimed at crafting a better future system of transparency and oversight of financial corporations:

"In this environment, people are so angry about what happened to them. They lost the homes, they lost their jobs, they lost their retirement, they lost their health care. And they're beyond livid, and so there's a lot of heat, and I'm totally sympathetic to what's happened to people during all of this. But it's not about making institutions pay a price for what they did wrong. I'm in the business of trying to create an architecture so we can get it right. And if your motivation as a member of the United States Senate is to make these institutions pay a price for what they've done, that's one set of issues. I'm not sure that gets you to a better financial regulatory system. So if I'm writing this motivated by my anger to make them pay a price and to penalize them, then I don't think you're going to end up with anything that's going to do anybody much good. You've got to create wealth and you've got to create jobs in this country, and to do that you've got to have access to capital and credit. And if that doesn't happen, nothing happens. The economy stalls, people lose more jobs, more retirements fail, homes get lost. So if your motivation here is to whip the financial services industry, you're not going to be a hell of a lot of use to me. I've got to write a bill that makes sense and that doesn't do or create unintended consequences that could create even more problems in wealth creation and job creation in the country."

"You know," he added, "looking in rearview mirror is important as you fill in those (regulatory) gaps, but I've got to look through the damn windshield."

Reader Comments

HIDE COMMENTS

MORE FROM THIS BLOGGER

DAY BLOGROLL

News

Town Blogs | Notes from our town reporters

Day Photo Staff | On Assignment

David Collins | Today, in The Day

Karen Florin | On The Docket

Rufus Giuseppe | The Dog Dishes

JC Reindl | The Capitol Conveyor

Opinion

Paul Choiniere | Ruminations

Arts & Entertainment

Day staff | Taste Buds (Dining)

Kristina Dorsey | Reel Life

Michelle Gallerani | Motherhood

Julianne Hanckel | Glitterati

Rick Koster | Aging Rock Dude

Jennifer McDermott | The Sipping Room

Marisa Nadolny | Fear No Recipe

Sports

Steve Fagin | The Great Outdoors

Vickie Fulkerson | High School Sports

Nick Giuliano | Fenway Frankly

Gavin Keefe | UConn Men's Hoops

Jim O'Neill | Golf

Grace

Faye Trafford | In Other Words