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Keyword: cabailout

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  • Calif. wants federal government to back its loans

    05/27/2009 1:04:23 PM PDT · by SmithL · 34 replies · 776+ views
    AP via SFGate ^ | 5/27/9 | JUDY LIN, Associated Press Writer
    Sacramento, Calif. (AP) -- If AIG was too big to fail, how about the world's eighth-largest economy? In a move with only one modern-day precedent, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Democratic lawmakers are pressing the Obama administration and members of Congress for federal loan guarantees to help the state out of a desperate, multibillion-dollar jam. California is not asking for cash, like the tens of billions given to AIG, General Motors or Morgan Stanley. Instead, the state with the worst credit rating in the nation is asking that Washington act as a sort of co-signer on the state's borrowing, to...
  • Localities Want U.S. To Support Muni Bonds

    05/25/2009 6:02:45 PM PDT · by reaganaut1 · 24 replies · 1,281+ views
    New York Times ^ | May 25, 2009 | Leslie Wayne
    State and local governments are asking Washington to give them something that banks are trying to get rid of: federal bailout money. California is asking that money from the Treasury’s TARP, the Troubled Asset Relief Program, be used to help back more than $13 billion in short-term borrowings. Members of Congress and several municipalities want bailout money to be used to cover more than $1 billion in losses from investments by municipalities in debt issued by Lehman Brothers, the investment bank that went bust. And Representative Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, is drafting legislation that would...
  • The Sorry State of the States (NYT advocates California bailout)

    05/24/2009 5:33:38 AM PDT · by reaganaut1 · 34 replies · 1,089+ views
    New York Times ^ | May 23, 2009
    ... Like other states, California is suffering from a collapse in tax revenues brought on by the recession. Unlike other states, it suffers from severely dysfunctional politics, including gridlock-inducing budget procedures and a deeply anti-tax strain that plays itself out in endless voter referenda, dating back to the Proposition 13 property tax cap from the 1970s. As a result, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger declared recently that more tax increases are politically impossible. Yet, his proposed spending cuts are also unappealing, if not impossible, including slashing education and health care funds and releasing prison inmates early. What the Obama administration should make...
  • Just 24% Favor Federal Bailout for California

    05/22/2009 7:17:43 PM PDT · by reaganaut1 · 20 replies · 736+ views
    Rasmussen Reports ^ | May 22, 2009
    Twenty-four percent (24%) of voters nationwide favor federal bailout funds for states like California that are encountering “serious financial problems.” The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey found that 59% are opposed to such bailouts. As for California specifically, again just 24% believe the federal government should guarantee the state’s loans. Sixty-six percent (66%) of voters nationwide oppose federal guarantees. California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has said the state may request such guarantees. Even given the most extreme example of bankruptcy, voters oppose federal subsidies to keep the state government going. Forty-eight percent (48%) say it would be better for the...
  • California And The Great State Bailout ( Next up after the Auto Bailout! )

    12/11/2008 10:55:50 AM PST · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 10 replies · 745+ views
    24/7 Wallstreet ^ | December 11, 2008 | Douglas A. McIntyre
    Muscle man Arnold Schwarzenegger has told the California legislature that the state is out of money. California's budget deficit is up $3.6 billion since the last estimate early this year. The deficit is now projected to be $14.8 billion. In a state where property values are falling and businesses are failing at a remarkable rate, increasing taxes is an attractive but impractical option. State legislators are usually more corrupt and pandering than their brothers in the Congress. Going to their voters with plans to cut garbage collection or high school sports would probably diminish their chances of being sent back...