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Bush Prepares Request for Rest of Bailout Funds

by: David Cho and Lori Montgomery  |  The Washington Post

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Bush is preparing to request a second installment of $350 billion from Congress before President-elect Obama takes office. (Photo: Getty Images North America)

    If Congress votes down measure, veto power could come into play.

    Senior Bush administration officials, consulting with the Obama transition team, have prepared a plan to ask lawmakers for the second half of the $700 billion financial rescue package despite intense opposition in Congress, sources familiar with the discussions said.

    The initiative could create an unusual political scenario straddling the Bush and Obama administrations. If Congress were to vote down the measure, either President Bush or Obama would have to exercise a veto to get the money.

    Obama officials would prefer that Bush exercise any veto rather than leave the new president with the unsavory task of rebuffing his fellow Democrats in Congress to advance a widely unpopular program, sources said. The White House has declined to say publicly whether Bush would be willing to issue the veto.

    "There have been discussions between the administration and the transition team on how to proceed should the president-elect determine that he would like President Bush to notify Congress on his behalf of the intent to use the remaining $350 billion so that it will be available early in the new administration," White House press secretary Dana Perino said. "No final decisions have been made."

    But Democratic Senate aides were notified in a meeting yesterday afternoon that the request could come as soon as this weekend and that a vote could be held as early as next week, said congressional sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because no decisions have been made.

    Under the emergency rescue legislation approved by Congress in October, the administration must inform lawmakers that it wants access to the second installment of $350 billion. Unless Congress passes a resolution rejecting the request within 15 days, the Treasury can begin to tap the funds. If Congress turns down the request, the president could veto the resolution and then the Treasury could proceed. The money would be blocked only if Congress overrides the veto, which would require a two-thirds majority in both chambers.

    A congressional source said advocates of the plan are exploring whether there are enough votes in the Senate to sustain a veto. The first $350 billion has already been committed.

    "There have been discussions between the administration and the transition about how to proceed should the president-elect determine that he wants to have those funds available on January 20," said Robert Gibbs, spokesman for President-elect Barack Obama's transition team. "No final decisions have been made, but we want to be ready to act if needed."

    Both Bush and Obama officials say gaining access to the balance of the rescue funds is crucial to turning the economy around. Without the money, it would be nearly impossible to offer significant help for homeowners facing foreclosure, stabilize the financial system or jump-start the credit markets so more consumers and companies can get loans. The latest sign of the economy's deep malaise was new jobless figures released yesterday showing that unemployment has soared to 7.2 percent, the highest rate in 15 years.

    Even as senior Bush and Obama officials consulted about how to access the rest of the money, Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, unveiled a bill on Capitol Hill aimed at forcing the Treasury to use the money in accordance with lawmakers' wishes.

    Many of the measure's provisions are being coordinated with Treasury Secretary nominee Timothy F. Geithner, who is planning to expand the scope of the rescue program well beyond the financial system to help ordinary consumers and homeowners, as well small businesses and municipalities. Frank said in a news conference yesterday that his bill might not be needed if the Obama administration promised to abide by its principles.

    "It doesn't have to be enacted. It would be helpful if it was," Frank said. "We have smart and cooperative people in this [incoming] administration, I'm willing to accept their word that they will act as if it were the law."

    Frank's bill would mandate that the Treasury allocate at least $40 billion for foreclosure prevention. Banks and other institutions that receive funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, would be required to account for the use of the money. Clear limits on executive compensation would be imposed on all firms that take federal aid, including those that already received money.

    The House is expected to vote on Frank's measure on Wednesday, congressional sources said. If the measure is approved, Frank has said that some lawmakers who would otherwise vote against releasing the next round of TARP funds might be persuaded to reconsider. Without Frank's bill, House leaders are convinced that lawmakers would block release of additional funds to the Treasury, which is widely viewed by lawmakers as having rushed the bailout through Congress and then badly mismanaged the program.

    For Obama, using a veto runs the risk of souring his relationship with rank-and-file lawmakers, especially if it is one of his first official acts in the White House. It carries less risk for Bush, who is leaving office in a matter of days.

    But the threat of a veto could assure distressed financial markets that more help is on the way.

    In September, when Treasury secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. proposed the rescue to Congress, the House at first voted down the plan. Global stock markets plummeted immediately. The initiative eventually passed both chambers and was signed into law in October.

    Bush officials committed nearly all of the first half of the rescue funds on aiding the financial system and bailing out individual firms. But their programs angered lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. Some were steamed that no help was forthcoming for struggling homeowners. Others said the effort failed to stimulate lending.

    A majority of lawmakers in both parties are strongly resistant to giving more money to continue the program, Democratic leaders say, adding that a request from either administration is likely to be rejected, making a veto almost unavoidable.

  

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Apparently neither the Bush

Apparently neither the Bush or the Obama people seem to be aware that the first $350 billion (actually much more has gone to the bailouts of corrupt corporations and their officers and shareholders) has done nothing to slow the meltdown, reduce the increasing numbers of layoffs and factory closures, or help keep people in their homes and off the streets. Bailing out the bankers is really more Reaganomics with the hope that some of the money will trickle down from the bankers to the men and women on the street. Never in the history of the world has enriching the wealthy proven to beneficial to the lower classes. Only a healthy middle class and opportunities for class advancement benefit economies and more important the societies as a whole.

Jesus! Lord above! Whatever

Jesus! Lord above! Whatever you do, don't give this monsterous criminal any money!!! He is the great betrayer of humanity and God! If anything just get on with the very real moral and ethical obligation of bringing him and his cabal of co-conspiritors to justice! The world cannot heal from these crimes against humanity until justice has been brought to bare on these villains!

My fellow Americans. The

My fellow Americans. The American Economy is starting to look better with every passing weak. The TARP $350 billion helped our economy a great deal thanks to the inventive thinkers in our private financial sector. My friends, I assure you that the remaining $350 billion of the TARP money will not only fix our economy but will make us better than ever and the United States of America will be back on TOP. Meanwhile go out and start spending more money to support your financial system, borrow as much as you can , watch some great TV shows and sign up to the U.S. Armed Forces. God Bless America and the BANKSTERS. OOPS I meant the bankers. Your GREATEST President George W. Bush.

Stealing candy from children

Stealing candy from children is the shame of both political parties in this sleezy grab. Let the economic slide go long enough to find a normal and sustainable course for our country. Learn to cooperate, spread productive jobs around on a twenty hour work week. Real estate values can fall a long way, it will be briefly uncomfortable but won't hurt real people for long. Grit your teeth and hang on for a great ride! Two years from now the world will be a lot more fun and the people will be free of stress from the care and feeding of elite drones who are destroying the environment. Hang on, forget the government, free people can do it. Cordially, Garrett

Paulson and Bush have given

Paulson and Bush have given away the first $350 Million to their friends with no strings attached -- huge CEO compensation, golden parachutes, buy out of competing banks -- they really took the taxpayers to the cleaners. And, they can't/won't tell us how the money was spend! Say no to Bush. Hold on to that money until after January 20!

"Unless Congress passes a

"Unless Congress passes a resolution rejecting the request within 15 days, the Treasury can begin to tap the funds. " Doesn't Congress have until after January 20 to pass/reject Bush's request? Doesn't that mean that if Congress does nothing, the funds will go to the Obama administration, not the Bush administration?

How do we know that a

How do we know that a good-sized chunk of the previous $350 billion is not in Bush's and Paulson's own pockets right now? No one is making the slightest effort to tell us taxpayers where our money is. It is shameful.

WILL THIS MADNESS EVER END.

WILL THIS MADNESS EVER END. JANUARY 20, 2009 Make sure to give Bush the one finger salute as he flies out of our white House. GOOD RIDDANCE TO THE MOST PITIFUL S.O.B. OF A PRESIDENT. Support Vincent Bugliosi, read his book, The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder.

“[G]aining access to the

“[G]aining access to the balance of the rescue funds is crucial to turning the economy around. Without the money, it would be nearly impossible to offer significant help for homeowners facing foreclosure, stabilize the financial system or jump-start the credit markets so more consumers and companies can get loans.” Er, excuse me, but didn’t we hear this Chicken Little story before? Apparently the desperate approval and disappearance of the first $350 billion accomplished nothing. So, since it didn’t work the first time, let’s do it again. I’m sure the banks will be back on their feet in a couple of years as long as we keep feeding them $350 billion every quarter. Odd, too, that this urgent call for releasing the money yesterday comes as Sen. Frank is working overtime to put a few conditions on how the money is used. But Frank says maybe legal conditions aren’t needed because Treasury designate Geithner, who lives in the same pockets con man Paulson inhabits, is mumbling the right sorts of things. If Frank gets a promise they’ll abide by the principles of his legislation, he says that’ll be enough. Prexy George, the line goes this way: fool me once shame on you; fool me twice shame on me. I guess it’s shame on us time.

I say; No funds till there

I say; No funds till there is a 100% full accounting of the previous $350 billion and an enforceable promise to account for the second half!

This is a crime against

This is a crime against humanity! There should be no money going to those people and there is no reason for this $350 billion!