TARP IG hold lifted?

Thu Dec 04, 2008 at 09:01:06 AM PDT

The Project on Government Oversight reports:

Sources tell us that the secret hold blocking Neil Barofsky's nomination as the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP) has been lifted!

Could it be because the Senator's name was due to be revealed under the new rules within the next few days?

The new rules, passed in S. 1, the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007, require that holds be submitted in writing:

SEC. 512. NOTICE OF OBJECTING TO PROCEEDING.

     (a) In General- The Majority and Minority Leaders of the Senate or their designees shall recognize a notice of intent of a Senator who is a member of their caucus to object to proceeding to a measure or matter only if the Senator--

           (1) following the objection to a unanimous consent to proceeding to, and, or passage of, a measure or matter on their behalf, submits the notice of intent in writing to the appropriate leader or their designee; and

           (2) not later than 6 session days after the submission under paragraph (1), submits for inclusion in the Congressional Record andin the applicable calendar section described in subsection (b) the following notice:

     `I, Senator XXXX, intend to object to proceedings to XXXX, dated XXXX for the following reasonsXXXX.'.

(By the way, I wonder if anyone has ever submitted exactly that: "I, Senator XXXX," etc. That'd be funny.)

Anyway, there you can see the six session day rule. The Senator blocking the TARP IG nomination was required to put his notice of intent to object in writing and submit it to his party's floor leadership, and then at some point not later than six session days thereafter, submit his name and his reasons for inclusion in the Congressional Record.

Chairman Dodd noted the existence of the hold on November 21st. Since then, there have been four session days in the Senate, with a fifth coming tomorrow. The hold may in fact have been in place earlier than the 21st, which might make tomorrow the sixth session, but in any case, Monday's scheduled session would surely do the trick. So the Senator placing the hold was running out of time before he'd be required to own up to it, anyway.

Why lift the hold, though? The answer, if he's embarrassed by what he's done, might be here:

(3) NOTICE- A Senator who has notified their respective leader and who has withdrawn their objection within the 6 session day period is not required to submit a notification under subsection (a)(2).

In other words, lift your hold in time, and you don't have to publicly acknowledge that you were the one being a jerk.

(h/t to emptywheel for the heads up)

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Tags: TARP, oversight, hold, Neil Barofsky, Jim Bunning (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 6 comments

  •  I didn't think that was going to a problem (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Rolfyboy6

    for Sen. Bunning. He is pretty incorrigible from down there stage left from the chair.

    •  Yeah, he's already a jerk (0+ / 0-)

      Sometime last summer Bunning cracked up Sen. Byrd by telling him something and then asserting he knew because "he was a Senator!"  Byrd cracked up and said, "Yes, you certainly are a Senator."  Bunning's advancing senile dementia is a by-word.

      "It's too LATE to stop now!" - John Lee Hooker

      by Rolfyboy6 on Thu Dec 04, 2008 at 11:14:15 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  I don't understand the value (0+ / 0-)

    of allowing one person to block anything - secretly.  How does that serve the interests of the people of the country?  MAYBE - once upon a time before telephones, radio, TV's and the internet - there might have been a good reason to let that happen - with the idea being that maybe some evidence of a good reason for the hold had to be transported by horse across half the country...but today?  What does it do for us to let that happen?  I'm not really even sure what good there is in giving just one person out of 100 the ability to stop the work of the Senate - even with revealing their secret identity...except maybe that blocking of federal judges in states where the Senators of that state oppose it - but that's different, right?

    •  Let me offer you this: (0+ / 0-)

      An explanation of where the "hold" comes from, and how it came into existence:

      So what's up with "holds" in the Senate, anyway?

      Doing away with the hold is, at its root, really doing away with the Senate tradition of allowing unlimited debate, itself the root of the filibuster.

      •  Thanks for that (0+ / 0-)

        I presume this all applies to holds on appointments as well.
        I guess what I don't get, then, is the point of endless debate without out accountability...it seems that a secret hold isn't debate at all.  I suppose I don't have a problem with a Senator opposing an appointment and being able to slow the process - but by god we should know who s/he is and why!  And it seems to me that when there is a good reason to oppose an appointment (or a bill), those Senators are perfectly willing to announce it out loud, in public, preferably with the press present, but the secret ones tend to have no reason at all that we ever learn of - so where's the debate? And what really are their motivations?

        So all in all, I guess this new rule gets us closer to my imagined incompletely formed idea of perfection.  Yay!

  •  Haven't there been other holds since the (0+ / 0-)

    passage of this legislation?

    Wasn't the hold on making the Senators file their FEC info electronically in 2007, or was it earlier?

    One should no more deplore homosexuality than left-handedness. ~Towards a Quaker View of Sex, 1964 (Proud left-handed queer here!)

    by AUBoy2007 on Thu Dec 04, 2008 at 05:30:20 PM PDT

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