fraud

“The total number of U.S. food stamp recipients” surged “to an all-time high of 45.8 million people in May,” the most recent month for which data is available.  That’s “nearly 15 percent of the U.S. population.” “The average food stamp benefit was $133.80 per person” — which is more than I spent on food as a bachelor — “and $283.65 per household”  — which is more than my family typically spends on food in a month.

Loopholes in the law have enabled even millionaires to collect food stamps.   Food stamp fraud has also exploded.  As states have sought to implement antifraud measures, “The Obama administration is responding by cracking down on state governments’ antifraud measures,” notes James Bovard in the Wall Street Journal.  Food stamp amounts are generous enough to make fraud worthwhile for even some non-poor people.

Earlier, I wrote about how it is not difficult to live on a food stamps budget.  The Washington Post ran a story in its health section about how various people, such as the chef for a law firm and a natural foods store owner, were able to live quite well on a food stamps budget. For example, Rick Hindle, executive chef for the Skadden, Arps law firm “showed recently that you don’t have to spend hours in the kitchen to prepare healthful food for $1 or less per meal.”

The Congressional Budget Office says the stimulus package will cost $43 billion more than estimated. The stimulus package is full of waste, fraud, and abuse. As Michelle Malkin notes:

Last week, the Treasury Department inspector general found that the tax police have failed to prevent fraud in the stimulus law’s energy tax credit program. Some $6 billion in stimulus energy credits for homeowners have been claimed — but the inspector general’s audit found that 30 percent of credit-claimers had no record of homeownership. The recipients included prisoners and minors. “I am troubled by the IRS’s continued failure to develop appropriate verification methods for distributing Recovery Act credits,” the Treasury Inspector watchdog said.  Moreover, when the IRS wasn’t falling down on its job policing outside fraud, its own workers were committing their own stimulus fraud — by cheating the system and claiming a first-time homebuyer tax credit included in the 2008 and 2009 economic stimulus packages. At least 128 IRS employees claimed the credit, according to a recent Treasury Department audit, yet weren’t first-time buyers or violated other basic eligibility criteria.

Moreover, the stimulus package has also “redistributed wealth to prison inmates, flaky researchers, social justice boondoggles, infrastructure to nowhere, foreign companies, dead people and ghost congressional districts — not to mention $20 million in chump change to pay for campaign-style stimulus-hyping road signs across the country emblazoned with the shovel-ready logo.”

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Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were bailed out at a cost to taxpayers of between $148 billion and $363 billion. Their recklessness and wrongdoing was so obvious that even Treasury Secretary Geithner admits that “Fannie and Freddie were a core part of what went wrong” in the financial crisis. The two government-sponsored mortgage giants engaged in massive accounting fraud, and their allies in the Obama administration have now spent $160 million in taxpayer money defending them against various charges.

Yet, their longtime defenders, like the Washington Post’s Steven Pearlstein, are completely unrepentant. They continue to suggest that only right-wing ideologues could want to eliminate scandal-plagued Fannie and Freddie. Pearlstein long dismissed warnings from conservatives like the Wall Street Journal’s Paul Gigot about the dangers these mortgage giants posed to our financial system.

Incredibly, Pearlstein still believes that what’s good for Fannie and Freddie is good for America. In the January 23 Washington Post, Pearlstein showed he has learned nothing from the financial crisis.  Pearlstein called House Republicans “free-market ideologues” for wanting to rein in the two companies. He praised “low-income-housing advocates and the Obama administration” for opposing this reform effort.  He suggested that access to mortgages (and thus, homeownership) would suffer without Fannie and Freddie, ignoring the fact that homeownership rates are higher in countries like Chile and Italy that have nothing like Fannie or Freddie.

The last thing America needs is to keep Fannie and Freddie around to help spawn the next financial crisis. Fannie and Freddie helped spawn the current mortgage crisis by buying up risky mortgages and repackaging them as prime mortgages, thus creating an artificial market for junk: “From the time Fannie and Freddie began buying risky loans as early as 1993, they routinely misrepresented the mortgages they were acquiring, reporting them as prime when they had characteristics that made them clearly subprime.” As Government-Sponsored Enterprises, they were not subject to the sort of capital requirements that apply to private entities, so they did not have enough reserves to cover their losses when their mortgages started defaulting.

Congressional Democrats last year blocked a GOP amendment that would have reformed the  government-sponsored mortgage giants, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  The Obama administration lifted a $400 billion limit on bailing them out and showered their executives with $42 million in pay.

At the direction of the Obama administration, Freddie Mac ran up more than $30 billion in losses to bail out mortgage borrowers, some of whom had high incomes. Federal regulators sought to make Freddie Mac hide the resulting losses from the SEC and the public.

Obama received $125,000 in contributions from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac executives as a senator, second only to the Senator Chris Dodd, who was forced to retire last year over financial improprieties (such as his real estate gift from a lobbyist and “sweetheart mortgage from Countrywide Financial“), yet was the chief drafter of the Dodd-Frank financial “reform” law.  (Dodd-Frank harms the economy, and violates both the Constitution’s separation of powers, and private property and equal-protection rights).

Despite the devastating financial impact of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s mistakes, their defenders are as unrepentant, and perhaps as influential, as ever.  Don’t expect their allies in the Obama administration to endorse any meaningful reforms.

Yesterday the British Medical Journal found that Andrew Wakefield, who authored “studies” linking autism with measles, mumps, and rubella vaccines, had committed “an elaborate fraud” in a study published in the journal The Lancet in 1998.  Wakefield, the BMJ report noted, misrepresented or altered the medical histories of the 12 children included in the study.

His purported results caused an international hysteria about the MMR vaccine and led to many thousands of parents opting out of childhood vaccination.

In May 2010 Wakefield had had his medical credentials yanked because he “repeatedly breached fundamental principles of research medicine,” a medical disciplinary council found.  The council also said  that “his actions in this area alone were sufficient to amount to serious professional misconduct.”

CEI scholars and adjunct fellow Steve Milloy had repeatedly pointed to problems with Wakefield’s studies and the health consequences of parents’ not vaccinating their children.  As Milloy wrote in 2005:

Epidemiologists refer to “herd immunity” as a population’s overall resistance to epidemics once that population achieves a 90 percent vaccination rate. Among a “herd” of 90 percent immune individuals, a non-immunized person enjoys a fairly low risk of contracting whatever deadly communicable diseases to which the “herd” is immune.

As the herd’s immunity falls below 90 percent, however, not only do the non-immunized individuals face a greater danger of becoming ill, but the greater availability of more non-immune persons provides the diseases with an “opportunity,” if you will, to replicate throughout the population in the form of various epidemics.

Each epidemic, in turn, strikes hardest at those individuals least capable of defending themselves – the elderly, the newborn, the immuno-compr[om]ised, and, of course, pregnant women and their developing fetuses.

Junk science can have life-threatening consequences.

Image credit: DrShapero’s flickr photostream.

Kenneth Feinberg, the individual dolling out the $20 billion BP Oil Spill “Settlement” (a No Pressure Voluntary thing), has been criticized for distributing funds too slowly.   Fighting back, Feinberg has noted that the delay has resulted from the flood of dubious claims pouring into his office (some 50,000 at last count).  Over 5,000 of these, he noted, have no documentation at all — another 25,000 claims have various deficiencies.  He is forwarding to the Department of Justice examples where he thinks fraud is an issue.

That Feinberg is surprised that such problems might arise in Louisiana — a state whose history demonstrates that they do not tolerate corruption — but rather insist upon it — is shocking, shocking!

There are only 36,697 black farmers in the entire country, but in a class-action lawsuit, more than 86,000 African-Americans claimed to have suffered from race discrimination by the Department of Agriculture during their time as farmers.   They are getting “‘virtually automatic’ $50,000 payouts” at taxpayer expense, thanks to the Obama administration.  It has repeatedly loosened the requirements for payouts in a class-action lawsuit against the government known as the Pigford case, in order to make such payouts possible.  Essentially, the Obama administration is using the case to award race-based reparations to people who never farmed or even intended to farm.  The government’s collusion with the plaintiffs’ lawyers in this case will ultimately cost taxpayers billions.

The next time you hear President Obama on TV challenging his critics to identify any unnecessary government spending that can be cut, and suggesting that there is no waste to be found in the federal budget, keep this case in mind.  In 2009, Obama made a big show of ordering his cabinet to come up with a measly $100 million in cuts even as he submitted a record budget request of $3.67 trillion (not counting hundreds of billions in “emergency” spending).  That $100 million was less than 0.003 percent of the budget, and is much smaller than the billions that the government will ultimately waste on the Pigford case.

The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that “President Obama’s policies would add more than $9.7 trillion to the national debt over the next decade.”  That’s despite the fact that there are $3 trillion in tax increases built into the president’s budget.

Obama recently signed a deficit-expanding $26 billion public-employee bailout.  The stimulus package is now expected to cost $75 billion more than predicted.  The stimulus package is using taxpayer subsidies to replace U.S. jobs with foreign green jobs. It also destroyed jobs in America’s export sector.

One issue in the Pigford case was the fact that people with bad credit ratings didn’t get loans from the Agriculture Department as often as people with good credit ratings.  That was deemed “discrimination” because African-Americans tended to have lower credit ratings on average than whites.

Earlier, President Obama fired the inspector general for the AmeriCorps program after he uncovered fraud by Obama crony Kevin Johnson.  (Johnson did not receive even a slap on the wrist for his fraud; an organization Johnson ran was required to pay $350,000, but it never did so because it was insolvent; and Johnson himself was not ordered by the Obama administration to pay anything.)

Now, the Obama administration is honoring Johnson despite his fraud, inviting him to be a featured speaker at an event for AmeriCorps, the program Johnson defrauded.

The Obama administration fired the inspector general who uncovered the fraud, Gerald Walpin, falsely claiming he was a senile right-winger, even though Walpin was a successful lawyer with recent high-profile court victories who had uncovered millions in fraud against taxpayers, and even though Walpin, a northeastern moderate Republican, was sufficiently non-partisan that he endorsed Obama’s Supreme Court nominee, Sonia Sotomayor.  (The Obama administration even trumpeted Walpin’s endorsement of Sotomayor to push her nomination.)

Over at Cato@Liberty, Walter Olson criticizes CEI’s filing of an FTC complaint against General Motors regarding a recent television advertisement by the company. GM’s ad stated, “we have repaid our government loan in full with interest five years ahead of the original schedule.”

Walter and CEI agree that since GM’s alleged loan “repayment” was financed not by the company’s privately-raised (non-coercive) capital but by a separate pot of government money, the GM ad was quite disingenuous. Since the FTC has a long history of jumping on private firms for similarly misleading ads, and since exposing hypocrisy is one of the most effective methods of undermining the Leviathan, CEI decided to petition the FTC to take action against GM for its deceptive ad.

When GM was bailed out by the U.S. government a year and a half ago, the company’s reputation took a severe hit. GM sales plummeted as taxpayers reacted with fury to the bailout. Indeed, as Ed Whitacre, GM’s CEO, noted in the TV ad: “A lot of Americans disagreed with giving GM a second chance. Quite frankly, I can respect that.” GM’s ads were intended to restore the company’s tarnished reputation, presumably in hopes that GM automobile sales would increase as a result. Had GM actually repaid its government loan in full, thereby reducing its fiscal burden on American taxpayers, such an announcement would have been welcome news to us (and, presumably, to Walter as well).

But, of course, GM did not. Instead, GM “repaid” some of its bailout obligations by employing an old gimmick and transferring funds from one pot of taxpayer funds to another. (Budget gimmickry is one of the many problems of Washington; it has now expanded to government-dependent companies like GM.) Of course, we at CEI, Walter, and many other Americans wish that GM’s status as a de facto Government Sponsored Enterprise (GSE) would end. But distorting what actually happened is no way to achieve this goal.

Nor do CEI or Walter have any illusions about the factual content of the GM ad. GM is a bastardized creation of the modern welfare state. GM has become a large state-capitalist enterprise in which the management and unions have adopted non-sustainable pension, business and marketing practices with the assurance that if anything goes wrong, they’ll be bailed out by taxpayers. Much like Fannie and Freddie, GM epitomizes the challenge posed by crony capitalism to economic liberty. With GM, the boundary between the coercive power of the state and the voluntary, risk/reward feature of capitalism has been blurred beyond recognition. This is not your grandfather’s Free Market!

Crony capitalism endangers the legitimacy of capitalism, the free market, and economic liberty. Indeed, over the last two years, most (if not all) free market advocates have encountered the question, “How can you defend capitalism after the bailouts?”

Walter would probably agree with much of this, but nevertheless, he argues that CEI’s petition is a mistake. He worries that our complaint might set a precedent enabling the FTC to become even more aggressive in policing private firms’ commercial speech.

We doubt it-and with good reason. We have occasionally petitioned government agencies in the past without increasing the regulatory burden of government, but effectively making some important points in the process. The FDA didn’t pay much attention to our 1995 petition asking that agency to regulate coffee and colas as “caffeine delivery devices.” (We argued that they met the same criteria the agency had used to regulate cigarettes as “nicotine delivery devices”, though we did make it clear that we did not actually advocate FDA regulation. We were skeptical that the FDA wanted to take on the coffee and cola drinkers of America. We were right. Though, of course, that might not be true of today’s FDA.)

In 1999, we petitioned the FTC, asking the agency to investigate a deceptive Ben & Jerry’s ad campaign, which touted the “dioxin-free” nature of its new ice cream packaging. The ads talked about how toxic dioxin was, claiming that there was no safe level. But they made no mention of the fact that essentially all animal fats, such as the dairy products in ice cream, contain dioxin. (In fact, as a super-premium ice cream, Ben & Jerry’s is especially rich in butterfat and actually has more dioxin than most ice creams!) In this case, the FTC didn’t have to act, because Ben & Jerry’s dropped its claim.

Still, asking government to intervene in the market is always risky. We should (and do) take that risk very seriously before petitioning a federal agency. But, while Walter seems concerned mainly with governmental threats to commercial speech, other economic liberties are perhaps at even greater risk in this “Crisis of Capitalism” era.

Walter points out that “despite [GM's] current dependence on government, GM is in every relevant legal sense a private company.” That’s true. But, while Walter and CEI both defend commercial free speech rights (see, for example, CEI v. Department of Transportation, 856 F2d 1563 (D.C. Cir. 1988)), Walter neglects how the mission of advancing economic liberty is undermined by GM’s claims that its government bailout was almost costless (“Repaid in full with interest, five years ahead of the original schedule”).  This is a common refrain often echoed by opponents of economic liberty in defending government bailouts and takeovers of private firms. Indeed, it was the primary argument of both Bush and Obama in defending the transformation of large swaths of the Fortune 500 into protected state-corporations in our new “Too Big To Fail” corporatist state.

The growth of the “mixed economy” has been a major defeat for all defenders of economic liberty. It poses a threat far greater than attacks on commercial free speech. For too long, political entities have been shielded from the burdens on the private sector created by the regulatory state. Although we do not intend to downplay the very real threat posed by commercial speech restrictions, we nevertheless believe that requiring government to obey the same laws it imposes on genuinely private entities is an important means of disciplining the Leviathan. Thus, we petitioned the FTC to apply the same rules that already handicap private firms to GM, a majority state-owned enterprise.

Does Walter think liberty is advanced by freeing government from the regulations it imposes on others? CEI sees its mission as defending economic liberty, the free market, and the ever-shrinking private sector. We see no need to protect Government Motors or Fannie and Freddie or the other GSE hybrids that increasingly dominate our economy. If we are to effectively counter political control of the economy, shouldn’t we seek at least policy neutrality?

We doubt that our petition, even if addressed, would encourage the FTC to intensify its attacks on private business. Still, if the FTC were to divert resources from attacking genuinely private firms to state-owned corporations, it would be a very good thing (even regulators can’t destroy everything at once). But we do view crony capitalism, the partial nationalization of great swaths of our economy, and the bailouts as the greater threat to economic freedom. All this has discredited capitalism – “You libertarians keep arguing that capitalism works. How then can you defend GM?”

Moreover, I doubt Walter believes that allowing government to enact new laws and regulations while exempting itself is a useful means of advancing freedom.

Exposing government hypocrisy is an effective means of advancing economic liberty. That was one purpose of our petition, and the media got our point. A Google search shows that our FTC complaint encouraged nearly 100 news outlets and many more websites and blogs to publish articles on the subject. Most of these articles discuss at length GM’s misleading statements and highlight the crucial fact that GM remains on the taxpayers’ dole. Undermining public support for nationalization of struggling firms is an essential ingredient in advancing economic liberty. While our method in this case certainly entailed some risk, we believe these risks are far outweighed by the clear benefit of shining the spotlight on GM’s status.

Walter also argues that libertarians should be reluctant to appeal to the questionable authority of the FTC (or any political entity). Like Walter, we do view the FTC as being far too quick to treat any questionable statement by a private firm as fraudulent. And we share Walter’s disdain for the FTC’s overbroad powers. We would prefer that the agency possess only the power to police speech by private actors in narrow instances in which there is clear evidence of consumer harm.

In this case, though, the misleading statement was perpetrated by an entity that is majority-owned by the Treasury Department. The issue at hand involves not a private firm, but a state-owned enterprise claiming it isn’t one. While Walter is correct in noting that this distinction may not matter in a court of law, it matters very much in the political arena. Bill Niskanen once argued that the political process is more likely to approximate a free society when bureaucracies compete with one another, when “faction checks faction.” Environmentalists and even the EPA questioning the environmental impact of ethanol is one example; the FTC challenging misleading statements by General Motors would be another. Walter doesn’t address our serious concerns about the today’s bailout culture and its detrimental impact on the moral foundation of the free market. And, of course, neither CEI, nor Walter (I suspect) accept the view that “bailouts are OK because eventually the taxpayer will be fully repaid.”

Walter’s implicit distaste for using government to promote liberty reminds me of the old folk story of the man walking in the woods who stumbles across a snake and grabs a “stick” which turns out to be a rattler! We acknowledge that action on the front lines of public policy debates often entails risks that theorists need not face.  Like wartime armies, a tactical decision to storm one hill can result in casualties. But the battles for political and economic freedom cannot be waged with theory alone.  Deregulation and other economic liberalization efforts sometimes require that political tactics be used to curb the power of government. The most successful example of this might be deregulation of freight rail. This was a messy and decidedly imperfect liberation effort, necessitating compromise, but it undoubtedly expanded the sphere of free enterprise.

We all pine for that one decisive battle that would restore the American Dream. In reality, however, we have the far less glorious – but essential – task of taking on the pick-and-shovel work of government reform – chipping away, one stone at a time, the monolith of government. In that battle, selective and intelligent use of the apparatuses of government is critical.

It is good, as Walter suggests, that we are skeptical of using government to weaken government – that process can often go astray. Walter’s constructive criticism is welcome, and I hope it continues. But our task is to determine whether a specific policy would represent a step toward economic liberty, a step away, or lead us into a cul-de-sac that would make further economic liberalization more difficult. This requires that we consider not only the principles that Walter (and we) espouse, but also the changes such partial steps would create in the power balance between the forces of freedom and statism. Admittedly, this is not an easy task. But CEI is dedicated to moving America toward the goals that excellent libertarian think tanks like Cato articulate so well. Our efforts, we believe, are a crucial complement to the work of groups like Cato. Thus, while I admire Walter’s work immensely, I do believe that CEI was right to petition the FTC.

The Competitive Enterprise Institute filed a complaint today against General Motors with the Federal Trade Commission, over GM’s claims that it paid back what it received from taxpayers.  In recent TV ads, GM’s CEO, Ed Whitacre, has boasted that GM repaid its government bailout loan “in full, with interest, five years ahead of schedule.

President Obama’s tax-cheat Treasury secretary, Tim Geithner, recently trumpeted these claims, crowing that “GM had repaid in full the $4.7 billion balance it owed under the government’s Trouble Asset Relief Program.” But this so-called “repayment” was just a deceptive accounting trick. GM used government bailout money to make the “repayment,” as The New York Times noted.

More importantly, this “repayment” is just a drop in the bucket compared to what GM has received from taxpayers.  The federal government has yet to recover the lion’s share of the more than $50 billion it loaned the company.  Why?  Because that $50 billion was mostly “converted into stock held by the Treasury Department.”  That’s billions of dollars for stock in a company that, for all intents and purposes, was bankrupt. (GM just lost another $4.3 billion.)

The Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), a Washington think tank, argues in its FTC filing that GM’s claim is misleading to consumers, and therefore violates the Federal Trade Commission Act:

Most consumers would reasonably interpret GM’s ads as meaning both that GM has paid back all the money that it received from the government, and that those repayments were made with its own funds rather than with other government funds.  Neither of these interpretations is accurate.  .  .

GM’s ads also leave the false impression that it is on the road to profitability, since it is now able to pay off its debts. (In public statements, GM deliberately sought to reinforce that impression by linking the ‘repayment’ to increased sales of two cars produced by GM.)

In reality, however, GM used taxpayer money to make the repayment — government bailout money from the Troubled Asset Relief Program — and it was still losing money at the time of the advertisement.

This false impression matters to consumers . . . because a profitable automaker, unlike an automaker that goes out of business, can provide replacement parts for an automobile that a consumer purchased. And unlike a bankrupt automaker, it can be counted on to make good on its warranties.

Moreover, the only reason GM had enough government money left over to pay back any of what it received from taxpayers is because of Toyota’s recent safety issues and recalls, which drove car buyers away from Toyota to GM and Ford.  Only that kept GM from burning through all of the taxpayers’ money.

Even though GM still hasn’t paid back the $50 billion, and received billions in additional handouts through programs like the incredibly wasteful Cash for Clunkers (which cost taxpayers and used-car and car-parts businesses billions), Obama backers now claim that critics of the bailout owe Obama, GM, and the UAW “an apology.”

Ironically, GM would never have needed a bailout if it had just received relief from costly regulations such as CAFE rules (which wipe out at least 50,000 jobs) and dealer-franchise laws.  That’s so despite GM’s self-inflicted wounds from mismanagement, excessive union wages and benefits (worth up to $70 an hour), and rigid union work rules.

The Obama Administration left those wasteful work rules and excessive benefits largely intact, and gave the United Auto Workers Union (UAW) a big chunk of General Motors‘ stock, even though the UAW helped bankrupt the company, and the company has value today only because the federal government pumped billions of taxpayer dollars into the company (and engineered the wiping out of General Motors’ bondholders, some of whom were non-union employees who had invested their life savings in the company).

Veteran political commentator Michael Barone called the Obama administration’s treatment of Chrysler and GM bondholders “gangster government.” Law professor and bankruptcy expert Todd Zywicki called it an attack on “the rule of law.”

Back in 2008, Zywicki prophetically warned that a bailout would prove worse for the auto industry than for automakers to quickly file for bankruptcy without first seeking a bailout.  Zywicki noted that by enabling automakers to get rid of expensive union contracts and red tape, a “Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing will likely result in a stronger domestic industry.”   It would provide  ”a mechanism for forcing UAW workers to take further pay cuts, reduce their gold-plated health and retirement benefits, and overcome their cumbersome union work rules.”  It would also help automakers get rid of redundant auto dealerships that should be terminated but aren’t because of state dealer franchise laws.  Nobel Prize winning economist Gary Becker also argued that a bankruptcy filing would have been better than a bailout in achieving “needed reforms.”

But the federal government ignored their wise advice, and chose to embark an incredibly costly bailout instead.   The bailout of GM and Chrysler is similar in many ways to the British government’s unsuccessful auto bailout in the 1970s, which ultimately failed despite a cost in the billions.

The federal government used money from the $700 billion bank bailout for the auto industry bailout. Legal scholars at the Heritage Foundation, Clinton administration Labor Secretary Robert Reich and many other commentators have argued that using the bank-bailout money for auto bailouts was illegal.

In addition to the $50 billion it gave to GM, the administration gave another $17 billion to GM’s finance arm, GMAC.

President Obama has collected millions from Wall Street special interests, his administration is chock full of Wall Street lobbyists, and he supported the unnecessary $700 billion bank bailout.  But now, he’s pushing a deceptive financial regulation bill with phony rhetoric about “reform,” claiming it is “not legitimate” to point out that the bill could lead to yet more bailouts and government takeovers (as economists and banking experts like Peter Wallison have demonstrated).

Obama’s legislation would do nothing to curb the abuses of the worst offenders behind the mortgage crisis, the government-subsidized mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, even as it would enrich the politically connected liberal Wall Street firm Goldman Sachs (recently accused of fraud), enrich left-wing lobbying groups and community organizers, and give the government the permanent ability to bail out and take over Wall Street firms.

Obama’s proposed financial rules overhaul does absolutely nothing about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, admits Obama’s Treasury Secretary, tax cheat Timothy Geithner, even though he admits that “Fannie and Freddie were a core part of what went wrong in our system.” Worse, the Obama administration lifted the $400 billion limit on bailouts for Fannie and Freddie, so that they could continue to buy up junky mortgages at taxpayer expense, and showered their executives with $42 million in compensation.  The Obama administration is now expanding the bailouts of these mortgage giants so that they can lavish pay on their CEOs and reduce the payments of deadbeat mortgage borrowers.  (At the direction of the Obama administration, Freddie Mac is now running up $30 billion in losses to bail out mortgage borrowers, some of whom have high incomes.  Federal regulators sought to make Freddie Mac hide the resulting losses from the SEC and the public.)

Fannie and Freddie helped spawn the mortgage crisis by acting as loan toilets, buying up risky mortgages and thus creating an artificial market for junk.  “From the time Fannie and Freddie began buying risky loans as early as 1993, they routinely misrepresented the mortgages they were acquiring, reporting them as prime when they had characteristics that made them clearly subprime.”

Why did they buy these risky loans?  They put up with Clinton-era affordable-housing regulations that required them to buy up lots of risky loans, in order to curry favor on Capitol Hill and thus retain their annual $10 billion in tax and other special privileges (which they possessed owing to their status as “Government-Sponsored Enterprises” or GSEs). They paid their CEOs millions in the process, and engaged in massive accounting fraud — $6.3 billion at Fannie Mae alone — to increase the size of their managers’ bonuses.  As GSEs, they were exempt from the capital requirements that apply to private banks, so they did not have enough reserves to cover their losses when their mortgages started defaulting.

Banking expert Peter J. Wallison, who prophetically warned against the risky practices of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for years, says that Obama’s proposals will lead to “bailouts forever” and give big, politically connected banks that are “too big to fail” the ability to drive smaller rivals out of business at the expense of consumers and taxpayers.  His colleague Alex Pollock notes that Obama has not lived up his administration’s claims that it would back reform of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Obama claims that it will not lead to more bailouts, but even congressional Democrats admit that it will.  As Congressman Brad Sherman (D-Calif.) admitted, the “bill has unlimited executive bailout authority. . .The bill contains permanent, unlimited bailout authority.”

Government pressure on banks to make loans in economically-depressed neighborhoods was another key reason for the mortgage meltdown and the financial crisis.  If Obama has his way, that pressure will increase.  The House earlier approved Obama’s proposal to create a politically-correct entity called the Consumer Financial Protection Agency. “The agency would be in charge of enforcing the Community Reinvestment Act, a law that prods banks to make loans in low-income communities.”  It would do so without regard for banks’ financial safety and soundness, even though the Community Reinvestment Act was a key contributor to the financial crisis.

Obama’s proposed financial regulations would also harm retail banking operations used by middle-class people and small businesses.