Seventeen. That's how many times, according to this White House statement (hat tip Gateway Pundit), that the Bush administration has called for tighter regulation of the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Congress has cooperated only once. In spring 2007, as House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank likes to point out, the House did pass a bill in response. The Senate did not act until 2008; Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd spent most of 2007 camped out in Iowa running for president. The legislation passed by Congress in 2008 enabled Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to put Fannie and Freddie into federal conservatorship this summer when they failed. But it didn't prevent them from spewing a huge amount of toxic waste, in the form of subprime and Alt-A...
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WASHINGTON----Technology and environmental leaders today announced a new initiative to develop a national strategy for information and communications technologies to improve the energy efficiency of the economy.
Tuesday November 18, 8:20 am ET Launches Initiative to Expand Retail Distribution Network NEW YORK, Nov. 18 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- News ) a manufacturer and distributor of agricultural application products in China, has...
by: Sramana Mitra November 18, 2008 | about stocks: just don’t seem to be coming to an end, not a surprise as Japan follows the European Union and Hong Kong into an official recession. Priceline’s quarterly results still...
Christopher Davis is a fund analyst with Morningstar and editor of Morningstar's Fidelity Fund Family Report, a monthly newsletter that offers independent guidance on the fund family and helps investors find the best Fidelity...