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WASHINGTON — House investigators have recommended that three lawmakers be further investigated to determine whether political contributions were improperly linked to votes on the huge financial overhaul bill.

The independent House Office of Congressional Ethics recommended that the member-run House ethics committee pursue potential rules violations by Republicans John Campbell of California and Tom Price of Georgia and Democrat Joseph Crowley of New York.

The ethics office recommended no further investigation of five other lawmakers in the same probe: Democratic Reps. Earl Pomeroy of North Dakota and Mel Watt of North Carolina, and Republicans Jeb Hensarling of Texas, Chris Lee of New York, and Frank Lucas of Oklahoma.

All offices of the lawmakers had received letters from the OCE by Tuesday and made the conclusions public.

President Barack Obama signed the financial overhaul bill into law July 21. It aims to restrain Wall Street excesses with the most sweeping overhaul of financial rules since the Great Depression, clamping down on lending practices and expanding consumer protections to address failures that precipitated the 2008 meltdown that knocked the economy to its knees.

The Democrats – Crowley, Pomeroy and Watt – voted for the final bill. The Republicans – Campbell, Price, Hensarling, Lee and Lucas – voted against it.

Campbell said he was “perplexed by OCE’s decision, as they have presented no evidence that would suggest wrongdoing.”

Campbell added that he “always complied with the letter and the spirit of the law. To suggest otherwise is unfounded and untrue. In addition, my voting record and opposition to a culture of taxpayer-funded bailouts has been and always will be unshakable.”

Price said it was “truly a mystery” that his case was referred for further investigation.

“There being no evidence of any wrongdoing or any inconsistency in my policy position, one can only guess as to the motive behind their decision or even why they chose to initiate a review in the first place,” he said. “My constant allegiance to a transparent and conscious divide between my official duties as a member of Congress and my actions as a candidate is without question.”

Crowley’s office said in a statement that he “has always complied with the letter and spirit of all rules regarding fundraising and standards of conduct.”

All three lawmakers referred for further investigation had fundraisers last December, around the time of crucial House votes.

Price had two fundraisers, including a breakfast on Dec. 2 and a luncheon Dec. 10 billed as a financial services event. A special guest was Rep. Spencer Bachus of Alabama, the ranking Republican on the House Financial Services Committee.

Crowley had a cocktail reception Dec. 10.

Campbell had fundraisers Dec. 8 and Dec. 9.

Campbell and Price consistently opposed the regulation legislation. Crowley, after attending his fundraiser, returned to the House and voted against Democratic amendments aimed at toughening some financial regulations.

In each case he joined more than 100 Democrats, including fellow New Yorkers, to vote against the proposed changes.

___

Associated Press writer Jim Kuhnhenn contributed to this report.

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Amid all the junk mail pouring into your house in recent months, you might have noticed a solicitation or two for a “professional card,” otherwise known as a small-business or corporate credit card.

If so, watch out. While Capital One Financial Corp.’s World MasterCard, Citigroup Inc.’s Citibank CitiBusiness/AAdvantage Mastercard and the others might look like typical plastic, they are anything but.

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Joseph Stiglitz is a Nobel laureate, a former chief economist of the World Bank and he chaired Bill Clinton’s presidential council of economic advisors.

His latest book, ‘Freefall’, is a worrying critique of the root causes of the Global Financial Crisis, and despite President Obama’s recent banking reforms, he says it could happen again. He’s also predicting another US economic slowdown.

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WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama on Friday proclaimed a week of “enormous progress” in fixing economic problems and cracking down on Wall Street, prodding the Senate to do even more by passing tax credits for small businesses.

In the midst of a sleepy, steamy day in Washington, Obama went before the cameras to try to frame the state of the economy in his own terms.

He praised a trio of matters he signed into law this week – an overhaul of financial regulations, an effort to shrink wasteful government payments, and an extension of unemployment benefits for millions of jobless people – as the governing that people expect.

The president said fresh revelations of big bank bonuses underscore the need for the financial regulation bill he signed into law this week. Obama noted that the Treasury Department’s pay czar reported 17 banks gave their top executives $1.6 billion in bonuses while receiving billions of dollars in bailout money.

Obama then pivoted to pressuring Congress to send him a bill to help struggling small businesses.

A measure emerging in the Senate would create a new lending fund to help community banks offer loans, help states encourage more private-sector lending and eliminate capital gains taxes for certain investments in small businesses, among other steps.

“Taken together, we made enormous progress this week on Wall Street reform, on making sure that we’re eliminating waste and abuse in government and in providing immediate assistance to people who are out there looking for work,” Obama said in a brief statement in the Roosevelt Room.

“But ultimately our goal is to make sure that people who are looking for a job can find a job,” he said.

More than 14.6 million people were out of work in June. The economy is slowing as consumers cut back spending under the strains of 9.5 percent unemployment, lackluster wage gains and sagging home values. Businesses are wary of hiring because of uncertainty about the strength of the economic rebound.

A year and a half into his presidency, Obama is under mounting pressure to show more economic gains, particularly on the job front. The sour public mood about the economy is poised to be a major factor when voters go to the polls in the November midterm elections.

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The dramatic expansion of financial regulation approved by Congress this week bears the stamp of no one more than Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner and gives him vast powers to determine the final form of the new rules.

Half a year after some pundits were predicting he would be booted from the Obama administration for poor performance, Geithner is poised to inherit authority to shape bank regulations, financial market oversight and a new consumer protection agency. Few treasury secretaries have ever had such sweeping influence over such a wide realm.

The bill not only hews closely to the initial draft Geithner released last summer, but also anoints him — as long as he remains treasury secretary — as the chief of a new council of senior regulators. The legislation also puts him at the head of the new consumer bureau until a director is confirmed by the Senate, allowing Geithner to mold the watchdog in coming months. And it will be up to him to settle a raft of issues left unresolved by the bill — for instance, which financial derivatives will be subject to the tough new trading rules and which risky activities big banks will be required to spin off.

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