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Obama considering Lawrence Summers for Treasury. Sec. Who is He?

I am sure that you have read the following article from the Times on Line  http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/us_elections/article4968993.ece
 
It is quite interesting in that it notes that Obama's candidate for Treasury Secretary may be former Treasury Secretary under Bill Clinton Laurence Summers.  I had run into his name in doing research on the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 that repealed the Glass-Steagal Act.
Phil Gramm has been widely blamed for the bill that bears his name by the Obama campaign as the man who set in motion the mortgage melt down we now have.  Please examine the following:
 
Here is a section of the above cited article.
 

Another leading candidate for the Treasury is Summers, who has been guiding Obama through the Wall Street melt-down. Summers was forced to quit as president of Harvard University in 2006 after suggesting controversially that men had a greater aptitude for science and engineering than women.

At a conference at Harvard Business School last week, Summers defended Obama’s plans to tax the wealthy by pointing to the huge rise in inequality over the past 30 years between the earnings of the top 1% and bottom 80% of the country. “It is immense compared to any discussion of changing the tax system here or there,” he said.

 

Now here is an article on the web from the New York Times October 23, 1999

http://partners.nytimes.com/library/financial/102399banks-congress.html

 

Please go to the article and read it.  Following are a few clipping from the article that are of interest.

 

"When this potentially historic agreement is finalized," Clinton said in a statement, "it will strengthen the economy and help consumers, communities and businesses across America."

Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers said in an interview, "At the end of the 20th century, we will at last be replacing an archaic set of restrictions with a legislative foundation for a 21st-century financial system." The measure, he added, "would provide significant benefits to the national economy."

Please note that Mr. Lawrence H. Summers is mentioned above and what he said.  Please note also that Representative James A. Leach of Iowa who is mentioned in this article is also the James Leach who is the head of the Republicans for Obama that gave a speech at the Democratic Convention this year and he is also named as co-author on the Gramm Bill.

Next from the article we have Christopher Dodd and Charles E. Schumer mentioned as to the forced compromise between Gramm and the White House.  Notice who was pushing for inclusion of lending to minorities not Mr. Gramm.

The breakthrough in Friday's legislation came in a backroom meeting at the Capitol soon after midnight, when a group of moderate Senate Democrats -- led by Christopher Dodd of Connecticut and Charles E. Schumer of New York -- forced a compromise between Gramm and the White House over the legislation's effect on the Community Reinvestment Act, a 1977 anti-discrimination law intended to encourage lending to minorities and others historically denied access to credit.

Dodd, whose state is home to the nation's largest insurance companies, and Schumer, with strong ties to Wall Street, have long sought legislation to repeal the Glass-Steagall Act. Both men said in interviews Friday that they moved to strike a compromise after it became apparent that the legislation might be killed, as it was last year by Gramm, over the debate about the Community Reinvestment Act.

 

Once again we have Mr. Laurence Summers name coming up.

The White House had insisted that the President would veto any legislation that would scale back minority-lending requirements. Four days of intense negotiations between Summers, Gene Sperling, the President's top economic policy adviser, and Gramm, while moving the two sides closer, failed to resolve the differences.

Such was the state of play Thursday evening when Gramm decided to force the issue by having the House-Senate conference committee vote on his proposed compromise, which the White House had already rejected for failing to block banks with bad lending records from expanding to new businesses.

When Gramm's measure was defeated by one vote, it quickly became clear that there would be no law unless Gramm could get some Democrats to break from the White House.

But Administration officials had spent all day making sure that the Democrats remained solidly against the measure until their concerns about the Community Reinvestment Act could be worked out.

 

After receiving calls from executives of some of the nation's leading financial companies, Dodd and Schumer began trying to work out a compromise. An agreement was quickly reached on the issue of banks and expanded powers -- no institution would be allowed to move into any new lines of business without a satisfactory lending record.

Please read the whole article.

Gramm had maintained that he did not want anything in the bill that would expand the application of the Community Reinvestment Act because it was, he said, unnecessarily burdensome to banks. He had sought a provision that would exempt thousands of smaller banks from the law. He also wanted a provision that would expose what he has described as the "extortion" committed by community groups against banks by requiring the groups to disclose any special financial deals the groups extract from the banks

 

Next I have as a reference a Press Room release from November 12, 1999.

http://www.treas.gov/press/releases/ls241.htm

Please note that it contains the words of Sec. Summers at the signing of the Gramm bill.

SEC. SUMMERS: Let me welcome you all here today for the signing of this historic legislation. With this bill, the American financial system takes a major step forward towards the 21st century, one that will benefit American consumers, business, and the national economy for many years to come. This is the culmination of years of effort by many, many people, reflects the work of presidents, Treasury officials, members of Congress, those in the private sector, from both parties, and dedicated professionals, both inside and outside the government. With their help, I believe we have all found the right framework for America's future financial system.

I want especially to thank the members of Congress who played so crucial a role in passing this legislation, thank the key regulators and the agencies they represent -- Chairman Greenspan and the Federal Reserve, Chairman Levitt and the SEC, Comptroller Hawke and the OCC, Ms. Seidman (sp) and the OTS -- for all that they have contributed to bringing us to this point. And I want to thank especially my predecessor, Bob Rubin, who cared deeply that we get this bill right, and finally, my many

 

I know much has been said about Phil Gramm being the sole architect of this bill but it would be worth reporting at this date

that the Obama campaign has as it's top economic advisors and is planning to use as it's economic advisors some of the

same people who created the mess we now have.  Bob Rubin who is mentioned in the above paragraph is at this time also

one of Obama's advisors.

Should you not report on this so the American public knows before election day that the very people who helped to bring down

this house of cards on all of us will be in charge of our country should Obama be elected.  It looks to me as if an Obama

presidents would be putting the foxes in charge of the hen house.

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