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Why Paul Ryan Is Bad News for Bankers

AUG 13, 2012 8:10am ET
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When bankers heard over the weekend that Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney had selected Paul Ryan as his running mate, most likely cheered the news. The Wisconsin congressman is, after all, the Capitol Hill antithesis of Barney Frank. He's the Republicans' standard-bearer for limited government in all its forms and has gone into greater depth than anyone else in his party in laying out a plan for limiting it.

Given the mountain of regulations that bankers are struggling to digest under Dodd-Frank (which Ryan voted against), that message is undoubtedly music to the ears of many financiers. It also explains why Ryan has had strong financial backing from banking and insurance lobbyists as a Wisconsin congressman and head of the House Budget Committee.

Yet for bankers there's a lot about Ryan's selection to dislike. On the fringe, for those who believe healthy banks have suffered for the sins of their irresponsible, bailed-out brethren, there's Ryan's grudging support for the Troubled Asset Relief Program. In explaining his backing for Tarp, even as two-thirds of his Republican colleagues initially rejected it, Ryan argued that if the financial system had been permitted to collapse in 2008, "we would have had a big-government agenda sweeping through this country so fast that we wouldn't have recovered from it."

The Jamie Dimons of the world will be no more thrilled by Ryan's support for a Volcker Rule that effectively resurrects Glass-Steagall. "If you're a bank and you want to operate like some nonbank entity like a hedge fund, then don't be a bank. Don't let banks use their customers' money to do anything other than traditional banking," Ryan said last year.

More important, on the big-picture stuff, Ryan's supporters and detractors agree on one thing: His presence on the GOP ticket is going to further polarize the country, assuming that's possible.

That means in the run-up to the November balloting the story line is clearer than ever. Obama-Biden will portray themselves as the champions of working families and will position their rivals as conniving to give the rich more tax breaks while depriving the rest of us of Medicare and Social Security. What Ryan adds to the ticket, in the words of Obama campaign aide David Axelrod, is a "right-wing idealogue."

The Romney-Ryan campaign, by contrast, will try to cut a profile of favoring American enterprise, small government and deficit cuts while painting its Obama-Biden antagonists as having failed to revive the economy and pandering to big labor.

It's just one pundit's opinion (mine), but Romney's bid to shake up the presidential race by selecting a young, polarizing firebrand doesn't seem to bode well for the GOP or its financial industry backers. Adding an ideologically extreme running mate to energize the base certainly didn't work out too well for John McCain when he hitched up with Sarah Palin four years ago.

Instead of a sign of strength, Romney's selection of Ryan appears to be a recognition by the former turnaround artist that his own campaign is lagging in the polls and itself needs a turn-around, as The New York Times' Nate Silver points out.

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Comments (31)
What a small minded conventional wisdom take - pathetic.
Posted by tk101 | Monday, August 13 2012 at 10:33AM ET
Weinberg echos the "Republican establishment" that is afraid of conservative views and doing what is right (in other words, always caving in to pacify). The track record of the Republican establishment is abysmal. Dodging and weaving plays right into the hands of Obama et al. The fact of the matter is that there is no negotiating with the left because they are dealing with their own hatred of this country. I am pleasantly surprised that Romney chose Ryan because I didn't think that he would do that, continuing the course of trying to pacify. This country needs strong leadership; it certainly doesn't have that heading up Washington now. That is what it will take to get people to see where Obama is taking this country.
Posted by cooperpop | Monday, August 13 2012 at 10:33AM ET
Romney's selection of Ryan is bad for which banks? It looks to me as though Mr. Weinberg is talking his book so to speak, his book being his support for big banks. It has been very clear to most of us in the hustings that regulatory and east of the Hudson thinking has been dominated by TBTF banks with little or no attention being paid to the Foundation of a Free Economy--COMMUNITY BANKS! Excuse me, Mr. Weinberg, what's wrong with "If you're a bank and you want to operate like some nonbank entity like a hedge fund, then don't be a bank. Don't let banks use their customers' money to do anything other than traditional banking. . ." I submit to you that the majority of your readers (and most importantly the majority your subscribers)and their bank directors agree with Paul Ryan.

Jon Bruss
Fortress Partners Capital Management, Ltd.
Posted by jcbruss | Monday, August 13 2012 at 10:42AM ET
There is no one candidate that has demonstrated they have all the answers.....I don't think any VP candidate as every swung an election in the end in favor of their party's nominee for President. With that being said, I think Paul Ryan is good for this country, he has strong values, a strong family man, and I believe he has a genuine interest in trying to "fix" some things in this country that are broken....unfortunately Americans are losing faith in their government, perhaps Ryan can be a symbol of hope and renewed faith.....
Posted by banker50 | Monday, August 13 2012 at 10:44AM ET
Likening the Paul Ryan pick to the Sarah Palin pick by John McCain is a stretch to say the least. Palin had not an ounce of policy (or experience) credibility to add to the ticket. Ryan has, at the least, put forward solutions to the budget woes facing the country. We can debate the merits of those solutions, or we can be lazy like Mr. Weinberg and jump on the Axelrod bandwagon by branding Congressman Ryan a right-wing ideologue.

The next time you write an opinion piece, you might consider adding some opinions of your own, rather than regurgitating what you heard on the Rachel Maddow show last night.
Posted by tcufrog | Monday, August 13 2012 at 10:48AM ET
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