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Lincoln, who faces a difficult re-election race, reacted with barely disguised anger. The committee "has passed not only the strongest, but the only bipartisan Wall Street reform bill," she said in a statement released to The Associated Press. "This legislation will only strengthen the broader reform bill and it should be incorporated as is and sent straight to the Senate floor." Obama has made the broader legislation one of his congressional priorities, and in a speech in New York he chastised Wall Street for risky practices at the same time he sought its help for "updated, commonsense" banking regulations to head off any new financial crisis. At a news conference during the day, top Democrats accused Republicans of falsely claiming a bill approved earlier in the Senate Banking Committee included a $50 billion fund that would be used to bail out failing banks. "The lies are not taking hold," said Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. Earlier, McConnell challenged Democrats to disprove his claim. "This bill would give the administration the authority to use taxpayer funds to support financial institutions at a time of crisis," he said.
"Yes, that bill says taxpayers get the money back later, but that sounds awfully familiar," he added. As for derivatives, the Agriculture Committee legislation would require bank companies to spin off those operations, barring them not only from trading in the instruments themselves but also from creating deals for other clients. The objective is to avoid exposing commercial bank operations to the risks of the more speculative business. The Banking Committee version would prohibit bank companies from engaging in speculative trades with their own accounts, but it would not do away with the ability of banks to create derivatives markets for clients. Last week, a senior Treasury official indicated a preference for the approach taken by the Banking Committee, and there is additional concern that the alternative could lead to greater concentration in a market where a handful of firms conduct about 80 percent of derivatives business.
[Associated
Press;
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