Spitzer: Bank Regulators Lacked Will, Not Power Before he quit public life in disgrace, Eliot Spitzer made his name by cracking down on Wall Street malfeasance. Now, the former New York governor writes about the financial crisis for Slate, and he says regulators could've stopped wrongdoing if they'd really wanted to.

Spitzer: Bank Regulators Lacked Will, Not Power

Spitzer: Bank Regulators Lacked Will, Not Power

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Eliot Spitzer resigned as New York's governor in March 2008 after he was outed for using a call girl service. Above, he speaks to the media with his wife, Silda, while apologizing to his family and the public, March 10, 2008. Mario Tama/Getty Images hide caption

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Mario Tama/Getty Images

Eliot Spitzer resigned as New York's governor in March 2008 after he was outed for using a call girl service. Above, he speaks to the media with his wife, Silda, while apologizing to his family and the public, March 10, 2008.

Mario Tama/Getty Images

As New York's attorney general, Eliot Spitzer pursued the insurance company AIG and drove the company's longtime boss, Maurice "Hank" Greenberg, out of his job.

Spitzer, who last year was forced to resign as New York's governor after news of his involvement in a prostitution ring, now writes about AIG and other Wall Street matters for Slate.com.

In a recent Slate column, Spitzer takes exception to the idea that federal regulators lacked the power to stop financial abuses before the crisis.

"An effort is being made to suggest if only the regulators had had more power, they would have found a, b and c," Spitzer tells NPR's Robert Siegel. "Whereas, in truth, what we have gone through is a decade where regulators had the power but not the will.

"Unfortunately, the loss of will was more fundamentally damaging to us, because they should have done things that were visible and reacted to things that were visible."

As for skeptics who may point out that Spitzer's own participation in a scandal has earned him his place on the sidelines of public life, Spitzer says people can decide whether they find his perspective valuable.

"I look back at the record we had when I was attorney general, and if it suggests that there are some useful observations I can make about our current economic crisis, I'm happy to provide them when asked," he says.