Interesting Perspectives on the Bailout

Neil Gordon blogs over at the Project on Government Oversight about a troubling provision in the current debate over a bailout proposal for Wall Street that would give Secretary of the Treasury Hank Paulson the ability to waive provisions and requirements of the Federal Acquisition Register (FAR), the set of regulations that govern how the feds run government contracting. Gordon points out a very disturbing irony of this provision:

This would have enabled the Treasury Secretary to award billions of dollars in sole-source contracts to private asset managers firms and financial consultants, even those with a direct financial interest in the bailout. In addition, the Secretary could waive other FAR provisions that protect taxpayers.

Gordon also points out the fascinating analysis released Monday from the Center for Responsive Politics which showed a relationship between campaign contributions from the finance, insurance, and real estate sectors and the way House members voted on the bailout on Monday. The data might shock you - it shocked me, although I suppose after so many years working in Washington, these things should stop surprising me.

It seems that House members who voted for the bill on Monday have collected about 51 percent more in campaign contributions from the affected industries (finance, insurance and real estate) than those who voted against it. Among Democrats, that discrepancy between bill supporters and opponents is an even more astonishing 88 percent.

I wonder if any of those contributions came from companies who may gain from a government contract to fix this mess? Gulp!

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