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标题[新闻] 国会与布希政府达成初步协议
时间Sun Sep 28 15:40:20 2008
标题:Breakthrough Reached in Negotiations on Bailout
By DAVID M. HERSZENHORN and CARL HULSE
Published: September 27, 2008
WASHINGTON — Congressional leaders and the Bush administration reached a
tentative agreement early Sunday on what may become the largest financial
bailout in American history, authorizing the Treasury to purchase $700
billion in troubled debt from ailing firms in an extraordinary intervention
to prevent widespread economic collapse.
Officials said that Congressional staff members would work through the night
to finalize the language of the agreement and draft a bill, and that the bill
would be brought to the House floor for a vote on Monday.
The bill includes pay limits for some executives whose firms seek help, aides
said. And it requires the government to use its new role as owner of
distressed mortgage-backed securities to make more aggressive efforts to
prevent home foreclosures.
In some cases, the government would receive an equity stake in companies that
seek aid, allowing taxpayers to profit should the rescue plan work and the
private firms flourish in the months and years ahead.
The White House also agreed to strict oversight of the program by a
Congressional panel and conflict-of-interest rules for firms hired by the
Treasury to help run the program.
The administration had initially requested virtually unfettered authority to
operate the bailout program. But as they moved toward clinching a deal, both
sides appeared to have given up a number of contentious proposals, including
a change in the bankruptcy laws sought by some Democrats to give judges the
authority to modify the terms of first mortgages.
Congressional leaders and Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. emerged
from behind closed doors to announce the tentative agreement at 12:30 a.m.
Sunday, after two days of marathon meetings.
“We have made great progress toward a deal, which will work and be effective
in the marketplace,” Mr. Paulson said at a news conference in Statuary Hall
in the Capitol.
In the final hours of negotiations, Democratic lawmakers, including
Representative Rahm Emanuel of Illiniois and Senator Kent Conrad of North
Dakota carried pages of the bill by hand, back and forth, from Speaker Nancy
Pelosi’s office, where the Democrats were encamped, to Mr. Paulson and other
Republicans in the offices of Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio, the
House minority leader.
At the same time, a series of phone calls was taking place, including
conversations between Ms. Pelosi and President Bush; between Mr. Paulson and
the two presidential candidates, Senator John McCain and Senator Barack
Obama; and between the candidates and top lawmakers.
“All of this was done in a way to insulate Main Street and everyday
Americans from the crisis on Wall Street,” Ms. Pelosi said at the news
conference. “We have to commit it to paper so we can formally agree, but I
want to congratulate all of the negotiators for the great work they have done.
”
In a statement, Tony Fratto, the deputy White House press secretary, said: “
We’re pleased with the progress tonight and appreciate the bipartisan effort
to stabilize our financial markets and protect our economy.”
A senior administration official who participated in the talks said the deal
was effectively done. “I know of no unresolved open issues for principals,”
the official said.
In announcing a tentative agreement, lawmakers and the administration
achieved their goal of sending a reassuring message ahead of Monday’s
opening of the Asian financial markets.
Lawmakers, especially in the House, are also eager to adjourn and return home
for the fall campaign season.
Among the last sticking points was an unexpected and bitter fight over how to
pay for any losses that taxpayers may experience after distressed debt has
been purchased and resold.
Democrats had pushed for a fee on securities transactions, essentially a tax
on financial firms, saying it was fitting that they contribute to the cost.
In the end, lawmakers and the administration opted to leave the decision to
the next president who must present a proposal to Congress to pay for any
losses.
Officials said they had also agreed to include a proposal by House
Republicans that gives the Treasury secretary an additional option of issuing
government insurance for troubled financial instruments as a way of reducing
the amount of taxpayer money spent up front on the rescue effort.
The Treasury would be required to create the insurance program, officials
said, but not necessarily to use it. Mr. Paulson had expressed little
interest in that plan, and initial cost projections suggested it would be
enormously expensive. But final details were not immediately available.
Saturday’s intense negotiating effort followed a tumultuous week, including
a contentious meeting at the White House with President Bush and the two
presidential candidates.
That meeting had moments of drama, including a bunt warning by President
Bush. “If money isn’t loosened up, this sucker could go down,” he said. It
ended with angry recriminations after House Republicans scotched a
near-agreement from earlier in the day.
Mr. Paulson scrambled to revive the talks, and they resumed almost
immediately. Congressional and Treasury staff then worked all of Friday and
through the night, ending in the predawn.
Mr. Paulson and Congressional leaders stepped in at 3 p.m. Saturday and were
in direct negotiations for most of the rest of the night. And immediately
after the news conference, staff members began efforts to finalize the
language.
Even then, their work is hardly over.
Congressional leaders who want the bailout to pass with solid bipartisan
support had already begun to anxiously court votes, mindful of the difficulty
they could face in a high-stakes election year.
Public opinion polls show the bailout plan to be deeply unpopular.
Conservative Republicans have denounced the plan as an affront to free market
capitalism, while some liberal Democrats criticize it as a giveaway to Wall
Street.
Representative Roy Blunt of Missouri, the chief negotiator for House
Republicans, who have been among the most reluctant to support the plan,
expressed some satisfaction but did not commit his members’ support.
“We need to look and see where we are on paper tomorrow,” Mr. Blunt said. “
We have been talking about how we can make these things work in a way that
our conference can come together.”
Representative Barney Frank of Massachusetts, the lead negotiator for the
House Democrats, said that there was no expectation of making anyone smile.
“This was never going to be a bill that was going to make people happy,” he
said. “No solution to a problem can be more elegant than the problem itself.
We are dealing with a very difficult problem.”
“Given the dimensions of the problem, I believe we have done a good job,”
he added. “It includes genuine compromises.”
Aides described a tense meeting on Saturday afternoon that included Senator
Max Baucus, Democrat of Montana, shouting at Mr. Paulson about executive pay
caps.
Outside, stunned tourists visiting the Capitol watched as camera operators
shoved one another to get footage of lawmakers talking outside of the meeting
room.
At one point, when too much information was leaking out, staff members’
BlackBerrys were confiscated and collected in a trash bin.
While Congressional Republicans sent only their chief negotiators, Mr. Blunt
and Senator Judd Gregg of New Hampshire, at least nine Democrats with
competing priorities piled into the meeting, surprising the Republicans but
apparently not unsettling them.
The centerpiece of the rescue effort remains the plan for the government to
buy up to $700 billion in troubled assets from financial firms as a way to
free their balance sheets of bad debts and to help restore a healthy flow of
credit through the economy.
The money will disbursed in parts, with an initial $250 billion to get the
rescue effort underway, followed by another $100 billion upon a report by Mr.
Bush to Congress.
The president could then request the balance of $350 billion at any time. If
Congress disapproved, it would have to act within 15 days to deny the
Treasury the money.
Early in the day, the two presidential nominees were active from the
sidelines. Mr. McCain telephoned Congressional Republicans to sound them out,
and Mr. Obama got regular updates by phone from Mr. Paulson and top lawmakers.
Some lawmakers have made clear that they will not vote for the bailout plan
under virtually any terms. “I didn’t want to be in the negotiations because
I object to the basic principles of this,” said Senator Richard C. Shelby of
Alabama, the senior Republican on the banking committee, who would normally
be his party’s point man.
Pressed about his role, Mr. Shelby replied, “My position is ‘No.’ ”
Officials, including Mr. Bush, stepped up efforts to sell the plan to the
American public, which, according to opinion polls, is deeply skeptical.
“The rescue effort we’re negotiating is not aimed at Wall Street; it is
aimed at your street,” Mr. Bush said in his weekly radio address. “There is
now widespread agreement on the major principles. We must free up the flow of
credit to consumers and businesses by reducing the risk posed by troubled
assets.”
In a brief speech on the Senate floor, Senator Kent Conrad, Democrat of North
Dakota, said: “It’s not just going to be Wall Street. The chairman of the
Federal Reserve has told us if the credit lockup continues, three million to
four million Americans will lose their jobs in the next six months.”
The ultimate cost of the rescue plan to taxpayers is virtually impossible to
know. Because the government would be buying assets of value — potentially
worth much more than the government will pay for them — there is even a
chance the rescue effort would eventually return a profit.
Some Democrats had sought to direct 20 percent of any such profits to help
create affordable housing, but Republicans opposed that and demanded that all
profits be returned to the Treasury.
Robert Pear contributed reporting.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/28/business/28bailout.html?pagewanted=2&_r=
1&th&emc=th
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