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Senate questions Obama's plan

By Anne Flaherty

The Associated Press

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Published: Thursday, June 18, 2009

Updated: Friday, June 19, 2009

Timothy Geithner

Susan Walsh/The Associated Press

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner arrives on Capitol Hill in Washington to testify before the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday.

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s plan to increase oversight of banks and other financial institutions met with skepticism on Capitol Hill on Thursday, where senators sharply questioned whether it was enough to prevent another economic meltdown.

The lack of a ringing endorsement suggests the proposal was headed for a rewrite by a Congress sensitive to voter frustration with the government’s handling of the economy.

“They’re very angry, and they are worried. And they are wondering who’s looking out for them,” Sen. Christopher Dodd, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, said of his constituents.

In testimony before the panel, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner defended the proposal as the nation’s best shot.

“It will be very hard, perhaps impossible, for any authority, any individual to anticipate and pre-empt all potential sources of future risk,” Geithner said.

Lawmakers mostly agreed that change was needed to streamline federal regulation and fill in oversight gaps believed to have contributed to the housing and credit crisis. Several Democrats also lauded the proposed creation of a new consumer-protection agency that would police the market for deceptive business practices in such financial products as credit cards and mortgages.

But members on both sides of the aisle questioned whether the administration was putting too much faith in the Federal Reserve.

Under Obama’s plan, the Fed would oversee institutions deemed so big or influential in the market that their failure could seriously damage the economy.

A council of federal regulators, including the Fed, would help monitor the market for risk.

But the Fed would ultimately be accountable for ensuring companies don’t make overly risky bets.

Several lawmakers have suggested tasking the council of regulators with the job and criticized the Fed for its role in the recent crisis.

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