Municipal bond experts say they know of no other state where a firm was allowed to wear three hats; several states prohibit a single firm from acting as both adviser and underwriter. In Pennsylvania, which has such a prohibition, federal prosecutors are investigating accusations that investment banks and financial advisers conspired to sell bonds with inflated fees to school districts. "It's like the lion being hired to protect the gazelle," Robert E. Brooks, a municipal bonds expert and a professor of financial management at the University of Alabama, said of the situation in Tennessee. "Who was looking after these little towns?"Something tells Pith we're not going to hear much more from the state GOP on this. With several of the lawmakers who voted for the bill running for governor or thinking about it--including Ramsey, Kisber, McMillan and Herron--it behooves the political establishment to shut up about all of this. That won't stop, say, Zach Wamp, Bill Haslam or Ward Cammack from bringing it up, though. It'll make a great little attack ad in the governor's race.
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Of course, you will hear nothing about Morgan Keegan, Regions Financial, or the PACs to which Regions and Morgan Keegan liberally donate, or the lobbying firms hired on their behalf - not a word of that from Bill Hobbs. Or how the management and leadership at MK have enriched the GOP in recent years, either.
I hope this is an issue in the governor's race. The General Assembly is known for back room dealing and looking out for big business. They don't care about the people. We shouldn't reward Ramsey, Herron, or McMillan by giving them the keys to the governor's mansion.