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I talked to Ron Paul
last weekend about the massive financial reform bill that is being finalized
in Congress. The House and the Senate have each passed their respective
versions of the bill, and now the two must be merged. The result will
be the most comprehensive reformation of U.S. financial regulation since the
Great Depression.
Conferences are very
important in defining the ultimate language of the bill that will be signed
into law, so committee seats are highly coveted. Members are wined and
dined by lobbyists and showered with campaign contributions, as they have the
power not only to merge the bills and determine final language, but also to add new
stuff -- stuff that was never debated in either house. Matt Taibbi
describes this on pages 44-46 in his book The Great Derangement.
Theoretically the entire bill can be rewritten in
Conference. In secret.
After the two bills are reconciled, a conference report is issued and the
House and Senate vote again on the new, combined bill. Conference
reports are thus incredibly important. Unfortunately, members of congress
have become so derelict in their duty that they barely take a second look at
the new bill, instead striking the attitude, "We already voted on this once,"
and rubber stamping it through. Contributing to this problem is the length of
the bills. The working draft of the current financial reform
legislation is already close to 2,000 pages. Members
may only be given a few days -- or a few hours -- before a vote takes
place.
Something is dreadfully wrong with this process.
As for this
conference, many of the meetings will be conducted in public, and CSPAN will be
covering the sessions, which begin today (Tuesday, June 15, 2010), live. This
is an opportunity to see our representative government in action, but more
importantly, to influence the outcome.
Of particular
interest to the Liberty Movement, Tea Partiers, and Progressives (i.e. Americans), is
Paul's HR 1207, which is included in the House version of the legislation as
the Paul-Grayson amendment, and which calls for complete transparency and a
full audit of the Federal Reserve. Unfortunately, the committee
is starting with the Senate's weaker version of the legislation, which
includes only the watered down, one time peek at the
Fed's books. It is therefore essential that conferees add the
undiluted language of the Paul-Grayson amendment when reconciling the Senate
and House versions of the Financial Reform Bill. Only this will
insure a thorough, complete, and ongoing audit of the Fed.
As part of a 'motion
to instruct' delivered on the House floor, Dr. Paul urged the committee to
remember its responsibility to the American people and to reject the idea
that the Federal Reserve can remain a secret, opaque institution beyond the
scrutiny of the American public and Congress:
Ron Paul is one of
us. Like you and I, he is gravely concerned about the threats to our freedom.
He is different from us in that he is actually in a position to
influence policy at the highest levels of government. He's the
point man, but he needs our help.
What We Can Do for a Fed Audit
This is crunch time.
The bankers and lobbyists will be working hard to keep the real audit
language (HR1207) out of the final legislation. But we have a voice,
too, through our representatives. That is why ours is called a representative
government.
Of the House
Conferees, 15 of 31 members are co-sponsors of HR 1207, including all
Republican members (Bachus, Royce, Biggert, Capito, Hensarling, Garrett,
Lucas, Barton, Smith (TX), Issa, and Graves), and four Democrats (Peterson,
Boswell, Conyers, and Shuler).
The sixteen (16) Democrats who have not cosponsored HR 1207 are listed below.
Their names are conveniently hyperlinked to their contact pages so that you
may easily focus your energy on emailing, calling and/or faxing them to
express your support for a full and complete audit of the Federal Reserve,
and the inclusion of the Paul-Grayson Amendment / HR 1207 in the final financial reform legislation. Be sure to remind them that 80% of Americans want a full audit of the
Federal Reserve.
Barney Frank (D - MA)
Paul Kanjorski (D - PA)
Maxine Waters (D - CA)
Carolyn Maloney (D - NY)
Luis Gutierrez (D - IL)
Mel Watt (D - NC)
Gregory Meeks (D - NY)
Gwen Moore (D - KS)
Mary Jo Kilroy (D - OH)
Gary Peters (D - MI)
Henry Waxman (D - CA)
Bobby Rush (D - IL)
Howard Berman (D - CA
)
Ed Towns (D - NY)
Elijah Cummings (D - MD)
Nydia Velazquez (D - NY)
Of the Senate
Conferees, five have co-sponsored HR1207 (Crapo, Lincoln, Leahy, Harkin, and
Chambliss). The seven Senate members to contact (again, conveniently
hyperlinked) are:
Chris Dodd
(D-Conn.)
Tim Johnson
(D-S.D.),
Jack Reed
(D-R.I.),
Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.),
Richard Shelby
(R-Ala.),
Bob Corker (R-Tenn.),
Judd Gregg (R-N.H.)
I have been assured
that contacting members has a real impact. Many
listen. Many are worried about being reelected. Many just want their phones
to stop ringing, their email inboxes to stop overflowing, and their fax
machines untied.
Keep the pressure up and please spread the word.
Michael A. Nystrom
Editor, Bull not Bull
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