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Barney Frank: Republicans are like children who've lost security blanket; GOP has "psychological disorder"

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
April 2, 2009

House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

During an impassioned debate on the House floor Wednesday, Democratic Rep. Barney Frank characterized Republican opposition to the Pay for Performance Act as a manifestation of "a psychological disorder" and compared GOP lawmakers to "kids who have had a toy bear or a security blanket" taken away.

The Pay for Performance bill, whose details were reported Tuesday in the Examiner, would impose government controls on the salaries and bonuses of all employees -- not just top executives -- of companies that have received capital investments through the Troubled Asset Relief Program and other federal measures. The bill would give Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner the power to determine whether those salaries or bonuses are "unreasonable" or "excessive." Geithner would also have the authority to draw up a set of "performance standards" that the covered companies would be required to use to calculate bonuses and retention payments.

The bill passed the full House Wednesday evening by a vote of 247 to 171. The vote marked a turnaround for many House Republicans, half of whom had voted in favor of a bill two weeks ago imposing a 90 percent tax on many AIG bonuses. This time, nearly all House Republicans voted against the Pay for Performance measure, while nearly all Democrats voted for it.

"The government can barely run the government," Republican Rep. Roy Blunt, who voted in favor of the AIG tax, said during the floor debate. "To try to tell these companies how to pay the people who work for them is not the right thing to do." Blunt voted against Pay for Performance.

During the debate, Democrats attempted to re-frame the bill as a measure to fix a defect in the $787 billion economic stimulus. In the rush to pass that bill in February, Democrats inserted a clause protecting bonuses for executives of AIG. A few weeks later, when the bonuses were paid and became the subject of enormous controversy, the House rushed to impose a 90 percent tax. On Wednesday, Democrats portrayed the Pay for Performance Act as an effort to fix the part of the stimulus that allowed those controversial bonuses. Frank attacked Republicans for criticizing the bonuses in the stimulus and then opposing the new bill that would outlaw them. "I have never seen people so attached to something they hate," Frank said. "This is presumably a psychological disorder which I am not equipped to diagnose."

"My colleagues on the other side," Frank continued, "are kind of like kids who have had a toy bear, or a blanket, and this security blanket means a lot to them. Their security blanket is being able to complain about something [the stimulus bill] that happened before the break."

The fight on the floor followed another contentious session Tuesday afternoon in the House Rules Committee. When that committee met to consider the Pay for Performance bill, some Republicans were irritated by a quote that had appeared in the Examiner from Democratic Rep. Alan Grayson, who wrote the original version of the bill.

"This bill will show which Republicans are so much on the take from the financial services industry that they're willing to actually bless compensation that has no bearing on performance and is excessive and unreasonable," Grayson told the Examiner on Monday. "We'll find out who are the people who understand that the public's money needs to be protected, and who are the people who simply want to suck up to their patrons on Wall Street."

Grayson's suggestion that any Republican who voted against the bill was "on the take" became the subject of testy exchanges in the committee room when Republican Rep. Pete Sessions read the quote to Rep. Frank. "Do you agree with that statement?" Sessions asked.

"I will say this," Frank answered. "It has been my experience that there are Republican members of Congress who are able to be completely mistaken for free."

Some in the room chuckled, but Sessions pressed on. "You would not say that a vote on either side of this would be an indication of showing whether you are corrupt or bought off?"

"I would say I would not generalize," Frank answered. "I would make individual judgments about that."

Later, Rep. David Dreier, the ranking Republican on the committee, took up the subject with Grayson himself. Dreier asked Grayson whether he, Grayson, had been misquoted in the Examiner. Grayson did not directly address Dreier's question, instead saying he agreed with the way Frank had answered the question earlier.

"So am I correct in inferring…that you are not saying anyone who votes against this is corrupt?" Dreier said. "Do you believe that any member who votes against this measure is, in fact, corrupt?"

"Not necessarily," Grayson said.

The debate significantly raised the profile of Grayson, a freshman from the Orlando, Florida area who has so far attracted little national attention. On Wednesday, Grayson published a statement in the Huffington Post, arguing that the government should have the power to set the salaries of all employees of companies that have received a capital infusion. A day earlier, Grayson appeared on the Fox Business Network, where he was grilled by anchor Neil Cavuto for refusing to define what would be "unreasonable" or "excessive" compensation.

"That's for the Secretary of the Treasury to do," Grayson said.

Prospects for the Pay for Performance Act in the Senate are unclear. Its predecessor, the AIG tax measure, disappeared within days after passage in the House when the Obama White House and then Senate Democratic leaders distanced themselves from it.
 

Byron York, The Examiner’s chief political correspondent, can be contacted at byork@washingtonexaminer.com. His column appears Tuesday and Friday, and his stories and blog posts can be read daily at ExaminerPolitics.com.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

sad world

Apr 2, 2009

Democrat are like homeless people,they want everyone elses money to take care of them...........

 

no freedom without risk

Apr 2, 2009

Now can we see who is responsible for the vitriol we all complain about in congress? Now can we see who is the amoral dolts who cause all the trouble and pain? Should anyone have to sit through such vitriol and not respond?

 

G

Apr 2, 2009

I don't understand Barney Frank? He has never had a job outside politics, yet wants to make Business decisions?? This is the same guy who gave his staff bonuses...is the government running that efficiently??? It has been reported numerous places, that there has been a brain drain on these companies already because of these rumors...as a taxpayer, I want the best and brightest at these companies, if that takes paying them well to get our money back..so be it. These companies are paying huge dividends on the funds, where is that money going?????

 

Larry Miller

Apr 2, 2009

Barney Frank is such a sad commentary on the state of politics in America. I look at Obama, Biden, Pelosi, Reid, Dodd, and Frank (and so many others) and just cringe. Is this the best America has to offer to compete in the world? Total losers that are so out of touch with ordinary Americans if their power wasn't so consequential for our children and grandchildren, they would be an ensemble comedy show.

 

Not Chicken Little

Apr 2, 2009

This - I cannot call him a man - this despicable being is truly an abomination. His is a malicious and malignant intelligence, purposefully and arrogantly promoting his agenda of more government control and immoral licentiousness. He represents the worst of human nature. God help us if he is truly representative of his constituency. They carry the blame for inflicting this shameful and shameless aberration of humanity upon us, to the detriment of the whole country.

 

bobc

Apr 2, 2009

Pay for performance? Then we should be able to rid ourselves of Frank and Dodd, as well as Obama, they are all set out to break our will, to break the bank and our pocketbooks..all for their agendas! This is not what we were founded upon. It's time to tell these politicians they work for us...then kick these fanatics out of office.

 

Mike from Chicago

Apr 2, 2009

Barney's Frank is not a liberal; he is a Statist to the MAX. For the sake of the country the 4th District of Massachusetts can do better and must.

 

Blane Burns

Apr 2, 2009

Government has no place in the private sector. None what so ever. The private sector OWNS government. Always and by definition of our Constitution. Government is living in a fallacy that they rule. Their duty is to serve. If they maintain their present course they shall learn the hard way. If they are fortunate it will be by ballot. If they continue the arrogant course they follow now, it may be a lesson by tar, feathers and a rail out of town.

 

Patriot1776

Apr 2, 2009

How does a malingerer like Mr. Barney Frank stay in office??? This is man who hails from the seed of our democracy. Have the people of Massachusetts forgotten their heritage??? Is it not true that Mr. Frank and his pecksniff Comrades overlooked the bonuses when they first signed this bill??? This is just another chapter in the book of stateism!! The founding fathers i.e. Samuel Adams would have had Mr. Frank tarred and feathered by now. Folks it is time to find the nearest Tea Party and express your outrage at the hostile take over of our country....

 

beauty

Apr 2, 2009

BO must go and take BF with him. What more can we say," Not Chicken Little" said it all May GOD help us.

 

Roland Wetzel, r.wetzel@att.com

Apr 2, 2009

Barney is a Marxist control freak. He wants government to control everything except an individual's lifestyle. He's the laughing stock of America except in the sad, liberal Massachusetts district that continues to return him to Congress. Roland Wetzel, St. Charles MO.

 

Clarksville Conservative

Apr 2, 2009

LOL! Barney (the Banking Queen) Frank - the one individual who carries more of the responsibility for this economic mess than any other single living human being is lecturing Republicans who tried to stop his Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) (Freddie and Fannie Mae) laws that penalized financial institution and Wall Street for not making bad loans to the unqualified but racially entitled. He is a shameless clown.

 

sell

Apr 2, 2009

I would be willing to bet that the uneducated "victims" (aka Democratic voters) will be getting a pay boost while educated people in the company get their pay chopped. Why don't they just call this the janitor and secretary paycheck stimulus bill.

 

Orion

Apr 2, 2009

If a CEO's live-in boyfriend is found to be running a homosexual prostitution ring out of his house, should the Treasury Secretary cap his pay? OK, probably not a fair question. Howabout the day before a company his is auditing goes belly up he declares it sound and in no danger of failing? Or is found to have taken money from companies his firm is auditing?

 

Lightduty

Apr 2, 2009

Voting AGAINST this makes someone corrupt? Laughable. A vote against this is a vote for keeping the "free" in the "free market". It's also a vote to retain talent in companies that taxpayers are supporting, instead of watching them leave for greener pastures. Oh - and government setting compensation for private firms is wrong. That should be enough.

 

barney the dinosaur

Apr 2, 2009

Maybe Congressman Barney Frank is afraid that the Republicans will decide to take his "Ken Doll" away from him.

 

therapyfirst

Apr 2, 2009

You know what I do not get: what the hell is wrong with the voting public of Massachusetts who keep this idiot in office for the decades he has allegedly represented them. Don't get me started on Kennedy. If this is the representation of a state, I wish they would just succeed from the US and form their own country: Mass of 2 S--ts!!!

 

therapyfirst

Apr 2, 2009

You know what I do not get: what the hell is wrong with the voting public of Massachusetts who keep this idiot in office for the decades he has allegedly represented them. Don't get me started on Kennedy. If this is the representation of a state, I wish they would just succeed from the US and form their own country: Mass of 2 S--ts!!!

 

Themistocles

Apr 2, 2009

Frank is a detestable character and seems to revel in his own utter hypocricy. There he is in congress along with Grayson slandering and labelling those who disagree with this monstrous aspect of TARP as having a pyschological disorder. This kind of labelling comes directly from the Socialist/Fascist handbook my friends. You agree with big brother and you are okay. You don`t and you are by definition "sick". I submit the sick on is the Right Dishonorable Barny Frank. I could make fun of his obvious speech impediment in this post, but I choose not to. The blood doth boil! Don`t tread on me!

 

mdscaper

Apr 3, 2009

Performance pay, you have got to be kidding me! Where's the performance pay bill for congress or public school teachers? How can anyone take this guy seriously? The leaders of China and Russia have to be shaking their heads and wondering how this country got to be a global leader with these cartoon characters in congress.

 

mdscaper

Apr 3, 2009

Performance pay, you have got to be kidding me! Where's the performance pay bill for congress or public school teachers? How can anyone take this guy seriously? The leaders of China and Russia have to be shaking their heads and wondering how this country got to be a global leader with these cartoon characters in congress.

 

MarkF

Apr 17, 2009

So it's come to this? We're getting advice on mental health from homosexuals now?

 

BetseyRoss

Apr 18, 2009

The folks in Barney Frank's district must be brain dead. They keep electing him. I don't understand why. He is one of the most corrupt persons in Congress. And he has corrupt friends, too. We should be seeing indictements flying all over the place, yet the criminals are put in charge of writing the laws. Right after TARP 1 was proposed and I saw who was interfering with the spirit of the thing, I knew that our country was in big trouble.

 

jda

Apr 21, 2009

Frank attacked Republicans (Democrats) for criticizing (writing in the language authorizing) bonuses in the stimulus and then opposing the new bill (supporting the bill) that would outlaw them. "I have never seen people so attached (hate)to something they hate (created)," Frank said. "This is presumably a psychological disorder which I am not equipped to diagnose." Guess crazy runs both ways....

 

Apr 21, 2009

The selection of Barney Frank of Mass. says something about the voters of Massachusetts. Because of his election and that of Senator Kennedy, it means to me that there is a different meaning of the word American in that state than in others.

 

thecat

Apr 22, 2009

Barney Frank is probably the last person who should be complaining about someone else's "psychological disorders".

 

C.G.H. in Ky.

Apr 26, 2009

Barney Frank is like a loaded Diaper,full of sh** and always on somebodys A**!!! Psychological disorder" in progress,thats ole Barney!!

 


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