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Ron Paul
(T.J. Kirkpatrick / Getty Images / AFP)
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A bill
introduced by Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) to audit America’s central bank, the
Federal Reserve, passed the US House of Representatives overwhelmingly
Wednesday afternoon by a 327-98 vote.
Paul’s
ongoing efforts to call for increased transparency in the Federal Reserve have
become a hallmark of his tenure in Congress and of his current campaign for the
presidency.
Rep. Paul
is still vying for the GOP nomination and intends to speak at the Republican
National Convention in Florida next month. And although Paul has as recently as
this week refused to endorse presumptive party nominee Mitt Romney, the former
Massachusetts governor has supported the congressman’s proposal to audit the
Fed.
"Ron
Paul's 'Audit The Fed' bill is a reminder of his tireless efforts to promote
sound money and a more transparent Federal Reserve," Romney writes on his
official Twitter page.
During the
Wednesday afternoon vote in Washington, D.C., Paul received backing from all
House Republicans but one, as well as support from 89 congressional Democrats.
Rep. Dennis
Kucinich (D-Ohio), was among those on the opposing party of Paul’s that still
saw reason to support the bill. "The Fed creates trillions of dollars out
of nothing and gives it to banks,” Rep. Kucinich said before Wednesday’s vote.
“Congress is in the dark. The Fed sets the stage for the subprime meltdown.
Congress is in the dark. The Fed takes a dive on LIBOR. Congress is in the
dark. The Fed doesn’t tell regulators what is going on. Congress is in the
dark.”
"It is
time for us to bring the Fed into the sunshine of accountability," the
democratic congressman continued.
House
Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) was one of those opposed to the bill, saying
that passing it “increases the likelihood that the Fed will make decisions
based on political rather than economic considerations, and that is not a recipe
for sound monetary policy.”
Ben
Bernanke, chairman of the US Federal Reserve has said that, although the Fed is
“quite transparent and accountable on monetary policy,” there was room for
improvement. Speaking to the House Financial Service Committee last week,
Bernanke said the agency still “needs to be transparent and it needs to be
accountable,” even though he believes that his quarterly projections and press
conferences already allow the central bank to be relatively open with
Americans.
Although
Wednesday’s vote was a success for the congressman’s efforts to bring added
transparency to the Fed, his fight for an audit doesn’t end here. Next the bill
will be brought to the Senate for a vote, where it is not expected to pass. If
it does clear both sides of Congress, however, it will then be sent to the desk
of President Barack Obama to sign into law.

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