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The Case For Biden

 
 
roger
 
  3  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 01:01 am
@McGentrix,
Anyway, if it hadn't been for all states having two senators, many of us wouldn't have been especially eager to join the union. New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana would have made a cross country drive a real challenge. I'm from New Mexico. I like it the way it is, and I vote.
0 Replies
 
vikorr
 
  5  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 01:25 am
@oralloy,
Quote:
No it isn't. The will of the American people is expressed by the Electoral College. The popular vote has nothing to do with it
Despite any constitutions, laws, essays, philosphies, arguments to the contrary - the will of a people will always be the will of the majority. Anything less is the will as defined by someone with a flawed, or vested interest.

That of course is not to say that the will of minorities should or should not be protected (ie. there would be a vested interest in protecting the will of a minority). And nor is it to say that any system would be perfect.
farmerman
 
  6  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 01:39 am
@vikorr,
Quote:
Quote:
The will of the American people is expressed by the Electoral College.
, by a non-Constitutional call by Congress in 1824. We shoulld fix this crap or else stop making believe what we are supposed to be, A Democratic Constitutional Republic.
0 Replies
 
MontereyJack
 
  4  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 04:01 am
@McGentrix,
Sin same by two senators, regardless of size or populationce a century ago when they amended the constitution so the senate was directly elected by popular vote, each state is represented exactly the same, by two senators, precisely giving small states and their smaller populations th protection the small states wanted, by one of the co-equal parts of the government. The presidency on the other hand is supposed to represent all of us but again it gives the small states and small populations disproportionate power too, because of the e..c. Conservatives bleat about the tyranny of the majority but they're blind to the tyranny of the minority.
MontereyJack
 
  5  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 04:03 am
@McGentrix,
oralloy calling someone else rude and obnoxious is blind to self-knowledge.
McGentrix
 
  -2  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 09:42 am
@Walter Hinteler,
Last I checked, Germany doesn't have a President. Has that changed? I guess that would mean the US, Germany and Switzerland have different forms of government.

Thanks for sharing though. Not sure how helpful it was.
Walter Hinteler
 
  2  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 10:16 am
@McGentrix,
McGentrix wrote:
Last I checked, Germany doesn't have a President. Has that changed?
Since the promulgation of the Grundgesetz "Basic Law", constitution) in 1949 we got a President of Germany.
Twelve persons have served as President of the Federal Republic of Germany so far - you must have checked that between 1945 and early 1949.
snood
 
  4  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 10:18 am
@Walter Hinteler,
Walter Hinteler wrote:

McGentrix wrote:
Last I checked, Germany doesn't have a President. Has that changed?
Since the promulgation of the Grundgesetz "Basic Law", constitution) in 1949 we got a President of Germany.
Twelve persons have served as President of the Federal Republic of Germany so far - you must have checked that between 1945 and early 1949.


Lol didn’t know McG was so old...
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  3  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 10:29 am
@MontereyJack,
It’s like being called a bit of a **** by Shitty the ****, The Shithouse, shitxty shitx **** Street, Shitterton by the ****, Shitland. SH1T
Walter Hinteler
 
  3  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 10:32 am
@McGentrix,
McGentrix wrote:
US, Germany and Switzerland have different forms of government.
Our form of government is a federation by power structure and a democracy by power source.
Same for Switzerland.
0 Replies
 
snood
 
  4  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 10:36 am
@izzythepush,
izzythepush wrote:

It’s like being called a bit of a **** by Shitty the ****, The Shithouse, shitxty shitx **** Street, Shitterton by the ****, Shitland. SH1T


LOL
izzythepush
 
  3  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 10:49 am
@snood,
Thanks.
0 Replies
 
McGentrix
 
  0  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 11:51 am
@Walter Hinteler,
Huh! I thought Germany just had Chancellor. Guess I am eating those words.

Tell me Walter, is your president elected via popular vote?

Walter Hinteler
 
  3  
Wed 18 Nov, 2020 12:10 pm
@McGentrix,
McGentrix wrote:
Huh! I thought Germany just had Chancellor. Guess I am eating those words.

Tell me Walter, is your president elected via popular vote?
Neither the chancellor nor the president are elected by popular vote.
• the chancellor is elected by the Bundestag (lower chamber, parliament)
• the president is elected by the Bundesversammlung (Federal Convention, also known as the Federal Assembly), a non-steady constitutional body in the federal institutional system of the Federal Republic of Germany.
revelette3
 
  3  
Fri 20 Nov, 2020 01:26 pm
New York (CNN Business)Elizabeth Warren's fingerprints are all over the Biden transition, much to Wall Street's dismay.

President-elect Joe Biden's agency review teams include several people who share Warren's reputation for being tough on the financial industry.

It's more evidence of the influence of Warren, a fierce opponent of big banks and the excesses of Wall Street -- as well as an early signal that Wall Street will be under much greater scrutiny, especially compared to four years of President Donald Trump's efforts to dismantle regulation and unshackle big banks.

"The big-bank CEOs who read that list are probably somewhat concerned," said Isaac Boltansky, director of policy research at Compass Point Research & Trading. "Progressives absolutely won the day on this."

Biden tapped about 500 people to work with government agencies, from the CIA to the United States Postal Service, and help shape the future of government policy and appointments.

'He made a lot of enemies'

Perhaps top on Wall Street's worry list is Gary Gensler, who will lead the team working with financial regulatory agencies including the Federal Reserve, SEC and FDIC. Gensler led the Commodity Futures Trading Commission from May 2009 to January 2014.

Among the Obama-era regulators, Gensler was the most aggressive in implementing the Dodd-Frank financial reform law that Wall Street opposed.

"Gary Gensler undoubtedly brings back some bad memories," said Boltansky.

Although Gensler is a former Goldman Sachs banker, he is now viewed as a tough-on-Wall-Street ally of Warren.

"He made a lot of enemies in DC and the industry," said Ed Mills, Washington policy analyst at Raymond James. "The fact he's leading this is a signal to the Elizabeth Warren wing of the Democratic Party that they have a voice on financial regulatory picks."

Biden taps vocal critic of big banks, private equity
The financial regulatory team also includes Dennis Kelleher, the CEO of Better Markets, a nonprofit founded after the 2008 financial crisis focused on holding Wall Street accountable.

Kelleher, who declined to comment, is not exactly from the Robert Rubin wing of the Democratic party. (Rubin, a former Goldman Sachs chairman, served as Treasury secretary under President Bill Clinton.)

Last month, Kelleher condemned Goldman Sachs as a "recidivist lawbreaker" that has "preyed upon and ripped off countless Main Street Americans and many others."

In a June interview with CNN Business, Kelleher slammed what he called the "predatory private equity business model" of firing workers and unloading pension obligations after leveraged buyouts.

"Once a private equity firm extracts the maximum amount of value, it then tries to flip it into the public markets so it can cash out on the near-carcass of a corporation," Kelleher said.

That reads like a jab from one of Warren's infamous bank CEO takedowns.

Meanwhile, Biden has a separate team overseeing the transition of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the agency that is a Warren brainchild of Warren.

That team is being led by Leandra English, the CFPB's former deputy director. In 2017, English unsuccessfully tried to block Trump from installing as the agency's acting director Mick Mulvaney -- who once pushed to abolish the CFPB. While testifying as acting director, Mulvaney defended his tenure by saying, "I have not burned the place down."

"Leandra English has deep experience, not just on the issues, but on how the mechanics of the CFPB works," said Compass Point's Boltansky.
He noted that the Trump transition met some "bumps in the road" because the president tapped some people who didn't have much experience in government.
No major overhaul is coming

Of course, it's important to note that Biden has only named a transition team, not a full Cabinet. There is no guarantee his picks to lead major agencies will ultimately please Warren and the progressive wing of the party.

And even if Biden wanted to pick regulators who would be very tough on Wall Street, Republicans in the US Senate may have the votes to block those appointments. (Unless Democrats sweep the runoff races in Georgia, Republicans will retain control of the Senate.)

"Progressives are absolutely first on that invisible scoreboard between progressives and centrists," Boltansky said.

But Boltansky noted that "we're at a very different point in the evolution of financial regulation" than in 2009, when the Obama administration was taking over. Back then, during the Great Recession, it was clear that a major Wall Street overhaul was not just inevitable, but necessary. And it took years to implement the Dodd-Frank law of 2010.

Today, Wall Street is not viewed as the top priority, with the Biden administration likely to focus instead on the pandemic, inequality and the climate crisis. And the fact that banks have withstood the turmoil of the health crisis (so far at least) suggests Dodd-Frank worked to strengthen the system.

Is too-big-to-jail over?
But that doesn't mean Biden-appointed regulators won't put a stop to practices they view as unfair. Analysts are warning the Biden administration could crack down on overdraft fees, the banking industry's $11 billion gravy train that critics say punish society's most vulnerable.

And Biden's regulators could take a much tougher stance on bad behavior like the laundry list of scandals at Wells Fargo (WFC).

"If you're a bank that has a scandal, then you need to be worried," said Mills, the Raymond James analyst.

It's no coincidence that Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup all reached major settlements this fall with the Trump administration ahead of the change in power. Even former Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf agreed to a personal $2.5 million penalty over his role in the fake-accounts scandal.

Still, Biden will be under pressure from progressives to take a tough stance on enforcement. Critics say the Obama administration adopted a too-big-to-jail mindset by failing to go after big banks and their top executives.
Yet like other Democrats, Biden will have to balance that urge to root out Wall Street wrongdoing with the need to keep capital flowing.

"They need the economy to work to get reelected," said Mills. "And you can't have the economy work if the banking sector isn't."

cnn
snood
 
  3  
Fri 20 Nov, 2020 01:41 pm
@revelette3,
Think there’s any chance she gets Treasury Secretary?
revelette3
 
  4  
Fri 20 Nov, 2020 02:12 pm
@snood,
I hope so. The problem is that most "progressives" don't consider Warren a progressive. In fact they have already been been grumbling over some of the picks already last I read about it.

But I hope Biden ignores both those progressives and the moderate democrats and just picks Warren since she has been at this financial stuff since Occupy Wall Street.
oralloy
 
  -3  
Fri 20 Nov, 2020 02:19 pm
@revelette3,
The odds that the Republican Senate will confirm an extremist like Warren seem pretty slim.

Mr. Biden is going to have a centrist-moderate cabinet, or he will have no cabinet at all.
snood
 
  4  
Fri 20 Nov, 2020 02:41 pm
@oralloy,
oralloy wrote:

The odds that the Republican Senate will confirm an extremist like Warren seem pretty slim.

Mr. Biden is going to have a centrist-moderate cabinet, or he will have no cabinet at all.


But, you said Trump’s going to be president until 2025.
MontereyJack
 
  4  
Fri 20 Nov, 2020 02:58 pm
@snood,
said it repeatedly.
 

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