David R. Sands
Articles by David R. Sands
Senate panel OKs nuke pact with India, but time is short
A major new U.S.-India nuclear cooperation deal cleared a key hurdle Tuesday as a Senate panel voted overwhelmingly to approve the agreement. Published September 24, 2008
Lawmakers openly skeptical as bailout plan gets hearing
Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke faced bipartisan skepticism as they pushed for quick congressional approval of the administration's $700 billion Wall Street rescue plan. Published September 23, 2008
Wall Street woes ripple across globe
Spain and Taiwan are cracking down on short sellers of stock. Britain's prime minister sees his poll numbers plummet, while Japanese financial giants snap up pieces of distressed U.S. lenders. And some in France and Germany are hailing what they see as a humiliating blow to "Anglo-Saxon" economics. Published September 23, 2008
Democrats: Bailout support is costly
Lawmakers are engaged in a $700 billion game of chicken this week over the Bush administration's push to pass an economic bailout proposal for Wall Street. Published September 22, 2008
Democrats seek changes to bailout plan
UPDATED -- Sen. Barack Obama and other top Democrats said Sunday their support will come at a price as Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson pressed for quick congressional approval of a $700 billion fiscal rescue package. Published September 21, 2008
Short sellers defend practice
They've been called the hyenas of high finance, feasting on the misfortunes of others, but the market's short sellers say they are being used as scapegoats as regulators and politicians around the world struggle to prevent a global economic implosion. Published September 20, 2008
Congress pushes for last-minute deal with India
Congress and the Bush administration are making a strong last-minute push to approve the far-reaching nuclear cooperation deal with India, a top Senate Democrat said Thursday. Published September 19, 2008
Lawmakers say they’re out of the loop
DEVELOPING -- Lawmakers from both parties are complaining they've been kept out of the loop as the Federal Reserve and Treasury Department have struggled to contain Wall Street's exploding financial crisis. Published September 18, 2008
New financial watchdog considered
The federal agency that managed the bailout of the savings and loan industry in the 1980s and 1990s has emerged as the leading model to contain the fallout from Wall Street's current meltdown. Published September 18, 2008
Fidel’s fading but what is next?
For the first time since the Kennedy administration, the next U.S. president won't have Cuban President Fidel Castro to deal with when he takes office in January. Published September 16, 2008
Freeze sought on foreclosures after takeover
Four Democrats on the Senate banking committee Thursday called for a temporary freeze on foreclosures for trillions of dollars in home loans held by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, just four days after the Treasury Department ordered a taxpayer-financed takeover of the two mortgage giants. Published September 12, 2008
Unity proves divisive for third parties
While the nation's two major political parties bicker over name-calling, a collection of smaller third-parties came together Wednesday in a so-called unity event that, in the end, only produced yet more bickering. Published September 11, 2008
Third-party unity bid produces fresh division
While the nation's two major parties bicker over name-calling, a collection of smaller third-parties came together Tuesday in a so-called unity event that, in the end, only produced yet more bickering. Published September 10, 2008
Congress: Short session likely partisan
Opening a legislative session likely to be short on bill-passing and long on point-scoring, congressional Republicans and Democrats on Tuesday tried to tag one another as being weak on key national-security issues ahead of November's election. Published September 10, 2008
Overseas debt drives bailout of Fannie, Freddie
Foreigners own a big chunk of the debt issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, broadening the fallout of any failure beyond U.S. borders and giving the Bush administration one more powerful reason to take over the mortgage giants. Published September 9, 2008
12-term Democrat faces tough fight in Pennsylvania
Rep. Paul E. Kanjorski is bucking the national trend this year - not exactly welcome news for his campaign. Published September 9, 2008
Democrats tentatively back mortgage bailout
Key Democratic lawmakers cautiously welcomed the Bush administration's takeover plan for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac but made it clear Monday that the move was meant to save the two mortgage giants, not bury them. Published September 8, 2008
GOP fares best without lawyers
When the Republican Party formally nominates its presidential and vice-presidential candidates Thursday, it will achieve something the Democrats have managed to do only twice since the two parties began contesting elections in 1856 - keep a lawyer off the ticket. Published September 4, 2008
Global prices unfazed by milder Gustav
World oil prices fell Monday as energy traders concluded that Hurricane Gustav is unlikely to pack anything like the one-two punch to the nation's oil and gas infrastructure delivered by Katrina and Rita in 2005. Published September 2, 2008
Palin’s rise a model for maverick politicians
Right from the start of her political career, Sarah Palin has shown a willingness to take on the powers that be in her home state of Alaska. Published August 30, 2008