Election Thoughts, F&F Next Steps
There is nothing much I can add to what already has been
reported about last week’s elections.
The Republicans kicked major butt.
It was a GOP political tsunami, bringing more conservative
strength to their bulging House numbers (a black Mormon woman elected from
Utah!!??), and Senate victories made a legitimate scallywag, Sen. Mitch
McConnell (R-Ky.) the Senate Majority Leader.
The GOP cut like a hot knife through butter; D’s got wiped
and pushed out of the South, making the GOP responsible for all of those states
which were part of the original confederacy, something which is symmetric but hauntingly
ironic that with 57% of the south is home to Black Americans (source 2010
census), it’s now represented in the Congress by today’s political party which is
so antithetical to minority rights.
Seven of the 10 states, with the fastest Hispanic
population growth, are in the south (source 2013 HuffPost).
Few convincingly can deny that this was a massive rejection
of President Obama’s policies and program initiatives. He suggested that
himself a few weeks ago and, sadly, he was correct.
I am not lamenting that Washington will be run by the
Republican party for the next two years as much as I gag at the transparency of
their ideology and dogma. It’s seeks to recreate an America which existed at
the end of WWII, both economically, demographically, and socially, except that
ain’t never happening again, unless the GOP opts for pogroms!.
The forces that created the Grand Old Party—primarily in
the past 20 years-- sculpted a massively non-inclusive affair shaped largely
for the benefit of the tightly connected homogeneous “haves,” who already possess too much of our
national wealth.
The southern and south western states now firmly in the GOP
camp—including Kentucky, Louisiana, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia,
South Carolina, Texas, et al--represent many of the poorest educated states,
the states with the least amount of income, the states with highest degree of
medical problems; states with the highest levels of poverty, and all sorts of indicia
of backwardness and need.
State officials and their residents may blanch at those qualities, but statistically it’s true.
What types of federal programs, save more of "feed the rich" are their GOP Congressmen and Senators going to produce to help them?
Save me from the GOP pointing to a Black southern Senator,
a Black far western Congresswoman, a few Hispanic others (Cubans are not
“Hispanic” in my book) and arguing that their party is a big tent.
The Republican Party is not, hasn’t been, and won’t
suddenly become inclusive and open, because the party’s controls all are in the
hands of very conservative extremists.
If in your GOP gut, you don’t like black and brown citizens,
and don’t need their votes, you are not going to spend a lot of time trying to
help them.
The Democratic congressional leadership—Sen. Harry Reid
(D-Nev.), Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Cal.), Rep. Steve Israel (D-NY.), Sen. Michael
Bennett (who?), and the DNC head Rep. Debbie Wasserman-Schulz--quickly should
apologize to their national membership, resign, seek party successors and then run
and hide their shame.
Sure the “D’s will fight will go on,” but the uphill
incline is much steeper, especially if the congressional Republicans don’t—as I
suggested they could—puke all over themselves, reprehensively, in the next two
years and create hope for the Democratic Party.
One of the more constructive columns I read, a column by
Charles Krauthammer in the Washington Post, has the GOP throwing around its
weight but in some positive ways.
The next two years are going to be loud, rancorously
ugly and require the best of each of us to pierce the noise and calumny.
Is
the Conservative SCOTUS Warming Up??
Last Friday, the Supreme Courts quick (goose?) stepped into the GOP’s
ongoing Obamacare fight, absent any triggering underlying case
resolution requiring pending SCOTUS interaction, saying it will decide
whether the tax subsidies in that law are constitutional.
That scares me given what I think is the activism level of
our highest court and its willingness to turn back the clock to a long gone
era.
I just see the possibility of a gaggle of older Catholic
guys writing 5-4 majorities for this court on any number of matters.
Should the nation worry over which
of these long standing decisions could be challenged and reviewed, possibly
with an eye to changing them, especially if some GOP berserkers in either
chamber decide to mount a real or PR challenge?
- Racial segregation: Brown v. Board of Education, Bolling v. Sharpe, Cooper v. Aaron, Gomillion v. Lightfoot, Griffin v. County School Board, Green v. School
Board of New Kent County, Lucy v. Adams, Loving v. Virginia
- Voting, redistricting, and malapportionment: Baker v. Carr, Reynolds v. Sims, Wesberry v. Sanders
- Criminal procedure: Brady v. Maryland, Mapp v. Ohio, Miranda v. Arizona, Escobedo v. Illinois, Gideon v. Wainwright, Katz v. United States, Terry v. Ohio
- Free speech: New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, Brandenburg v. Ohio, Yates v. United States, Roth v. United States, Jacobellis v. Ohio, Memoirs v. Massachusetts, Tinker v. Des
Moines School District
I
am sure there is some legal answer out there besides, “Trust them; they never would
do that,” which may satisfy me that this Court and its congressional
Amen Chorus won’t start to reshape the country in their “1950’s TV family”
ideals.
Let’s
Talk Fannie and Freddie
While nothing in the election results making F&F
situation any worse or better—and some arguing they now are worse--the GOP
takeover of the Senate likely means that Alabama’s Dick Shelby (R-Ala.) will be
the next SBC Chairman.
Shelby is a wily Senator who I don’t believe will take on
issues which are not ripe or worse, sour, and I doubt that he would try and
make the Senate swallow a House approved mortgage reform bill.
With the 2015 numbers, major Senate action means 60 votes at the bottom line (with
@ 55 R’s in the chamber) to survive an Obama veto.
Currently, Shelby isn’t a GSE fan, but he’ll move carefully
on what he tries to pass.
Still to come next month in the House
GOP Caucus is a possible challenge to HBC Chairman Jeb Hensarling (R-Tex.) from committee member Frank
Lucas (R-Okla.), which could impact committee action against F&F.
F&F
Earnings
Yawn, as predicted here last week, Fannie
and Freddie last week reported that they would send $6.8 Billion to the Treasury’s
General Fund, raising to $230 Billion the amount over and above the $188
Billion figure the government infused in the two in 2008.
That success won’t stop the noise to
get rid of the two but it does show that if the Obama Admin decides that it has
consumed enough F&F honey, there is money that easily could go to corporate
capital for protection against future losses or even some possible reduction of
the conservatorship rules.
Here is a Detroit News story on the earnings.
Clea Benson in Bloomberg
interviewed the top guys at both F&F for their perspective on earnings and
related issues...
F&F Urban Institute Conference
Last week, there was a “F&F
going forward” confab co-hosted by CoreLogic and the Urban Institute, which
featured among others, Jim Millstein and current UI GSE guru and former Obama
WH official, Jim Parrott.
Moderator: Faith Schwartz, senior vice president, government solutions,
CoreLogic
Ø Andrew Davidson, president, Andrew Davidson & Co.
Ø Julia Gordon, director of housing finance and policy, Center for American Progress
Ø Jim Millstein, chairman and chief executive officer, Millstein & Co.
Ø Jim Parrott, senior fellow, Housing Finance Policy Center, Urban Institute.
Ø Andrew Davidson, president, Andrew Davidson & Co.
Ø Julia Gordon, director of housing finance and policy, Center for American Progress
Ø Jim Millstein, chairman and chief executive officer, Millstein & Co.
Ø Jim Parrott, senior fellow, Housing Finance Policy Center, Urban Institute.
The takeaway from the event was continued
belief about the difficulty of a new Congress moving any significant restructuring
legislation on the subject and more support, with caveats, for the long stated
Millstein approach that the Obama Administration should use its regulatory
authority to make necessary and desirable operational changes in the mortgage
giants.
Judge Margaret Sweeney’s Own Words
If there are those among you who
lost a little hope when Judge Royce Lamberth issued his opinion claiming there
were no lengths to which the government couldn’t go and control or work its
will on F&F, take heart. This article linked below quotes Judge Margaret Sweeney
on her support and decision for “discovery,” which will allow plaintiffs
lawyers to fig into Treasury and FHFA records to see what evidence may exist suggesting
the government played fast and loose with the law when opting for the F&F
revenue sweep in 2012.
“Tim Howard717” and OFHEO
Miscreants?
When Steve Blumenthal, current DC
lawyer and former special assistant (who left in 2006) to OFHEO (FHFA’s
predecessor) Director Armando Falcon, argued last week in National Housing News
that F&F should be combined, it caught the attention of “not our” Tim
Howard 717.
Much of which was documented by a
HUD IG’s report (now public) which came just short of saying certain OFHEO
principals were guilty of major violations.
TH717 called out those 10 year old actions—for which the statute of limitations has run
out—but promised to reveal more damaging material about what may have
occurred at OFHEO during those tumultuous times.
There are several people in town who
still hold those two largely, but not exclusively responsible (because there
were other antagonists at OFHEO), for the incendiary regulatory—as history now
has shown--approach OFHEO took with the two companies and their execs,
especially Fannie.
I don’t know who the TH717 is, except that he is not our
former Fannie colleague, but I am looking forward to seeing where he goes with
this foray.
As a reminder, this is the guy who
is offering major dollars for anyone coming forward with documented information
proving that Treasury and the FHFA contravened laws in imposing on F&F both
conservatorship and/or the “third amendment” revenue sweep.
Here are other links to some of
TH717’s spirited observations.
What Others Are Saying
F&F earnings
Fiderer
likes to point out that given that more than 25% of that $188 Billion was
forced borrowing to pay interest to pay on the interest—when the GSEs lacked
income(shortly turned around in 2012)--the Feds, in truth, have made @$85
Billion for lending F&F @ $145 Billion.
____________________________________________________________
My thanks to the NAR’s Joe Ventrone
for sending this release from last week’s Realtors conference in New Orleans on
predictions for housing action next year.
DC Lobbying Firms Lick Chops Over GOP Control
___________________________________________________________
Mortgage Bankers Association’s early view of Next Congress
Here’s how the Mortgage Bankers’ Association
is handicapping the new Congress and what housing related actions it could undertake
next year.
____________________________________________________________
Maloni, 11-11-2014
Happy Veterans Day to all of those who serve and served, their families, and loved ones; each of us owes you men and women our everlasting thanks and support for what you do and did. (Thanks to my Uncle Isadore, US Army in WWII and wounded in Battle of the Bulge; my late brother Lou and my late cousin Bernie for their 1950’s service in the US Navy.)
12 comments:
Very interesting concept and reflexive ideas,your blog is direct and concise ,good ,congratulation,i have a question,"(Cubans are not “Hispanic” in my book)"You lost me , Why It's that??
Un---
The best analogy I can give you is think "caste system."
While Cubans share the Hispanic background as many others in this nation and certain the southern hemisphere do, Cubans consider themselves at the top of that chain and somewhat above the others (for cultural, racial, and a myriad of other reasons)..
That's why so many--but not all Cubans--are Republicans.
For generations, those with German Jewish heritage always thought (and may still think) they were/are superior to Russian, Polish, and other Eastern European Jews. Yes, they all shared the religion but....!
Ugh...see the link below to a Rush Limbaugh exchange.
http://hubpages.com/forum/topic/105960
And more, here.
http://www.cuban-exile.com/menu1/what.html
Bill,
It seems bizarre that you imply that the GOP are racist when your comment 'Cubans not really Hispanic' smacks of intolerance itself.
I'm no lover of republicans but it seems that you are implying that it is ok to be racist towards a non white consevative?
Heanza--
I am not implying anything, I stated it, I believe it. I've seen it and written about it 30 years ago, long before I was associated with Fannie Mae.
Do you really believe that the overwhelming number of Tea Party types in the GOP and what's left of the R corporate and country club set see African Americana as their brothers and sisters or equals??
I believe that the GOP is racist and always has been. And I also believe that I am hardly alone in thinking this.
Look at the comments made after Obama's second victory, when GOP loyalists berated the party for not being open and diverse. (BTW, that's still an issue for the 2016 presidential and congressional races and the R pros know it.)
Is every Republican a racist. No, but it sure applies to lots of them and their leaders.
Who has been the target of all of the voting rights legislation moved at the state level, just to cite the most recent evidence of the Republican Party's discrimination?
How much voter fraud have we had to justify the myriad of state actions designed to keep minorities out of the voting booth.
That answer is close to zero, which hardly justifies the effort Republicans in many state have undertaken to tighten up who can vote.
Which Supreme Court decided to whack the Voting Rights Act.
On the Cuban comment, remember, it is not what you and/or I might label or categorize Cubans, it is what they think themselves.
My Cuban comments are based on what Cubans and others I know say and claim. I encourage you to look at the citations I offered--generic from a Cuban information service as well as a Rush Limbaugh discussion, the latter hardly a voice for Hispanic inclusion.
I continue to believe that Cubans just don't identify themselves with Mexicans, Salvadorans, and other "Hispanics."
I believe with many Cubans, it is a "class" issue or caste issue.
Heansa, you have my email address.
I encourage you to send me any factual information which challenges my statements. I will consume it and then answer you, directly, or put a response in the comment section, if you succeed in showing me I am wrong.
Again, thanks for stepping up and sharing your opinion. Good for you.
The Census Bureau describes “hispanic” and “latino” as an origin and specifically “not a race.” “People who identify their origin as Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish may be any race.”
I know a lot of Cubans and Spaniards and none identify with “Hispanic” or “Latino.”
And here in Texas, Senator Ted Cruz is not refered to as hispanic, rather, he’s Canadian!
Anon--Thank you for the contribution.
But, can you elaborate on why it is that the Cubans you know--as well as the ones I know--don't identify with/as "Hispanic?"
Maybe that Cubans have their own identiity and reasons for immigrating to the U.S. after Castro. I’m no sociologist, just have some Cuban friends. Everybody's different. Most love Cuba, but their families left for political reasons, not economic. "Hispanic" is too generic.
Hey, I really come here for the great GSE commentary!
Thanks Anon--I promise more of that.
I guess we got sidetracked but I try and stay precise and offer insight into things I believe (and also think I can support).
Keep reading, please.
Your comment "I believe that the GOP is racist and always has been. And I also believe that I am hardly alone in thinking this."
Bill - stick to GSEs your ignorance and prejudice is unbelievable.
Look at which party fought against slavery in the civil war. Also look at what party pushed the civil rights legislation over the finish line in the 1960's. The GOP has stood on the side of african americans in history much more than the democratic party.
You are a liberal shill who is trying to rewrite history.
It is sad that the liberal party only supports those minorities who believe in victimhood. Republicans have elected minorities in all areas of the country yet each one is dismissed by the liberals as an exception to the rule.
Thanks Rudy.
Tell me, again, why does the GOP think all of these state voting restriction are needed or justified?
Bill
Do you think Mexico is racist since they require id to vote, how about most of Europe?
I would argue most conservatives want everyone to vote. The saddest part of America today is the apathy towards their civic duty. However I do believe we want our votes to mean something and not be cast away by a suspicion of fraud.
You need an ID for almost everything official in this country yet the most important should be ignored?
And yes I noticed you ignored my refutation of the "long history" of the GOP always being racist and instead tried to change the argument.
Facts suck sometimes when clashed with ideology.
Rudy--I may have come in on a potato wagon, but not last night.
Where is the fraud you mentioned; do you have any data to support that argument?
You ignored my question (I used voter restrictions because it was the most recent egregious action)by citing Mexico and a national action by that federal government versus a variety of GOP driven local/state actions. There's a difference or will the GOP now move to apply similar "rules" in federal elections, too.
Wouldn't shock me.
Rudy, I just will list you as disagreeing that the GOP's recent history shows any significant
actions or incidents of racial intemperance.
(Did you notice, Rudy, I didn't insult you personally or call you names, just cited my conflicts with your opinion?)
Post a Comment