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Congressional Oversight Panel: Warren Steps Down from Congressional Oversight Panel

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Home > Press > Warren Steps Down from Congressional Oversight Panel

Warren Steps Down from Congressional Oversight Panel
September 17, 2010
For Immediate Release

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Elizabeth Warren today released the following statement
announcing her resignation from the Congressional Oversight Panel:
"When Congress established the Congressional Oversight Panel to monitor the
Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) almost two years ago, our economy
was in the midst of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. As
Wall Street firms fought for their very survival, families across America
watched the value of their homes, their savings and their retirement funds
collapse.
"Since then, the Oversight Panel has submitted 24 reports to Congress and has
held 21 public hearings on TARP. During the course of its oversight work, the
Panel has closely monitored how TARP funds have been spent. We have
analyzed and sometimes challenged key policy decisions, and we have worked
hard to hold officials from both political parties accountable for their economic
decisions. While the Panel has voiced many concerns with TARP and has made
hundreds of specific recommendations, it also has concluded that TARP played
a significant role in ending the panic created by the 2008 financial crisis and
helping to stabilize the financial markets.
"I am grateful to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid for appointing me to the
Panel and for his unqualified support for tough oversight over the past two
years. I am also grateful to the dozens of Members of Congress of both parties
who have been steadfast supporters of the Panel, and I deeply appreciate their
encouragement, advice and support.
"None of our work would have been possible without the unique insights,
invaluable experience and contributions of my fellow panelists, J. Mark
McWatters, Richard Neiman, Damon Silvers, and Kenneth Troske. While we
have at times approached problems from different points of view, we have
respected and learned from each other's ideas at every turn. More often than
not, we have also come to consensus.
"The Panel's work, in every way, has been more effective, more incisive, and
more comprehensive thanks to our talented and dedicated staff. From the
beginning, the Panel's staff established a reputation as professional, nonpartisan, effective and tireless. They have worked long hours and made
considerable personal sacrifices, always in the public interest. The staff has
never missed a deadline, and they deserve enormous credit for producing one
top-notch report after another. I wish them the very best in the final months of
their work."
The Congressional Oversight Panel was created to oversee the expenditure of the Troubled

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Congressional Oversight Panel: Warren Steps Down from Congressional Oversight Panel

Asset Relief Program (TARP) funds authorized by Congress in the Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act of 2008 (EESA) and to provide recommendations on regulatory reform.
The Panel members are J. Mark McWatters; Richard H. Neiman, Superintendent of Banks
for the State of New York; Damon Silvers, Policy Director and Special Counsel for the AFLCIO; and Kenneth Troske, William B. Sturgill Professor of Economics at the University of
Kentucky. The Panel will continue to issue monthly oversight reports through April 3,
2011.

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