September 28, 2008
The House Republicans hold …

… and get the concessions they said had to be done to the bail out before they would sign off.

House and Senate negotiators from both parties emerged with Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. at 12:30 a.m. from a marathon session in the Capitol to announce that they had reached a tentative agreement on a proposal to give Paulson broad authority to organize one of the biggest government interventions in the private sector since the Great Depression.Full details of the plan were not immediately available. Lawmakers said their staffs would be working through the night to assemble the package and post it on the Internet. […]

Rep. Roy Blunt (R-Ohio), who represented House Republicans, the group that had raised the most serious objections to the plan, said he was pleased with the progress made but that he had to take the proposal back to his caucus before committing his support for it. “I look forward to what we’re going to see on paper and presenting these ideas to my colleagues and getting their reaction,” Blunt said.

A senior administration official, who requested anonymity to speak freely about the plan, said both sides had made significant concessions to achieve compromise. The Bush administration has agreed to accept a number of Democratic demands, including:

· The money would be dispersed in segments, with Paulson receiving $250 billion immediately, $100 billion upon White House certification of its necessity and the final $350 billion only after Congress has been given 15 days to object.

· Firms participating in the bailout would be required to grant the government warrants to obtain nonvoting shares of stock, so taxpayers can benefit if the companies return to profitability.

· Firms taking advantage of the bailout would be required to limit compensation for senior executives, with especially severe limits on “golden parachutes” at failing firms. The compensation limits will be enacted primarily, but not solely, through the tax code by reducing tax deductions for firms that pay executives more than $400,000 a year. […]

Democrats also made a number of concessions, abandoning demands that bankruptcy judges be empowered to modify home mortgages on primary residences for people in foreclosure. They also agreed not to dedicate a portion of any profits from the bailout program to an affordable housing fund that Republicans claimed would primarily assist social service organizations that support the Democratic Party, the official said.

Meanwhile, House Republicans won a major victory, persuading negotiators to include a provision that would require the Treasury Department to create a federal insurance program that would guarantee banks and other firms against loss from any troubled asset, the official said.

It was John McCain that brought the House Republicans to the table, enraging the excreble Harry Reid who only wanted McCain back to do the Democrats bidding and causing serious enough problems with Nancy’s botox she squealed that the Republicans were “unpatriotic” and she wanted to sue ‘em to cover her plastic surgeon bills.

Those two haven’t paid attention to Country First, but when have they ever?

7 Comments  :::   Post a comment »

  1. Comment by Dan Collins on 9/28 @ 12:15 pm #

    Darleen, are you sure? They’re telling me it should be CountryWide First.

  2. Comment by Pablo on 9/28 @ 2:06 pm #

    Thank God for the House GOP, the same folks who killed Maverick’s Shamnesty bill. They’re the last bastion of sanity in DC.

  3. Pingback by ACORN outrage removes affordable housing provision on 9/28 @ 3:27 pm #

    […] also, Darleen, for McCain’s role in stripping this odious provision. Posted by Dan Collins @ 3:25 pm | […]

  4. Pingback by Tentative agreement reached on 9/28 @ 3:41 pm #

    […] the bail out. Darleen has the details. Posted by Jeff G. @ 9:41 am | Trackback SHARETHIS.addEntry({ title: “Tentative agreement […]

  5. Comment by Rusty on 9/28 @ 4:51 pm #

    Dan. I think somebody has already absorbed Coutrywide. Goldman Sachs? Which is probably why THEY need bailing out.

  6. Pingback by Acorn Funding Is Out, Sources Say [Updates with more confirmations] : NO QUARTER on 9/28 @ 8:02 pm #

    […] I’ve added more confirmations at the end of this story. Among those updates is this giving John McCain some rarely reported credit for bringing C.S. to this deal: “It was John McCain that brought the House Republicans to the […]

  7. Comment by Marsh on 9/28 @ 8:28 pm #

    Countrywide was bought by Bank of America.

    Why do the MSM and MacCain campaign let Obama run around the country claiming credit for forseeing the problem and solving it. He’s absolutely pathetic.

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