By Richard G. Thomas
Thomas Voting Reports

(Editor’s Note: This story was released Oct. 22, 2008, for publication by our newspaper subscribers.)

It’s not often that members of Congress, within sight of Election Day, find themselves voting on a bill so important it could prevent national or global financial catastrophe, so radical it would partially socialize a swath of the U.S. economy for at least the remainder of the decade, and so costly it ranks as the most expensive taxpayer bailout in American history

Such a perfect political and legislative storm struck Capitol Hill when Congress voted to infuse more than $700 billion of public funds into financial services firms in hopes of adding stability to a plummeting U.S. economy. When President Bush, a free marketeer, signed the bill Oct. 3, he authorized the most intrusive reach by Washington into private financial institutions since the 1930s.

The House and Senate roll calls on the bailout are featured in this report on 24 of the most newsworthy congressional votes of 2008. The report also spotlights members’ stands on issues such as home foreclosures, energy taxes, paycheck discrimination, global warming, tobacco regulation, Iraq troop withdrawals, GI education benefits, free trade, congressional ethics and government spy and torture policies.

Supporters called the bailout objectionable but essential. “Doing nothing is the worst thing we could do,” said Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., a prominent fiscal conservative, in floor debate. “This is one of those once-in-a-century kind of crises, and we need to act to prevent it from becoming a once-in-a-century kind of a recession.”


Our Editors Pick the Year's
24 Most Newsworthy Votes

House

Senate

To Approve
$170B Stimulus

Jan. 29, 2008

To Raise Taxes
on Energy Firms

Feb. 27, 2008

To Override
Spy-Bill Veto

March 11, 2008

To Establish
Ethics Watchdog

March 11, 2008

To Shelve
Free-Trade
Pact

April 10, 2008

To Address
Mortgage Crisis

May 8, 2008

To Withdraw
Troops
from Iraq

May 15, 2008

To Establish
New GI Bill

June 19, 2008

To Renew
FISA Spy Powers

June 20, 2008

To Bail Out
Fannie, Freddie

July 23, 2008

To Regulate
Tobacco Products

July 30, 2008

To Approve
$700B Bailout

Oct. 3, 2008

To Approve
$170B Stimulus
Feb. 7, 2008

To Pass
2008 Spy Budget
Feb. 13, 2008

To Deny
Bankruptcy Help
for Mortgages
April 3, 2008

To Block
Pay-Bias Bill
April 23, 2008

To Prevent
Arctic Drilling
May 13, 2008

To Defeat
Iraq Pullout Bid
May 23, 2008

To Start
Debate on
Global Warming
June 2, 2008

To Advance Tax
on Windfall Profits
June 10, 2008

To Renew
FISA Spy Powers
July 9, 2008

To Grant
Telecom Immunity
July 9, 2008

To Bail Out
Fannie, Freddie
July 26, 2008

To Approve
$700B Bailout
Oct. 3, 2008

But Rep. Mike Pence, R-Ind., spoke for many when he said he “did not come to Washington to ask working Americans to subsidize the bad decisions of corporate America,” and Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, called the bill “the slippery slope to socialism.”

What members didn’t know at the time was the true nature of what they were voting on. Congressional leaders had presented the bailout as a Treasury purchase of distressed, mortgage-backed assets that would rescue troubled firms and lubricate frozen credit markets. But Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. announced days later the government would actually take ownership positions in financial institutions, starting with a $125 billion partial nationalization of the nine largest U.S. banks.

Paulson said, “Government owning a stake in any private U.S. company is objectionable to most Americans, me included. Yet the alternative of leaving businesses and consumers without access to financing is totally unacceptable.”

Although Paulson said the original plan to purchase distressed assets was still in the works, Alan Blinder, a Princeton University economist and former Federal Reserve vice-chairman, told The Washington Post, “If I were a member of Congress, I would be wondering about bait and switch….”

In the weeks since Congress rushed to approve the bailout and begin a pre-Election Day recess, outside observers have read the fine print and found taxpayer protections lacking.

For one thing, loopholes riddle the bill’s limits on executive compensation. For another, the nine largest U.S. banks are permitted to use a share of the $125 billion from taxpayers to pay dividends to common stockholders, a non-essential benefit. Congress also oversold prospects of the Treasury eventually recouping a significant share of the $700 billion, since the bill contains few mandatory provisions to achieve that.

The most costly U.S.-taxpayer bailout before the Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 was the Treasury’s $124 billion lifeline to the savings-and-loan industry in the 1980s and early 1990s.

In the Senate, 82 percent of Democrats and 69 percent of Republicans voted for the 2008 bailout, and in the House, 75 percent of Democrats and 46 percent of Republicans backed it.

Whether the landmark measure eventually is judged a savior of the U.S. economy or a disastrous misstep won’t be sorted out for years. As to whether individual members cast a “right” or “wrong” vote on the bill, constituents can weigh in as early as Nov. 4.

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Copyright 2008, Votes in Congress Newspaper Syndicate


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