Elizabeth Warren
Related: About this forumElizabeth Warren’s Challenge to Hillary Clinton
BY JOHN CASSIDY
Im down in Washington, D.C., at the Institute for New Economic Thinkings Finance & Society conference, at which, as I pointed out yesterday, all of the speakers are women. At the opening dinner last night, Senator Elizabeth Warren delivered a rousing condemnation of the big banks that, to me, at least, sounded suspiciously like a stump speech. Financial institutions shouldnt be allowed to cheat people, she said at one point. Can I have an amen on that?
She could. But this wasnt an Occupy Wall Street reunion. The audience was largely made up of well-heeled Washingtonians in expensive dresses and suits, a good number of whom cheered. Warren, who, as we all know, isnt running for President, went on to outline a number of proposals for reform that would go beyond the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010, which was Washingtons response to the 2008 financial crisis. Lets get real. Dodd-Frank did not end too-big-to-fail, she noted, correctly. What was needed was to end it once and for all.
How? she asked. By breaking up the big banksjust break them up.
When I say that it sounded like a stump speech, Im not criticizing. To the contrary. The Massachusetts senator brings an infectious passion and energy to her issues. She is also able to cut to the essence of complicated subjects, and to expand the political debate to include proposals that many other politicians regard as verboten, such as cutting the megabanks down to size, extending the remit of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (which was her baby), and introducing a transactions tax on short-term trades. Some of her ideas may be questionable. For example, quite a few people who sympathize with her over-all approach arent convinced that bringing back the Glass-Steagall Actwhich separated commercial banks from investment banks, among other thingsis the right solution to Wall Streets excesses. But, in a town that is still largely beholden to financial-industry lobbyists, she is an essential presence.
After listening to Warren speak, I have no reason to doubt that she was being sincere when she said, just over a month ago, that Hillary Clinton deserves a chance to lay out her program. But Im pretty sure that Warren also meant it when she told my colleague Ryan Lizza that she expects to have an impact on the political debate and the 2016 election. If Clinton doesnt demonstrate, with some detailed proposals, that she has left behind for good the light-handed approach to financial regulation associated with her husbands Administration, she can certainly expect Warren to make her displeasure public.
more
http://www.newyorker.com/news/john-cassidy/elizabeth-warrens-challenge-to-hillary-clinton
orpupilofnature57
(15,472 posts)on surveillance, and Defense don't breed confidence and trust .
BrotherIvan
(9,126 posts)If EW is serious, she will fight like hell for it.