JPMorgan’s $2 Billion Loss: The Political Ramifications - East Idaho News
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JPMorgan’s $2 Billion Loss: The Political Ramifications

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Getty 011812 RomneyObama?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1337071394990Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Alex Wong/Getty Images(WASHINGTON) — Republicans and Democrats both stand to suffer from the ripple effects of the massive losses announced by JPMorgan Chase last week.

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon described himself as “barely a Democrat” during an interview on NBC’s Meet the Press.  He has been a major donor to the Democratic party over the course of his career.  But while he may lean to the left, presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney has been the largest recipient of funds from the financial service firm this cycle by far.

According to The Center for Responsive Politics, Romney has received more than $373,650 in donations from individuals employed by the company, more than any other candidate for political office.  Obama has received $76,675 from donors employed by JPMorgan Chase.

Obama is the second largest Democratic recipient from those affiliated with the firm.  Mark Warner, the freshmen senator from Virginia, has so far received a total of $79,150 in donations, making him the largest Democratic recipient, second largest recipient overall this cycle.

Dimon and his wife have given $730,000 in political contributions since 1992.  The majority of that money has gone to Democratic candidates, including Hillary Clinton and Al Gore, though Dimon’s giving history is bipartisan.

JPMorgan Chase, the nation’s largest bank, first reported a $2 billion trading loss last Thursday, adding new fuel to the already fiery debate surrounding financial regulation and oversight, and prompted an SEC investigation into the firm’s practices.

Transparency and regulation within the financial sector are two big topics for both parties in this election cycle, and the firm’s massive loss could have potentially damaging ripple effects to both Obama and Romney.

For Obama, the news of the company’s loss has the potential to recall negative memories from 2008, when enormous losses in the financial sector resulted in massive job loss and dealt an enormous blow to the nation’s economy.  Obama may not have been the president who passed the controversial Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP) but he voted for it in the senate and he came into office promising to bring big changes — among them accountability and transparency — to Wall Street and the financial sector.

For Romney, the company’s losses paint an obvious opportunity for attacks from the other side on the presumptive nominee’s position regarding Wall Street reform.  Romney has argued for the repeal of the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, signed by Obama in 2010.  It includes a version of the not-yet-implemented provision known as the Volcker Rule, which seeks to place limits on certain types of speculative investments.

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

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