Political Quotes

Jim Bunning

The Public Record

Jim Bunning is a former United States Senator from Kentucky, serving from 1999 to 2011. A member of the Republican Party, Bunning was known for his strong conservative positions and advocacy for fiscal responsibility. Before his political career, he was a professional baseball player, notably a pitcher in Major League Baseball, where he was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1987. Bunning's tenure in the Senate included a focus on issues such as energy policy and workers' compensation reform, often criticizing the Department of Energy's handling of compensation programs for workers.

Quotes by year · 20012010447 total · peak 2009 (236)
2001: 11 quotes2003: 52 quotes2004: 17 quotes2007: 1 quote2008: 1 quote2009: 236 quotes2010: 129 quotes
May 5, 2010

It is hard for me as someone who worked in the market for 31 years to understand how any trades can be broken arbitrarily by an exchange.

congress.gov
May 5, 2010

If I am in Schenectady, New York, and I am dealing with a broker-dealer in Schenectady, any broker--I am not going to give anybody a plug here--how do I compete with the electronic traders that have nanosecond access?

congress.gov
May 5, 2010

I am glad to see the SEC followed through on its commitment to us last fall to start a broad examination of market structure issues.

congress.gov
May 5, 2010

But if you put a market order in, that is your execution.

congress.gov
May 5, 2010

significant price drops in exchange-traded funds, as was mentioned by Senator Bunning.

congress.gov
May 5, 2010

In other words, you did not have any big losses on your market.

congress.gov
May 5, 2010

I am troubled by the way exchange-traded funds and closed-end funds move differently than the stocks they are actually supposed to track.

congress.gov
May 5, 2010

Absolutely. That is what I am getting at.

congress.gov
May 5, 2010

But I am sorry, sir. Sophisticated--even if they are not sophisticated, anybody that puts a market order in knows exactly what is going to happen to a market order.

congress.gov
May 5, 2010

I happened to be watching the market very closely when this was going on, and I watched a stock called Procter & Gamble at $61 a share and then the next trade was at $37 and the next trade was at $39.

congress.gov
May 5, 2010

Well, I just am worried that by lack of not getting something done we could have a repeat.

congress.gov