Money | Henry Paulson Paulson's Imprimateur on Freddie/Fannie Rescue Madcap weekend recasts Treasury Secretary in Clintonian mold By Kevin Spak Posted Jul 15, 2008 9:16 AM CDT Copied Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson Jr., left, confers with House Financial Services Committee Chairman Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, July 10,2008. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta) Henry Paulson had a very busy weekend. The treasury secretary had been formulating contingency plans for bailing out beleaguered Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for weeks, but Friday’s crisis came before those plans were in place, the Wall Street Journal reports in a reconstruction of events leading to the rescue, culminating in the frenzied weekend scramble to negotiate the particulars with the Fed and Congress. Paulson was forced to swing into action when foreign central banks called Washington, warning that a Fannie or Freddie collapse would have global consequences, the New York Times reports. His moves appear to have staved off a crisis but, both papers note, by expanding the government’s role, Paulson has recast himself as a Clintonian financial activist—indeed, it is congressional Republicans who most oppose his plan Read These Next Joe Biden's post-presidential life not as cushy as predecessors. Erika Kirk forgives assassin as Trump voices 'hate.' Tom Brady's TV access and ties to the Raiders are blurry. Dutch police, right-wing rioters clash. Report an error