Good for Byron Dorgan. He talked to Dylan Ratigan about why these naked credit default swaps are so bad. According to TPM, he's willing to filibuster
May 14, 2010

Good for Byron Dorgan. He talked to Dylan Ratigan about why these naked credit default swaps are so bad. According to TPM, he's willing to filibuster over the issue.

Dorgan Threatens Filibuster:

North Dakota's Byron Dorgan is retiring after this year. He doesn't have much to lose. Financial reform has been one of his pet projects for years. He's not shy about pointing out that he predicted the financial crisis in a 1994 Washington Monthly cover story warning of the hazards of derivatives.

Still, Dorgan had been relatively muted in his criticism of the financial reform bill cobbled together by Sen. Christopher Dodd, who is also retiring this year and who sees financial reform as his crowning achievement. But things had been bubbling behind the scenes. Dorgan was especially upset that his proposed amendment to the financial reform bill wouldn't even get a vote. His amendment would prohibit naked credit default swaps, which Dorgan views as little more than pure gambling by the big banks, not a way to hedge their financial risks, but merely placing bets on other people's bets.

Dorgan took to the Senate floor yesterday with a floor speech that ripped the financial reform bill as not real reform (video).

In the Senate Democratic Caucus meeting today, Dorgan and other progressive senators pressed the leadership to allow their amendments to strengthen the bill to come to a vote. According to Dorgan, the leadership relented and said his amendment would be one of the ones to come to a vote.

But tonight, as Brian Beutler reports, when the list of amendments to be voted on was released, Dorgan's was not among them. A frustrated Dorgan approached Dodd and Majority Leader Harry Reid on the floor this evening and told them he would filibuster financial reform if his amendment doesn't get a vote. "I understand everybody thinks their amendment's important, but the question of the unbelievable speculation in credit default swaps that have no insurable interest -- if we can't vote on something like that, given what we've seen in recent years, then it's not really financial reform," Dorgan told us.

TPM doesn't think most of the progressives' amendments will get passed and their probably right. As they noted though Dorgan threatening a filibuster has just upped the ante, in a welcomed way I'd say.

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