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Thu, Dec 04 2008 

Published October 01, 2008 10:25 am -

Cole: Bailout plan his "toughest" vote


By M. Scott Carter
The Moore American

WASHINGTON, D.C.

Calling it the “toughest he’s ever cast,” Oklahoma Congressman Tom Cole said his “yes” vote on Monday’s $700 billion financial bailout measure was necessary because the country faces the “most challenging economic times since the Great Depression.”

Rep. Cole, R-Moore, and Democratic Rep. Dan Boren were the only two members of Congress from Oklahoma to support the Bush administration’s $700 billion economic rescue package.

The legislation would have allowed the government to buy bad mortgages and other non-performing assets held by troubled banks and financial institutions. Experts believed getting those debts off bank balance sheets would strengthen the banks and make them more inclined to lend money.

Monday, the bill failed on the House floor by a 228-205 vote.

That failure sparked the largest stock sell-off on Wall Street since shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, The Associated Press said.

Tuesday, Cole said he was disappointed by the vote.

“They worked very hard,” he said. “And they dramatically improved the bill.”

And while Cole said he, too, would have voted against the original version — as written by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke — he said Monday’s version of the bill “wasn’t as much of a bailout as it was a Main Street rescue plan.”

“This has never been a bailout bill,” he said. “It’s more of an asset purchase or a fire sale. In recent days we have seen some of America’s largest and most storied financial institutions fail. And while the problems may have originated on Wall Street, the devastating impacts of these problems are beginning to be felt on Main Street.”

Tuesday, Congressional leaders — along with presidential rivals John McCain and Barack Obama — scrambled to prevent a further erosion of the economy.

Both Obama and McCain announced separately they supported a plan some lawmakers had pushed earlier: Raising the insurance limit on bank deposits from $100,000 to $250,000. Shortly after those announcements, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation chairman asked Congress for temporary authority to raise the limit by an unspecified amount.

But the country’s credit problem, Cole said, will take additional legislation to solve.

“This is a systemic crisis,” he said. “And this is what government is supposed to do. It’s not about one individual or one company. This is global. If the economy collapses across the board, that’s going to be felt at home. That drop in stock prices, that’s $1.4 trillion in wealth; that’s every pension fund in America.”

Still, Cole was optimistic that some type of rescue package could be passed.

“There are still a lot of votes to get out there,” he said. “And there are a couple of strategies: The speaker can try and pass the measure without GOP votes or the other strategy is to keep working with members and help them to understand the consequences.”



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