2008 SD Senate encounters: on Budget & Economy


Joel Dykstra: Johnson was asleep at the wheel on Banking Committee

Dykstra said Johnson was part of a federal system that seemed to be “asleep at the wheel” as the nation’s mortgage industry was racing toward a crash. Dykstra asked why Johnson and other members of the Senate Banking Committee failed to see and take action to avert the country’s current financial crisis.

Dykstra said Johnson has touted his 22 years in Congress and projected himself as a veteran with influence and important committee assignments. But he questioned whether Johnson’s seat on the Senate Banking Committee had proven useful at all in the months leading up to the financial meltdown. “On that committee, either there was something he should have done or there was nothing he could do,” Dykstra said. “Either way, that’s not a strong recommendation.”

Johnson said he had called for more oversight of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the troubled government-supported mortgage entities. But that call for oversight was opposed by President Bush and Republican supporters in Congress.

Source: 2008 S.D. Senate debate reported in Rapid City Journal Sep 22, 2008

Joel Dykstra: Figure out where system failed in order to prevent a repeat

Johnson issued a statement that the Bush administration had “stifled regulation at every turn” when Congress sought controls over the mortgage industry and its practices. The financial bailout must be accompanied by more oversight, limits on executive pa and stipulations that the taxpayer money be used exclusively for American financial institutions, Johnson said.

“Folks in South Dakota work hard and their earnings should not subsidize the bloated compensation of a CEO of a failing firm,” he said. The $700 billion bailout “package may be a necessary evil, but we cannot allow it to be a gift to those on Wall Street at the expense of those on Main Street.”

Dykstra said the establishment in Washington, D.C., both Democrat and Republican, must accept th responsibility for the nation’s current crisis. And as the nation moves forward in trying to fix the problems in the mortgage business and on Wall Street, it’s important to figure out where the system failed in order to prevent a repeat, he said.

Source: 2008 S.D. Senate debate reported in Rapid City Journal Sep 22, 2008

Tim Johnson: Called for banking oversight, but opposed by Bush & GOP

Dykstra said Johnson was part of a federal system that seemed to be “asleep at the wheel” as the nation’s mortgage industry was racing toward a crash. Dykstra questioned whether Johnson’s seat on the Senate Banking Committee had proven useful at all in the months and years leading up to the financial meltdown. “In this whole banking crisis, Sen. Johnson sits on that committee. Either there was something he should have done or there was nothing he could do,” Dykstra said. “Either way, that’s not a stron recommendation.“

Johnson’s campaign said the senator was busy working on the proposed $700 billion bailout of the financial industry, with an agreement expected Monday night or today. Johnson said he had called for more oversight of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the troubled government-supported mortgage entities hard hit by the subprime mortgage crisis. But that call for oversight was opposed by President Bush and Republican supporters in Congress, Johnson’s campaign said.

Source: 2008 S.D. Senate debate reported in Rapid City Journal Sep 22, 2008

  • The above quotations are from 2008 South Dakota Senate encounters.
  • Click here for definitions & background information on Budget & Economy.
  • Click here for other issues (main summary page).
  • Click here for more quotes by Tim Johnson on Budget & Economy.
  • Click here for more quotes by Joel Dykstra on Budget & Economy.
Candidates and political leaders on Budget & Economy:

Retired Senate as of Jan. 2015:
GA:Chambliss(R)
IA:Harkin(D)
MI:Levin(D)
MT:Baucus(D)
NE:Johanns(R)
OK:Coburn(R)
SD:Johnson(D)
WV:Rockefeller(D)

Resigned from 113th House:
AL-1:Jo Bonner(R)
FL-19:Trey Radel(R)
LA-5:Rod Alexander(R)
MA-5:Ed Markey(D)
MO-9:Jo Ann Emerson(R)
NC-12:Melvin Watt(D)
SC-1:Tim Scott(R)
Retired House to run for Senate or Governor:
AR-4:Tom Cotton(R)
GA-1:Jack Kingston(R)
GA-10:Paul Broun(R)
GA-11:Phil Gingrey(R)
HI-1:Colleen Hanabusa(D)
IA-1:Bruce Braley(D)
LA-6:Bill Cassidy(R)
ME-2:Mike Michaud(D)
MI-14:Gary Peters(D)
MT-0:Steve Daines(R)
OK-5:James Lankford(R)
PA-13:Allyson Schwartz(D)
TX-36:Steve Stockman(R)
WV-2:Shelley Capito(R)
Retired House as of Jan. 2015:
AL-6:Spencer Bachus(R)
AR-2:Tim Griffin(R)
CA-11:George Miller(D)
CA-25:Howard McKeon(R)
CA-33:Henry Waxman(D)
CA-45:John Campbell(R)
IA-3:Tom Latham(R)
MN-6:Michele Bachmann(R)
NC-6:Howard Coble(R)
NC-7:Mike McIntyre(D)
NJ-3:Jon Runyan(R)
NY-4:Carolyn McCarthy(D)
NY-21:Bill Owens(D)
PA-6:Jim Gerlach(R)
UT-4:Jim Matheson(D)
VA-8:Jim Moran(D)
VA-10:Frank Wolf(R)
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Page last updated: Dec 02, 2018