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"The test for this legislation is a simple one
-- whether it will prevent another financial crisis." Feingold said in a statement. "As the bill stands, it fails that test." Specter, who lost the Democratic primary in Pennsylvania on Tuesday, was not in the Senate on Wednesday. He had been expected to support the Democrats. Two Republicans -- Maine Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe -- voted with the Democrats. Republican Sen. Scott Brown of Massachusetts had indicated he would vote with the Democrats. But when the vote came, he sided with his party. "A senator broke his word with me," Reid said, though he declined to identify the culprit. After the vote, Brown conceded he had approached Reid. "I went to the leader and I said I would be voting for cloture," he said, using the term for ending debate. But Brown told reporters that the bill did not include fixes he sought to protect Massachusetts insurance firms and banks that hold money in trust from a prohibition on commercial banks engaging in trades on their own accounts. The changes Brown sought had been blocked by Republicans. "I don't care who blocked it. I had assurances that these things were being addressed," he said. He left the door open to changing his vote Thursday. "I'm confident that something will be resolved."
On another front, the Senate was expected to let stand a contentious provision that would require banks to spin off their lucrative derivatives business. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd had sought to break an impasse over how to regulate derivatives by proposing to delay the implementation of the bank restriction by two years. He backed away from that plan on Wednesday after Sen. Blanche Lincoln, an Arkansas Democrat who has insisted on the spinoff measure, indicated she would oppose his effort. The financial industry also signaled it would not support the delay and Republican Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire likened the idea to a "Mad Hatter's tea party."
[Associated
Press;
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