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Despite lingering differences, some key aspects of the legislation have bipartisan support. Those include a mechanism for take over and dismantling large, failing firms and forcing the financial industry to cover the costs, and to create a "systemic risk" council that includes the Treasury and the Federal Reserve to look out for firms and practices that could pose a risk to the entire financial system. Dodd needs Republican support to get the 60-vote margin he needs to overcome delaying tactics. Earlier this year, Dodd tried to negotiate with the committee's ranking Republican, Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama. When those talks stalled, Dodd turned to Corker, a junior senator from Tennessee. In a statement Thursday, Shelby signaled that Dodd would now have to deal with all the committee Republicans as bloc. "As long as we remain focused on policy and not politics, an agreement is still very possible. The Republican members of the committee stand united and ready to work with Chairman Dodd toward that goal," he said.
Even if Corker and Dodd had settled their differences over a Consumer Financial Protection Agency, it could still emerge as a stumbling block. The president has made such an independent agency a central provision in the bill. The House version provides for such a stand alone agency, which would regulate institutions that offer credit, mortgages or other consumer financial products. Republicans, bankers and many in the business sector oppose a separate agency, saying it would add another layer of regulation and bypass existing bank regulators. Corker and Dodd had agreed to place such an agency inside the Federal Reserve. Corker said the latest agreement would have permitted bank regulators, under certain conditions, to appeal to a government risk council that would have the power to reject new consumer rules. The agency, however, would not have had enforcement powers. Several Democrats on the Banking Committee have insisted on a freestanding agency, and others have demanded that the agency have autonomous powers to write regulations. But Dodd was unlikely to retreat too far from the common ground he had found with Corker.
[Associated
Press;
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