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"People have been running for cover- particularly Republicans- because they are afraid of challenges in the primary," said Ross Baker, a congressional scholar at Rutgers University. "Bob Corker is in an interesting position. He doesn't have to face a Tennessee electorate during a period of extremely harsh partisan polarization." What's more, when it comes to banking, Corker doesn't have the same constituency pressures as lawmakers from states that are headquarters to big bank holding companies. "We're not the home to huge banking corporations like some other states would be," said Bruce Oppenheimer, a political scientist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn. "That may give Corker some movement that he might not otherwise have." The Senate Banking committee has been working for months to fashion legislation responding to the 2008 financial crisis. Dodd wants the legislation to limit risk-taking by financial institutions and create more transparency in global derivatives markets. He also wants a system to safely take down failing financial giants without burdening taxpayers. And he has embraced Obama's demand for new protections for consumers.
But the details have been a hindrance, especially on consumer protections. Obama has been pushing an independent consumer protection agency to write and enforce regulations on lending, credit cards and other consumer products. Republicans oppose a separate regulator, leading to the impasse between Shelby and Dodd. Corker said he talked again Thursday with Dodd and both agreed to negotiate other aspects of the bill before discussing the consumer issue. Asked if his outreach represented a new trend in the Senate, Corker replied: "I can't say grace over the whole gamut of issues," he said. "What I can say is that I have been highly involved in the banking committee and in financial regulation. The uncertainty is worse. The uncertainty is not knowing what the regulation is going to be."
[Associated
Press;
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