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Angie Drobnic Holan
By Angie Drobnic Holan September 17, 2008

Former adviser supported deregulation

With a plummeting stock market grabbing headlines, Barack Obama attacked John McCain's economic philosophy in a speech in Elko, Nev.

Obama mocked McCain for saying that he would shake up Washington and get rid of the "old boys network."

"I mean, where is he getting these lines? The lobbyists running his campaign?" Obama asked. "Maybe it's Phil Gramm – the man who was the architect of some of the deregulation in Washington that helped cause the mess on Wall Street, who also happens to be the architect of John McCain's economic plan and one of his chief advisers. You remember Phil Gramm – he's the guy who said that we were just going through a 'mental recession' and who called the United States of America a 'nation of whiners.'"

We should stipulate from the start that Phil Gramm might view the title "architect of deregulation" as a compliment, though he might prefer the title "architect of regulatory efficiency."

Gramm gave an interview to the Wall Street Journal editorial page, published on June 28, 2008. His biggest worry about Wall Street in the wake of the subprime mortgage meltdown was that it would be regulated more heavily, according to the story.

"Every American should worry a lot about this," Gramm said. "We have benefited enormously from New York being the financial capital of the world because we had a more efficient regulatory structure than other nations did."

As a U.S. senator, Gramm promoted two bills that curtailed regulation: The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 and the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000. Gramm had a prominent role as sponsor and co-sponsor of these bills, respectively.

But as we've said in other rulings, it takes more than one person to change a law. These bills had other supporters, and President Bill Clinton signed both into law. It's also worth noting that the Bush administration and the Federal Reserve have frowned on increased regulation in the years since those laws were passed. So don't give Gramm all the credit.

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Did deregulation "help cause" the disaster on Wall Street? The carnage is still being autopsied, but most Wall Street watchers agree that light regulation allowed irresponsible lending and mortgage fraud to go unchecked. The Commodity Futures Modernization Act in particular has been singled out for spurring the growth of poorly understood, unregulated securities such as credit default swaps, which have been getting a good portion of the blame for the financial crisis of September 2008.

Finally, Gramm is no longer a chief adviser to the McCain campaign. He resigned in July 2008 after the "nation of whiners" remark that Obama mentions.

So let's go over the elements of this statement:

"Architect of some of the deregulation": Not the architect, but fairly described as a key supporter.

"That helped cause the mess on Wall Street": Not the root cause, but a contributing factor. "Helped" seems a fair characterization.

"One of McCain's chief advisers": He used to be, but isn't anymore.

There's some truth here, but it also seems like Obama is exaggerating to make a point. When you add up all the elements, we rate Obama's statement Half True.

Our Sources

Wall Street Journal, The Return of Dr. No , June 28, 2008

Thomas, Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000

GovTrack.US, Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act , 1999

Financial Shock , by Mark Zandi, 2008

New York Times, What created this monster , March 23, 2008

Time magazine, Credit Default Swaps: The Next Crisis? , March 17, 2008

Bloomberg, Credit-Default Swaps May Incite Regulators Over Insider Trading , Oct. 10, 2006

Washington Times, McCain adviser talks of 'mental recession' , July 9, 2008

CNN.com, Phil Gramm steps down after 'whiners' comment , July 18, 2008

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