If elected, Clinton under pressure to
appoint tough Wall Street sheriffs
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[September 30, 2016]
By Amanda Becker
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democratic Party
progressives intent on reining in Wall Street are pushing Hillary
Clinton to choose people to head the Treasury, SEC and other agencies
who will crack down on big banks if she wins the White House on Nov. 8.
“Do they have a proven track record of challenging corporate power?”
asked Adam Green of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, a
grassroots group aligned with U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren, the party's
liberal firebrand.
In meetings with Clinton's team, progressive groups are urging that she
break sharply with the centrist, pro-business bent of some of the
economic leaders who served her husband, former President Bill Clinton,
and President Barack Obama.
Big U.S. banks are voicing concern about both Clinton and Donald Trump,
her Republican rival who has accused corporate America of buying
influence in Washington.
RASKIN A FAVORITE
Among Democratic progressives, a favorite for Treasury secretary is
Sarah Bloom Raskin, now deputy Treasury secretary and a backer of strict
enforcement of the Volcker Rule that prohibits banks from making some
types of speculative investments.
“I view proprietary trading as an activity of low or no real economic
value that should not be part of any banking model that has an implicit
government backstop,” Raskin, then a Federal Reserve governor, said in a
2012 speech.
Democratic activists, who believe Obama did not go far enough at the
height of the 2007-2009 financial crisis to punish bankers and tighten
regulation, want to make sure Clinton keeps her campaign promises to
defend the 2010 Dodd-Frank reforms and build on them to curb Wall
Street’s excesses.
Progressive priorities include ensuring the U.S. Justice Department
pursues criminal cases against bankers, not just institutions.
SANDBERG, BRAINARD
Some Democratic activists are wary of two potential Treasury candidates
- Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook's chief operating officer, and Federal
Reserve Governor Lael Brainard - because of links to the Bill Clinton
and Obama administrations.
Sandberg was chief of staff to Treasury Secretary Larry Summers in Bill
Clinton’s administration and Brainard was a top lieutenant to Timothy
Geithner, Obama's first Treasury secretary.
Locked in a tight race with Trump, Clinton has said little about any
future appointments. Her spokesman, Brian Fallon, said any speculation
about personnel is “entirely premature” as Clinton is focusing on
winning the election.
She has no obligation to heed the advice of progressives like Warren or
Bernie Sanders, who challenged Clinton for the Democratic nomination.
But Clinton risks a damaging intraparty rift early in her White House
tenure if she ignores them.
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Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton listens as she is
introduced at an Iowa Democratic Party Early Vote campaign rally in
Des Moines, Iowa, U.S. September 29, 2016. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Kara Stein, a commissioner on the Securities and Exchange
Commission, and Simon Johnson, a former chief economist at the
International Monetary Fund and co-author of a book warning of the
dangers posed by big financial institutions, are progressive
favorites for SEC chair.
Progressives also favor Gary Gensler, an adviser to Hillary Clinton,
for a senior administration role because of his reputation as a
tough regulator when he headed the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission in the Obama administration.
'BROAD FEELING OF REGRET'
Jeff Hauser, director of the Revolving Door Project at the Center
for Economic and Policy Research, said progressives have a "broad
feeling of regret” that they did not exert more pressure on Obama to
name officials committed to bold financial regulatory reforms.
"It wasn’t so much that progressives lost, it’s that they didn’t
understand the stakes at the time and didn’t get into the game until
it was too late,” Hauser said.
Warren, who would have a big microphone in any potential fight over
U.S. Senate confirmation of nominees, in a speech last week at the
Center for American Progress, warned Clinton against choosing people
who work at big investment banks.
“When we talk about personnel, we don’t mean advisers who just pay
lip service to Hillary’s bold agenda, coupled with a sigh, a knowing
glance, and a twiddling of thumbs until it’s time for the next swing
through the revolving door, serving government then going back to
the very same industries they regulate,” she said.
The New York-based Roosevelt Institute think tank is seeking
lesser-known candidates, some outside Washington, for at least 120
administration jobs. Their potential candidates include state
attorneys general who have taken on for-profit colleges and handled
large mortgage settlements.
(Reporting by Amanda Becker; Editing by Caren Bohan and Howard
Goller)
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