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Barney Frank, liberal icon who regulated a ‘too big’ financial industry, dies at 86

Kraig Pakulski 0 7 Article rating: No rating

By Michael Williams, Jeanne Sahadi, CNN

(CNN) — Barney Frank, the barrier-breaking former Congressman who helped draft reforms that sought to rein in an unruly financial industry in the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis, has died. He was 86.

His sister Doris Breay confirmed his death to CNN, saying, “he was a wonderful brother. I was lucky to be his sister. I will miss him.”

Frank entered hospice care earlier this year where he underwent treatment for congestive heart failure, according to media reports.

The former congressman built a reputation on Capitol Hill for being an outspoken progressive stalwart. He was also the first member of Congress to voluntarily come out as gay. Frank’s decision to publicly disclose his sexuality in 1987 made him the most prominent gay man in Washington during the height of the AIDS epidemic.

While many thought it could be a political career-ender at the time, Frank would later say he regretted he did not come out sooner.

“I am a much better openly gay man than I was a closeted one,” he told Men’s Journal in a 2017 interview.

Frank advocated for LGBTQ causes throughout his career and was instrumental in helping repeal the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy prohibiting gay servicemembers from openly serving in the military. In 2012, he became the first sitting member of Congress to marry a partner of the same sex while in office.

Legislatively, he made arguably his biggest mark in the world of finance. He became the ranking member of the House Financial Services Committee in 2003, and in 2007, became the committee’s chairman. His position put him at the center of the congressional response to the subprime mortgage crisis that led to the greatest global financial meltdown since the Great Depression. Frank pushed for greater regulation of banks and stronger consumer protections to avoid a repeat of the debacle.

He also backed the federal bailout of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which included a line of credit the government sponsored entities could tap, if needed.

“We are putting the money there … saying we know that we’re taking steps so that they’re not going to face this problem in the future,” Frank told CNN in mid-July 2008.

“Fannie and Freddie suffered not from their own decisions, but from the bad mortgage decisions that have been made throughout the economy. We’re not going to have those in the future. So, it is not simply hoping, it is taking action to make it less likely that they’ll be the problem,” he said.

Frank was a chief architect of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, which President Barack Obama signed into law in 2010.

Dodd-Frank established the framework for banking regulation and consumer protection as we know them today. The law’s aim was to introduce greater oversight of financial institutions, especially those judged to be “too big to fail.” It established new liquidity requirements and stress tests for banks; as well as the Volcker Rule, which limits banks’ ability to make risky investments with customer deposits.

Dodd-Frank also created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), which was charged with preventing financial abuse and standing up for consumers in the financial sector.

Since then, many Dodd-Frank provisions have been challenged in court and in Congress, and Republicans have sought to roll back many financial services regulations, including dismantling the CFPB.

With a larger-than-life personality, Frank’s sharp tongue and sarcastic wit made him sought after by journalists and, even after

EE.UU. dice que colaboró con la Policía Nacional de España en la investigación contra Rodríguez Zapatero

Kraig Pakulski 0 8 Article rating: No rating

Por Pau Mosquera, Gonzalo Zegarra y Mauricio Torres, CNN en Español

El Departamento de Seguridad Nacional de Estados Unidos (DHS, por sus siglas en inglés) dijo que colaboró con la Policía Nacional de España en una investigación contra José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, expresidente del Gobierno español quien, según la indagatoria dada a conocer este martes, es señalado como presunto responsable de encabezar una red de tráfico de influencias. Rodríguez Zapatero rechaza las acusaciones.

“Si bien no podemos comentar sobre los detalles específicos de la investigación criminal en este momento, el DHS sigue comprometido a trabajar con sus socios internacionales para combatir el crimen global, proteger a nuestras comunidades y defender el Estado de derecho”, señaló un portavoz del Departamento en un comunicado enviado a CNN este miércoles.

La Audiencia Nacional de España citó este martes a Rodríguez Zapatero, a quien investiga como presunto líder de “una estructura estable y jerarquizada de tráfico de influencias”, en una causa sobre supuestos cobros de comisiones ilegales en el rescate de la compañía aérea Plus Ultra.

El juez José Luis Calama levantó el secreto de las actuaciones y citó el 2 de junio a Rodríguez Zapatero por posible organización criminal, tráfico de influencias y falsedad documental.

El exjefe del Ejecutivo español (2004-2011), que ha rechazado anteriormente cualquier vinculación con el rescate de la compañía durante la pandemia de covid-19, expresó en un video enviado a CNN por el Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE), al cual pertenece, que toda su actividad pública y privada “se ha desarrollado siempre con absoluto respeto a la legalidad”. También aseguró que está dispuesto a colaborar con la Justicia.

“Quiero reafirmar con toda contundencia que jamás he realizado ninguna gestión ante ninguna administración pública, ni el sector público, en relación con el rescate de Plus Ultra, ni ante ninguna otra administración. Lo reafirmo con toda contundencia”, declaró.

CNN contactó a Plus Ultra para pedir comentarios y está en espera de respuesta. La empresa no ha sido acusada como parte de esta investigación.

El despacho de Rodríguez Zapatero y otras tres sedes mercantiles fueron allanadas este martes, según dispuso el magistrado, que asumió la causa en marzo, pero no consideró necesario intervenir el domicilio particular del expresidente del Gobierno como había solicitado la Brigada Central de Investigación de Blanqueo de Capitales y Anticorrupción.

Calama sostuvo que la investigación sobre el rescate de 53 millones de euros (US$ 61,6 millones) en 2021 a la aerolínea ha permitido constatar la existencia de “una trama organizada de ejercicio ilícito de influencias, estructuralmente organizada y liderada por José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, que habría puesto sus contactos personales y su capacidad de acceso a altos cargos de la Administración al servicio de terceros interesados en obtener decisiones favorables”.

Esta es la primera vez en democracia que un expresidente de Gobierno es imputado por la justicia de España.

La secretaria de Organización del PSOE, Rebeca Torró, expresó en X: “El presidente Zapatero tiene todo mi apoyo. Respeto absoluto a la presunción de inocencia y a la Justicia”.

The-CNN-Wire
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