- Mar 12, 2013
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Very disheartening. How can Democrats attack one of Obama's most important achievements? Were their constituents clamoring for this? Who benefits from this and who is put at risk? More importantly, how much money did the Democrats who are supporting this receive from banking interests?
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/15/us/politics/democrats-banking-rules.html
If that wasn't enough, Democrats just sided with Republicans in the house extending NSA spying on Americans (a clear violation of our civil rights).
https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opini...ic-surveillance-powers-they-should-ncna836836
Buoyed by their success in rewriting the tax code, the Trump administration and Republican lawmakers have now set their sights on helping the financial industry, which has been engaged in a quiet but concerted push to relax many post-crisis rules and regulatory obligations, particularly for thousands of small- and medium-sized banks.
But unlike the $1.5 trillion tax overhaul, which passed along party lines, the effort to loosen the post-crisis rules is somewhat bipartisan. A group of Senate Democrats has joined Republicans to support legislation that would mark the first major revision of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, a signature accomplishment of President Barack Obama that has been deemed “a disaster” by President Trump.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/15/us/politics/democrats-banking-rules.html
If that wasn't enough, Democrats just sided with Republicans in the house extending NSA spying on Americans (a clear violation of our civil rights).
Yet up until just hours before the vote, the most powerful member of the Democratic Caucus, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, was notably silent on the bill. If Pelosi had whipped Democrats to vote against the bill and supported the USA RIGHTS Act instead, there’s a good chance that Trump and Ryan would have failed to get their full extension. Yet, just before the floor vote today she said she would not support the USA Rights Act and shamefully voted to hand Trump exactly what he wanted.
Almost worse than Pelosi's willingness to go along with the NSA was Rep. Adam Schiff's, D-Calif., who has seen his star rise over the last year being the Democrat’s go-to voice on the Russia investigation. On CNN with Jake Tapperthis weekend, Schiff talked at length how he thought Trump was abusing his power and misusing the Justice Department to go after his political enemies.
Nonetheless, Schiff was a leading driver in the House to extend the NSA's surveillance powers, and has been undercutting the more robust reforms proposed by other Democrats, like longtime Senate Intelligence Committee member Sen. Ron Wyden, for months. (The Senate is expected to take up their own vote sometime in the next week if the House passes its bill.)
https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opini...ic-surveillance-powers-they-should-ncna836836
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