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Thursday, November 04, 2010

What Elections Could Do For The Foreclosure Crisis, FinReg, And Other Issues We’re Watching

As Americans go to the polls today, their votes will influence a number of issues that we’ve been watching, whether it be the foreclosure scandal or implementation of financial regulation and healthcare reform—some of our favorite topics. So here’s our attempt to parse some of the election coverage and bring these issues into sharper focus:

Foreclosure Crisis

In the wake of a foreclosure-documentation scandal that has grabbed headlines for more than a month, Elizabeth Warren, who’s leading the Obama administration’s Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, said, “Right now my money is on the attorneys general [1],” who in October launched a joint investigation in all 50 states.

Midterm elections, however, could present a complication for that investigation, given that 30 state attorneys general races are being decided today [2]. As the Washington Independent reported, some of the state attorneys general who’ve been most active in the investigation [3] are either engaged in close re-election contests or are set to leave their posts. More from the Independent:
Consider this: Of the 12 state attorneys general on the executive committee of the coordinated investigation, only two of them — Roy Cooper in North Carolina and Rob McKenna in Washington — aren’t up for re-election this year. Several of them — Jerry Brown in California, Richard Blumenthal in Connecticut, Terry Goddard in Arizona, Andrew Cuomo in New York and Bill McCollum in Florida — are running for higher office and will not return to their posts. And other races are closely contested.
Currently, 32 of the 50 attorneys general across the nation are Democrats, to 18 Republicans. According to Governing Magazine, the GOP is poised to pick up anywhere from six to 13 of those seats after November, dramatically changing the makeup of the attorneys general across the country — and potentially the nature of their investigation.
GO HERE to read more.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I'll say what I think it will do. It will make this worse. Republicans don't care about the little man. They could care less how many are losing their homes but they all were real happy when the real estate prices ballooned so they could all make a bunch of money!
The Republican Party does not care about the working class. It's all about the big boys. Wait and see what they do for the big boys in the next 2 years, then remember that 2 years from now.
I'm not saying the Democrats do everything right, I voted for my share of Rep. this election too but atleast the Democrats do seem to care about the working class.