(MarketWatch) -- Rep. Ron Paul, who has sought to audit the Federal Reserve for 26 years, has inched ever so much closer to his goal. A key congressional panel on Thursday approved legislation introduced by the Texas congressman that - for the first time in the central bank's 95-year-history -- would require government audits of Federal Reserve monetary policy, as well as how much the central bank has lent and will lend to specific banks.
Fed Chief Ben Bernanke and other key members of the Obama administration, including Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, had vigorously opposed the move.
The measure was approved by the House Financial Services Committee as it considered broad bank regulatory reform legislation, and included a package of other measures weakening the Fed's power and capping how much it can lend or guarantee. The committee is now poised to pass the entire bill and has scheduled its final vote on the legislation for December 1...
Paul's provision was opposed by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., the committee's chairman. He would have preferred that the committee only approve a less intrusive measure introduced by Rep. Melvin Watt, D-N.C., which was overridden by the Paul amendment...Cont'd...LINK
Col Douglas Macgregor: "It doesn't matter what most Americans think. Look
at the polls. We don't count. The only people that count are the people
sitting on the Hill that are being well paid for their Israel support, and
of course the White House."
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Col Douglas Macgregor: Trump Sabotaging his own Iran Deal...LINK
18 hours ago
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