Well as I posted about Fannie and Freddie weren't even in the subprime game in the first place. So even if you find the rules from 2003 of this supposed minority blockade it is a strawman argument in the first place.
The loans Freddie and Fannie made weren't the bullshittery that Washington Mutual, AIG, and all the others were trading in that sunk the banking system.
How can you even say that Freddie and Fannie weren't part of the problem that caused the recession. Those two entities alone held several trillion dollars in bad loans. They alone could have brought down the entire financial system, without any help from the other players.
Part of the regulation that the democrats blocked was meant to intentionally prevent them from making those bad loans. They were in trouble in 2003, and everyone knew it.
Here's a quote directly from the legislation, written by Frank as part of his duties:
system.
Additionally, we believe that it would be inappropriate and counterproductive to adopt asset limits of the type proposed by the Administration, under which the enterprises could hold assets only at levels ‘‘necessary’’ to provide adequate liquidity to the mortgage markets. The enterprises generally purchase mortgages and mortgage-backed securities when prices are out of line with the broader markets, which provides a source of support, particularly in periods of market turmoil, that helps reduce volatility and keep mortgage funding costs stable. Limiting the portfolios of the enterprises to a level ‘‘necessary’’ to provide adequate liquidity to the markets effectively puts the regulator in the position of determining when mortgage rates are too high and liquidity is needed, turning what is currently a market function into a regulatory one.
Finally, portfolio limits will discourage the enterprises from creating innovative or tailored products to respond to market needs. Because such products are more difficult and expensive to securitize, limiting the ability of the enterprises to hold assets in portfolio will result in higher costs for any product that does not have a broad market. This is clearly contrary to a key goal of this legislation: to encourage the enterprises to do more to fulfill their housing missions.
I bolded that last part because its the smoking gun against Frank. In essence, he was endorsing the 'innovative' derivatives that nearly destroyed the US financial system. He is, essentially, saying that its alright that they hold a ton of bad assets, as long as they keep providing loans. These are Frank's words mind you, this is no third person account.
Frank also voted against the house version:
http://clerk.house.gov/evs/2005/roll547.xml
Pelosi did as well. Frank tried to get the bill sent back to committee when it was on the floor of the house, but that effort failed.
Unfortunately, the bill was sent to committee in the senate, but the senate committees do not keep any publicly available records as far as either votes or committee actions are concerned. What I do know is that the senate version was killed because of a party line vote in committee, and the fact that there were more than enough votes in the senate as a whole to prevent cloture. So yes, the democrats killed a bill that would have tightened the leash on the country's two largest GSE's. (and two entities at the center of the issues we're still working out)
It is very clear, however, that Frank did his best to prevent the bill from ever reaching the senate.