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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Abercrombie, Hirono vote no

Advertiser Staff

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Rep. Neil Abercrombie

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Rep. Mazie Hirono

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Hawai'i's two representatives in the U.S. House, Neil Abercrombie and Mazie Hirono, both Democrats, each voted against the bailout package yesterday, saying it did not do enough to protect taxpayers and help mortgage holders.

The House failed to pass the legislation, so the Senate did not vote on it. However, Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawai'i, said that Congress needed to come up with something that would pass.

"We in Congress must stay on our jobs and work in a bipartisan fashion to pass a rescue plan that puts taxpayers first in fixing this crisis," Inouye said in a statement.

Abercrombie said the bill needed major changes.

"Even though the bill we voted on today was very different from the bailout plan pushed by the Bush administration, it still relied on public funds to save Wall Street from its own greed and bad decisions, with very little in the way of accountability or oversight," he said in a statement.

"We were given virtually no time for debate, discussion or consultation with our constituents — the people who would have picked up the tab for this fiscal frenzy — about the single most consequential policy and spending decision in decades," Abercrombie said.

He said that of the nearly 1,500 people who called, faxed or e-mailed his offices in Honolulu and Washington, only 11 people supported the bailout plan.

"My constituents and I reached the same conclusion: We need to put the mortgage holders and taxpayers first," he said.

Hirono also said she voted against the bill "because it did not go far enough to protect taxpayers and assist homeowners facing foreclosure.

"Clearly, we have to get back to work to come up with legislation that will avert a credit freeze, stabilize the financial markets, and more directly help homeowners facing foreclosure, which is the underlying problem," she said.

"This crisis was brought on by inadequate regulatory oversight or no oversight at all over these complicated mortgage-backed securities. We need to fast-track regulatory reform to prevent this kind of crisis from recurring."

She also said the focus needs to be on stimulating the economy immediately and creating jobs in Hawai'i.

Inouye said this was not the time for finger-pointing, "for wild rhetoric blaming others" or political posturing.

"I am convinced that our nation is facing a most dangerous situation," Inouye said. He said there are clear signs the credit market is "on the verge of collapsing."