Avoiding a political battle over a nomination process, President Obama appointed Harvard Professor Donald Berwick (l.), a patient-care-specialist health-policy expert, to run Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services during the critical transition into the implementation phase of the new health-care reform law. BU Professor Stephen Davidson, also a health-policy expert and author of “Still Broken: Understanding the […]
The financial regulatory reform legislation likely to be sent soon to President Obama calls for the biggest banks and hedge funds to put up some $20 billion in fees to pay the costs of additional oversight by regulators. But even that won’t help regulators don’t quickly upgrade the training and standards of rank-and-file examiners, says Mark […]
Those alleged Russian spies arrested after living in U.S. suburbia for 10 years were brought to New York as word got out that they may plead guilty and then be swapped for a scientist Moscow has kept imprisoned for a decade for allegedly spying for the United States. International relations Professor Arthur Hulnick, himself a long-time veteran […]
Although “coolness” was a factor that helped get him elected, President Obama has come under fire for not showing more anger — with banks, terrorists, or oil spills. School of Management Professor Kathy Kram, an expert on executive leadership development, says temperment is basically a set of preferences for how one wants to be in […]
With recriminations over Israel’s blockade of Gaza still erupting, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu met with President Obama at the White House for a show of solidarity meant for political audiences in both countries. International relations Professor Augustus Richard Norton, a Middle-East specialist and author of “Hezbollah: A Short History,” says Netanyahu has been playing the […]
The Congressionally appointed Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission exploring the 2008 crash questioned executives from Goldman Sachs, the world’s most profitable bank, about how much it makes trading derivatives — those complex financial bets that helped bring down the economy. Goldman Chief Financial Officer David Viniar said they had no way of determining its derivatives data […]
Posted in Professor Voices
|
Tagged 2008 Crash, BU SMG, Congress, David Viniar, derivatives, economic downturn, FCIC, Federal Reserve, Federal Reserve Bank Examiner, Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, Goldman Chief Financial Officer, Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, Mark Williams, School of Management, Uncontrolled Risk, US Congress
|
Even as his government acknowledged that its citizens were among the 11 people that U.S. authorities charged were part of a long-running spy operation, Russian Prime Minister Putin criticized U.S. law enforcement for busting up the espionage ring. International relations Professor Joseph Wippl, a 30-year CIA veteran, says Russia has continued a robust intelligence collection […]
The U.S. Supreme Court will review a 2007 Arizona immigration law that punishes employers who knowingly hire undocumented workers. The Justice Department says the law violates a federal law barring states from imposing penalties on those who employ people not in the country legally. Law Professor Susan Akram, an authority on immigration law, says the […]
June 30, 2010 at 12:56 pm
By threatening to withhold his vote for the final compromise, Massachusetts GOP U.S. Senator Scott Brown (l.) got the Democratic negotiators on the financial regulatory reform bill to delete a $19 billion fee on large financial institutions to cover costs of implementing the new law. Law Professor Cornelius Hurley, director of the Morin Center for […]
Posted in Professor Voices
|
Tagged Barney Frank, Boston University School of Law, BU LAW, Christopher Dodd, Cornelius Hurley, Democrats, Fed Board or Governors, Federal Reserve, financial regulatory reform, GOP, Morin Center for Banking and Financial Law, Republicans, Scott Brown, Senator Scott Brown, US Senate
|
The Supreme Court has reaffirmed the ban on political parties being able to raise unlimited amounts of “soft money” contributions, despite the high court’s ruling in January which removed restrictions on corporate and union spending in federal elections. The Republic Party had appealed to the court to undo the ban. Political science Professor Graham Wilson, author […]
Posted in Professor Voices
|
Tagged Boston University College of Arts and Sciences, BU CAS, Business and Politics, GOP, Graham Wilson, political parties, Political Science, Republic Party, soft money, soft money contributions, Supreme Court
|