http://mbd.scout.com/mb.aspx?s=78&f=1414&t=5658673
How Obama Sold Out Paul Volker 

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Charlie Gasparino explains how Obama's investment banker friends killed Paul 
Volker's reform plan that Obama proudly announced last month. The fixers always 
seem to win in Washington -- one of the best arguments I know for limited 
government..


The president needed the gravitas of the former Fed chairman to sell his bank 
reform to Wall Street. But when the big banks didn't buy it, Obama sold him 
out. 
Barack Obama owes Paul Volcker a lot, but he apparently owes the fat cats on 
Wall Street even more. That's the only reasonable conclusion that can be made 
from the president's timely and, in some ways, bizarre about-face on the former 
Fed chairman's plans to reform the financial industry and prevent another 
meltdown.

As first reported by the New York Post, Volcker's bank-reform idea-the one 
trotted out by the president with Volcker standing at his side just hours after 
Republican Scott Brown won Teddy Kennedy's seat and vowed to help crush Obama's 
economic agenda-has been nixed in favor of a watered-down version that bank 
chiefs like J.P. Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon and other Obama supporters on Wall 
Street are advocating.

I am told that both Larry Summers and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, good 
friends of Wall Street, considered the 82-year-old Volcker little more than a 
crank who should be ignored. And so he was.

The Volcker Plan, as I have reported in The Daily Beast, certainly had its 
shortcomings; its main emphasis was to stop banks that are deemed Too Big to 
Fail from engaging in so-called proprietary trading, or engaging in risky 
trades with their own capital-the theory being that taxpayers would again have 
to bail out the banks if their bets turned sour, as they did in 2007 and 2008.

The problem with the proposal was that proprietary trading wasn't the major 
reason for all those big losses that led to the financial collapse and the 
taxpayer bailouts.

Yet for all its drawbacks, at least the Volcker Plan was the start of a 
conversation about whether taxpayers should be forced to subsidize the 
risk-taking activities of Wall Street. That debate, as we know now, is over. 
Sources tell me a coalition of Wall Street heavyweights from Dimon to people 
like Larry Fink, the head of money-management powerhouse BlackRock-Obama 
supporters all-made their opposition to the plan well-known to the 
administration.

The message was clear: Wall Street, which helped elect Barack Obama with an 
unprecedented support for a Democratic presidential candidate (Goldman Sachs 
was the second largest contributor to the president's campaign), was ready to 
start backing the opposition of the so-called Volcker Rule. The bottom line: 
Even as Main Street struggles with severe unemployment, Wall Street still wants 
its billions in bonuses.

And with that, Volcker, one of the nation's great economists, was thrown under 
the bus. Of course, the administration is still pushing for "reform" of the 
banking system to prevent another meltdown, but by all accounts, the measures 
floated so far will do nothing more than force the firms to hold a little more 
capital if they want to roll the dice in the markets. The main thrust of what 
Volcker wanted to do and needs to be done-prevent the American taxpayer from 
ever again having to subsidized banks' risk taking-appears nowhere to be found.

Of course, you don't have to be a political junkie to understand why the 
president did a 180 on Volcker and his plan; already, Wall Street has begun to 
hedge its bets by supporting some Republicans, and it isn't a good thing having 
someone as powerful as Jamie Dimon, a lifelong Democrat and Obama supporter, 
against you. (People close to Dimon say while he still supports the president, 
he's also angered by some of his agenda.)

Even so, there was something particularly smarmy about how the former Fed 
chairman was used. Volcker's greatest achievement was defeating an economic 
calamity known as stagflation-the combination of high unemployment and high 
inflation-that scorched the American economy in the late 1970s, and threatened 
the country's status as the world's pre-eminent superpower.

Volcker left the Fed in the mid-1980s and since then has been sounding the 
alarm bells on all those financial "innovations" that blew up in 2008 and still 
haunt the banking system. He hated one of the greatest of these "innovations": 
the creation of the financial supermarket model of banking that combined 
risk-taking trading activities with federally insured deposits. If Volcker had 
his way, there would have been no Citigroup, one of the most costly of the 
bailed-out banks, and we would have been all better off for it.

In 2007, Volcker became an early supporter of then-candidate Obama. I am told 
Volcker believed Obama had the temperament to tackle the massive spending in 
Washington-remember, while campaigning, Obama often sounded right of George 
Bush on fiscal matters, and in reforming the banking system. When Volcker 
publicly announced that he was supporting Obama, he lent economic credibility 
to a candidate that his Republican challenger John McCain said would spend the 
country into economic oblivion.

Obama rewarded Volcker with an allegedly senior role in his economic team. I 
use the word "allegedly" because for the most part he was being ignored, 
particularly as he began pushing his ideas to prevent banks that are backed by 
the federal government from handling customers' deposits that are insured by 
the government and still take risks in the markets by trading bonds.

I am told that both Larry Summers and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, good 
friends of Wall Street, considered the 82-year-old Volcker little more than a 
crank who should be ignored. And so he was-that is until Scott Brown's victory. 
The popular theory about Brown's victory was that it was a vote against Obama's 
health-care reform. That's only part of the story; the same president who 
publicly called Wall Street CEOs "fat cats" was now being accused of aiding and 
abetting Wall Street's huge bonus pools, while unemployment remains near 10 
percent.

It didn't take the American public long to figure out that when you deem all 
these banks too big to fail, and then subsidize their long-term debt and keep 
interest rates close to zero, they will make money hand over fist.

That's why just hours after the Brown victory, it was such an enticing photo-op 
for the president to be standing next to Volcker, the wise old man who has been 
accurately decrying Wall Street risk-taking for years.

Then reality set in. Those same fat cats threatened to pull their support for a 
president who will no doubt need all the support he can get given the state of 
the economy and his rapidly evaporating agenda of stalled health-care reform 
and failed economic policies.

And just like that, the wise old man became the crazy uncle that no one listens 
to anymore.

Charlie Gasparino is a senior correspondent for Fox Business Network. He is a 
columnist for The Daily Beast and a frequent contributor to the New York Post, 
Forbes, and other publications. His new book about the financial crisis, The 
Sellout, was published by HarperBusiness.

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