Senate attack on bailout lacks explicit threat
By Kevin Drawbaugh and Patrick Rucker
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The leaders of the U.S. Senate Banking Committee rejected the Bush administration's Wall Street bailout plan on Tuesday but left room for negotiation about the proposal that would have the federal government buy up to $700 billion in soured investments.
"What they have sent us is not acceptable," Sen. Christopher Dodd, the Democratic chairman of the committee, said after a five-hour hearing to scrutinize the plan.
Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby, the panel's top Republican, said that the Senate would not give the plan a "rubber stamp" but he stopped short of outright opposition.
Over the weekend, the Treasury requested sweeping powers to vacuum up investments -- most tied to home mortgages -- that have frozen financial markets.
Dodd answered with 44 pages of legislative language that he said would increase oversight powers, give aid to borrowers facing foreclosure and see that the government gets a stake in any firm selling assets under the program.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said he wants lawmakers to pass the legislation quickly to calm the markets.
Despite stinging criticism of the Treasury's approach at the hearing, no senator has stepped forward with an overt threat to block the administration's effort.
The rules of the Senate, unlike the House of Representatives, give individual lawmakers substantial power to delay or halt legislation, but Senate aides said there were no clear signs yet of that power being exercised.
Vice President Dick Cheney was spending much of Tuesday on Capitol Hill trying to address the concerns of his fellow Republicans in the House and Senate.
STOPPING SHORT
Other senators, including Republicans Jim Bunning of Kentucky and Jim DeMint of South Carolina, have expressed strong concerns. But the aides said these lawmakers also have stopped short of warning they would work to block the bill.
In a hearing room swarming with financial industry lobbyists and sign-carrying protesters, Sen. Mike Enzi said the plan presents "enormous cost and enormous risk ... if approved in its current form, this plan will cost every man, woman, and child in this country approximately $2,300.
"Unfortunately, the only plan more costly would be doing nothing at all," the Wyoming Republican added.
Paulson offered a plan on Saturday to authorize the government to use taxpayer funds to buy billions of dollars in bad mortgage-backed securities that were created by investment banks during the home price bubble.
Now that the bubble has popped, many U.S. homeowners, saddled with mortgages they cannot afford, are defaulting. As a result, securitized debt instruments that depend on those homeowners being able to repay their loans are now broken. Continued...
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