The proposed nomination of Elizabeth Warren to the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, an entity she envisioned and invented, has reached a higher likelihood in recent weeks. She met with David Axelrod and Valerie Jarrett about the job last week, and before that she met with bank lobbyists at the Financial Services Roundtable, interestingly enough. That suggests that the lobbyists increasingly view her as someone they’ll eventually have to deal with. While I don’t agree with Noam Scheiber that Jack Conway’s support of Warren is out of the ordinary – Conway’s running a populist campaign in Kentucky, and has highlighted consumer protection with his work stopping Medicare fraud as Attorney General – the fact that he’s unafraid to tout her shows the difficulty for any Democrat to block her nomination once it came down from the President.
Chris Dodd understands this. He told the Hartford Courant’s editorial board that he would support Warren if she were nominated. But he also tried to use every tool in the toolkit to argue against that prospect, sounding increasingly desperate that he cannot stop the nomination from happening.
As the campaign supporting the appointment of Elizabeth Warren to head the country’s new consumer financial protection agency kicks into high gear, Sen. Christopher J. Dodd said Tuesday he isn’t working to derail the appointment.
“My simple question about Elizabeth is: Is she confirmable?” Dodd said during a visit Tuesday with The Courant’s Editorial Board. “It isn’t just a question of being a consumer advocate. I want to see that she can manage something, too.”
But when pressed about where he stands, Dodd said: “If the president wants to name her and it goes through the hearing process, then fine, he’ll have my support. But she has to tell me more than just she’s a good consumer advocate or that’s she’s got a great campaign.”
In expressing “support” for Warren (actually, just support for Obama’s choice, in his construction), Dodd: 1) questions whether she’s confirmable, 2) intimates that she’s not a manager, 3) asserts that she’s merely a “consumer advocate” with a coterie of cheerleaders. Later, he says that “he doesn’t want to the confirmation process to drag on, especially if it runs into the next session of Congress.” When he wouldn’t have any control over it. Now that sounds like some support!
As Brian Beutler notes, the suggestion that Warren may not be qualified is a complete reversal from earlier remarks, when he said that “She’s qualified, no question about that.” It also contradicts what the White House has said consistently.
I think you can read the Dodd comments as desperate bargaining against a Warren nomination. Yet even he has to announce support if she gets the call.



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Rahm must have read the polls. We’re making progress.
Whether they’ll have the gumption to stand behind Warren, when the slog through confirmation begins, remains to be seen. But it is a fight Obama should welcome.
The economy is about to turn; for the better I hope. But the ‘new normal’ of unemployment is going to be with us a long time. The Democrats desperately need to be seen by the desperate as the party that actually gives a damn about something besides the bottom line. Legislative victories aren’t enough particularly when the results are delayed(HCR) or denied(HAMP).
Warren is (and is seen) as undeniably on the side of the consumer. When the battle begins, we will see if Obama has ever played inside the paint and knows how to throw a sharp elbow.
if he does, there is hope for the midterms.
Consumers have enough protections already. We do not need Warren. We need someone with real world experience.
By the way today is the anniversary of the 19th Amendment (giving women the right to vote). This was the second worst amendment of all time with the 18th amendment being the very worst.
Stop by the Emerald City.
Get a brain and a heart.
Get back to me!
Jeez, you’d think his future paychecks were at stake or somethin’?
I guess Dodd figures there’s no reason to even pretend he’s on our side anymore now that the cat’s out of the bag so to speak.
Conway’s running a populist campaign in Kentucky, and has highlighted consumer protection with his work stopping Medicare fraud as Attorney General
Conway is running as a Law & Order, Just Say No neanderthal Dem.
I guess we just have a different interpretation of “populist”.
Tinman:
Exposing his misogynistic hate,
And carrying Tea Bag astroturf freight.
Either that or a shill paid by the Left to galvanize us regressive Progessives.
Tinman1967??–more likely Thin Woman–25 to 30. Pre-law. Dropped out for financial reasons.
Always fires the opening salvo but never stays around for the battle.
I don’t mind a rabble-rouser. I’m one myself. But, at least, do it for core belief, not for money.
[more comments at FDL also]
Dodd made a deal with someone he wouldn’t support this nomination. Ben Nelson?
Yeah, because the Senate keeps really high standards when it comes to management. That’s why the nation is in such great shape these days. /s
I hope Warren manages to dodge Dodd’s lameduck mischief. She’s practically the only ray of sunlight in DC.