Originally posted by: Infohawk
Originally posted by: XMan
Originally posted by: Corporate Thug
Commerce clause FTW?
Judge Napolitano would suggest not
Second was a fear the Framers had that if the government became a market participant, it would tilt the playing field in favor of itself or its patrons. That's why they wrote in the Contracts Clause that no state may interfere with a contract, and in the Due Process Clause in the Fifth Amendment that the federal government as well may not do so.
If Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac or any entity collapses because of market forces or poor management, and the Congress insulates the shareholders of the collapsing entity from the consequence of the collapse, it is favoring those shareholders over other shareholders of other companies that might also be on the verge of financial demise.
It simply does not matter whether Congress favors the shareholders by loaning them money, by guaranteeing to their lenders that the taxpayers will repay the loans, or by purchasing their equity. The result is the same. Their contracts ? their agreements with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac ? are not being enforced. And they are being relieved of a debt while other shareholders of other corporations are not.
This is just a newspaper opinion, not binding legal precedent. Napolitano was a state court judge (and now a fox analyst) and his arguments are weak. It's my understanding that the shareholders of these companies are screwed. The general welfare has arguably been served. It's like arguing that we can't spend money on the military because it benefits military contractors more than other citizens. It has also been established that government can be a market participant.
THis is not a constitutional issue, it's a policy issue.