(REMARKS AS PREPARED)
Thank you, Chairman Lewis.
I’d first like to recognize the absence of our Ranking Member on
Oversight, Dr. Boustany, whose father passed away earlier this week.
The thoughts and prayers of all of our committee members are with him
and his family.
The Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, was intended to open up
credit for families and businesses, but it was also supposed to restore
confidence in the market.
Yet every week brings new questions and new concerns about how these
tax dollars are spent, from the millions for AIG bonuses and spa
retreats to the billions that simply went missing.
Worse, TARP continues to change and multiply before our eyes. From
buying toxic assets to buying stakes in banks, there is no clear plan
and no consistent application of the program. Those involved have no
idea if, how, or when TARP will change... or change again.
One particularly troubling change is the apparent transfer of
authority from Treasury to the Federal Reserve, without any new
congressional oversight.
The complete lack of transparency in TARP has produced a credibility
crisis that undermines the very confidence it was meant to restore.
Without transparency, investors have little reason to participate in a
program that changes faster than the Dow. Without transparency, we are
left with outrageous abuses like bailout bonuses for companies
surviving on the backs of taxpayers alone.
To restore confidence, two things must be made clear: (1) exactly
how TARP money is being spent; and (2) what specific metrics Treasury
will use to measure the effectiveness of the program.
Taxpayers have every right to be angry that the results of the $700
billion bailout are as blank as the check that authorized it.
We have an obligation to them to find answers, to collect facts and
data, and to hold accountable the policies and people that led to
abuses like those at AIG.
We can all agree that TARP money has been misspent. Our options are
to stay mad at wrong-doers, or to identify how the wrongdoing occurred
and find solutions so it never happens again.
We must also remember that the lack of transparency and
accountability in TARP happened in the first place because Congress
acted on raw emotion before looking at all of the facts. That’s one of
many reasons why I opposed it. We must be careful not to let our
collective outrage prevail over good judgment and common sense.
After all, we all know the mistakes that can happen when government
panics and rushes to act, rather than working to get that action
right. This is not the time to again shoot first and ask questions
later.
I hope that we can all work together, Democrats and Republicans, to
get to the bottom of this, to get real answers, and to stop the
abuses. The American taxpayers deserve it.
I yield back the balance of my time.
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