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McCain adopts populist tone, regulation zeal

Wed Sep 17, 2008 4:36pm EDT
 
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By Jeff Mason - Analysis

GRAND RAPIDS, Michigan (Reuters) - Whether from political expediency or a genuine shift in philosophy, the crisis on Wall Street has driven White House hopeful John McCain to embrace something long anathema to him and his Republican party: regulation.

The Arizona senator, who has struggled to demonstrate his command of economic issues this election year as the economy has dominated voter concerns, promised a broad overhaul this week of decades-old rules governing financial markets.

At campaign events and in television appearances, the self-described "proud conservative" sounded a populist note, arguing that support for struggling workers should take precedence over putting taxpayer money into failing firms.

"I'm here to send a message ... to Washington and to Wall Street: we're not going to leave the workers here in Michigan hung out to dry while we give billions in taxpayers' dollars to Wall Street," he said on Wednesday during a visit to a General Motors auto assembly plant in an electoral battleground state.

The populist tone and regulatory push mark a departure for McCain. "I'm always for less regulation," the four-term senator told the Wall Street Journal in March, although he said he understood the need for government oversight in some cases.

But times have changed. With the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings, sale of Merrill Lynch, and government bailout of insurer AIG all in a span of some three days, McCain -- who portrays himself as a reformer in Washington -- now aims to be a warrior on Wall Street as well.

At rallies in Florida and Ohio he criticized corporate greed, knocked chief executives for taking big payouts from ailing enterprises, and accused the financial crisis' perpetrators of disregarding basic rules of sound finance.

"In my administration we're going to hold people on Wall Street responsible and we're going to enact and enforce reforms that make sure that these outrages - and they are outrages - never happen in the first place," he said in Tampa, Florida.

"Under my reforms, the American people will be protected by comprehensive regulations that will apply the rules and enforce them to the full."

NEW OR NOT?

Barack Obama, McCain's Democratic rival in the November 4 presidential election, accuses McCain of being a latecomer to the regulatory reform cause. The Republican's advisers deny that, citing his early calls to revamp mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, taken over by the government 10 days ago.

"This is not a new subject for him," senior economic adviser Carly Fiorina, the former chief executive of Hewlett-Packard, told Reuters in an interview, citing speeches McCain made in February.

"He was talking (then) about reform of regulation for Wall Street, talking about Fannie and Freddie - so it's not new."

But the emphasis is.

McCain, whose expertise is in national security, normally highlights plans to reduce spending and keep taxes low when addressing economic issues at campaign events.  Continued...

 
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