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On auditing the Fed, the committee adopted a plan by Republican Rep. Ron Paul that had the support of a bipartisan roster of more than 300 members of Congress. It would give the Government Accountability Office the authority to audit the entirety of the Fed's balance sheet, credit facilities and all securities purchase programs. Critics, led by Frank and Democratic Rep. Melvin Watt, argued that Paul's proposal was too intrusive and could indirectly lead to higher interest rates. They proposed a more limited audit. "If we open all of the discussions, the deliberations, the transactional gives and takes, what we will do is scare off capital because other governments will not deal with our Fed," Watt said. Paul, who ran a long-shot campaign for president last year, argued Watt's more limited proposal would exclude much of the Fed's work from scrutiny. "There is no reason in the world why this country and our people can't know eventually about what's going on in the Federal Reserve," Paul said. In the Senate, Republican Sen. Richard Shelby, top Republican on the Senate's banking panel, sharply criticized Dodd's proposed legislation. "It significantly expands the federal government's ability to bail out not only banks, but any large, politically connected company," Shelby said. Dodd could still pass the bill with Democratic votes in his committee but would find it far more difficult to get the needed votes in the full Senate without some Republican backing. Dodd argued that a year after the near collapse of the financial system, it was now time to correct the government's oversight. "As we sit here today, with gaping holes in our regulatory structure, we cannot tell our constituents that we're ready to prevent another shock," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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