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			 The audit of the Fed bill, championed by Rand Paul of Kentucky, a 
			Republican Senator and likely presidential candidate, would 
			encourage interference from lawmakers into the central bank’s 
			monetary policy discussions. A similar Fed audit bill passed the 
			House of Representatives late last year and a hearing on Fed 
			transparency is expected to be formally called by the Senate banking 
			committee, according to people familiar with the matter. 
			 
			A Reuters survey of 24 state banking groups has found that four are 
			actively opposed to Audit the Fed and five would probably take a 
			stand against the bill if it gains more support, giving the central 
			bank an influential ally as the Fed ramps up its own public 
			opposition. 
			 
			The support of groups like the Ohio Bankers League, which is sending 
			82 members to Washington this week with the bill on its agenda, 
			shows that even though banks of all sizes complain about restrictive 
			Fed regulations, they support its ability to independently set 
			monetary policy. 
			 
			"We feel the current system works well, it's time-tested, and there 
			are all kinds of reasons why political influence at the Fed is a bad 
			thing," said Bob Lameier, president of the Ohio group and head of 
			Miami Savings Bank in Miamitown, near Cincinnati. 
			  
			  
			 
			In the run-up to the 2010 Dodd-Frank legislation, community bankers 
			aligned with Fed officials to convince lawmakers not to strip the 
			central bank of responsibility for supervising small banks. The 
			Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act was a 
			group of rules passed in 2010 in a bid to prevent the recurrence of 
			events that caused the 2008 financial crisis.  
			 
			There are more than 6,000 community banks in the U.S., representing 
			93 percent of all lenders in the country, government data show. 
			Community banks, which typically have less than $10 billion in 
			assets, account for about 45 percent of all of the small loans to 
			businesses and farms made by insured institutions in the United 
			States. 
			 
			The sector is also an influential voice in Washington. The 
			Independent Community Bankers of America, their trade group, gave 
			$1.3 million in political contributions in the 2013-14 campaign 
			cycle, according to the Center For Responsive Politics. 
			 
			This week, Fed Chair Janet Yellen will testify before the Senate 
			Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee for the first time 
			since Republicans gained control of the Senate. Bankers and Fed 
			officials alike say the change of control increases the chance that 
			Congress backs the Audit bill and sends it to President Barack Obama. 
			 
			Committee Chair Richard Shelby, an Alabama Republican who opposed 
			Yellen's appointment, supports making the Fed more transparent but 
			has not said whether he backs a full audit. He is expected to call a 
			committee hearing on Fed transparency in the coming weeks, said a 
			person familiar with the matter. Shelby's office declined to 
			comment. 
			 
			The audit bill would allow legislators to launch investigations of 
			Fed policy decisions, which supporters say will shed more light on 
			the unelected body and its $4.5-trillion balance sheet. Last week, 
			Sen. Paul hosted a Facebook-based question-and-answer period on the 
			bill that drew more than 1,300 comments. 
			
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			The Fed's finances, however, are already audited and the bank has 
			taken steps to lift the veil on its decisionmaking, including 
			regularly publishing economic and policy forecasts, and clarifying 
			its long-term goals. Fed policymakers have meanwhile amplified their 
			criticism of the bill, arguing it would encourage short-term 
			political meddling and imperil its independence. 
			While Obama would be expected to veto a Fed audit bill, the debate 
			is set to heat up along with the campaign for the 2016 presidential 
			election. 
			 
			Audit the Fed "is unnecessary and we do not support it," said 
			Arizona Bankers Association spokeswoman Theresa Kleinlein, adding it 
			was not a high priority because the group did not expect the bill to 
			"move very far." 
			 
			The Iowa Bankers Association was similarly opposed, while its 
			Alabama counterpart plans a thorough review of the bill and is 
			prepared to discuss it with lawmakers during a spring visit to the 
			capital. The group is "very supportive of transparency yet would be 
			wary of efforts to diminish the independence of the Fed or to 
			politicize it in any way," said Scott Latham, president of the 
			Alabama Bankers Association. 
			 
			Shelby represents Alabama while Sherrod Brown, the ranking Democrat 
			on the Senate Banking committee, is from Ohio. 
			The Ohio bankers plan to meet this week with Brown, Republican House 
			Speaker John Boehner and other lawmakers to discuss the bill and 
			other issues such as bank regulations and cyber security. Brown 
			opposes the Fed audit bill. 
			 
			Banking groups in Texas, Tennessee, Massachusetts, Virginia and 
			Arkansas said they were inclined to oppose the bill but were 
			skeptical it would progress in Congress. 
			 
			Still, most of the state organizations contacted by Reuters were 
			either unaware of the bill or had not staked a position, a sign that 
			the banking industry, which sends more money to the Republican 
			party, may be cautious about a lightening-rod issue that can pit 
			Main Street against Wall Street. 
			  
			 
			 
			Through a spokeswoman, Sen. Paul said the bill is about "restoring 
			fiscal sanity to our nation's checkbook," adding in an email he aims 
			to put it to a Senate vote. At an Iowa rally earlier this month, he 
			told cheering supporters: "Anyone here want to audit the Fed? 
			Anybody hear that the Fed's out to get us?" 
			 
			(Reporting by Jonathan Spicer; Additional reporting by Ann Saphir in 
			San Francisco, and Michael Flaherty and Emily Stephenson in 
			Washington. Editing by David Chance and John Pickering.) 
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