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The National Auto Dealers Association continued to press for the House exclusion, objecting to the Senate proposal's requirement that the Fed's truth-in-lending rules hew to those issued by the consumer agency and that the FTC be given the authority to write auto dealer rules on a fast track. "Eliminating the existing safeguards is a sweeping change that Congress shouldn't attempt at the eleventh hour," NADA spokesman Bailey Wood said. Travis Plunkett, legislative director of the Consumer Federation of America, said the Senate compromise creates a dual track system, one for auto dealers and another for all other lenders that could result in regulatory gaps. "It's an attempt to make lemonade out of lemons and it's very complicated," he said. The discussion on excluding auto dealers is one of many negotiations under way in a joint House-Senate panel that is working out differences between the House and Senate bills. Panel members must still iron out some of the most difficult differences, including how to regulate the complex securities known as derivatives and how far to go in restricting the investment activities of banks. The Senate on Tuesday rejected a House proposal to provide mortgage assistance for unemployed homeowners. Rep. Barney Frank, the joint committee's chairman, said he would resubmit the proposal to the Senate, this time offering to pay its $3 billion cost with a fee on large banks and large hedge funds. The fee also would pay for a $1 billion neighborhood stabilization program. Frank and Dodd prodded the panel to conclude its work by Thursday in time for Obama's appearance before the Group of 20 nations in Toronto this weekend. "It would be a grave error for the U.S. to do things where we could be gamed by other countries," Frank, D-Mass., said.
[Associated
Press;
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