The Career of Reaganite Barney Frank
Most Democrats think that they belong to the party of the little guy,
the party that attempts to constrain Wall Street. Sometimes a Democrat
won’t fight hard enough, or, like Obama, will make political
calculations that shave off the better angels of their nature. This
myth says that Reagan deregulated, and Bush led us into the financial
crisis. In fact, that’s a fairy tale. It was Jimmy Carter who began
the deregulation of the financial services industry, who got rid of
usury caps, and Bill Clinton that deregulated derivatives and ended
Glass-Steagall. The rush headlong into madness has been fully
bipartisan, from the get-go. It’s not a surprise that as both
Republicans and Democrats shed their liberal wings, in favor of
neoliberalism, financial instability increased.
The career of Barney Frank casts a large shadow upon the Democratic
approach to financial matters, as he perfectly epitomizes how they
behaved throughout this time period. Frank was elected in 1981, as a
quintessential Reagan-era Democrat. He is frequently misunderstood, and
cast as a liberal. In another era, he would have been such. But he
was first and foremost interested in cutting deals, and to that end, his
ideology ended up as that of a Reagan-lite. It’s unfortunate, because
by the time he had real power in 2008, he had no firm basis upon which
to make decisions for the broad public, and ended up consolidating
wealth into the hands of a smaller and smaller number of people.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
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