Monday, May 09, 2011

Banks and their Lobbyists Continue Assault Against Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

You would think that when the big banks, their lobbyists and their puppet senators look back on the damage and hardships their greed and incompetence has brought to millions of Americans they would be ashamed to show their faces in public. Not so. Proving once again that lack of ethics is often accompanied by lack of shame they are using every conceivable tool to weaken the financial reform bill passed in July 2010. As we posted on Feb 17 a Business Week article ( “Starving the Regulators”) disclosed that the budgets of the regulatory agencies responsible for enforcement of the already anemic new Dodd Frank bill ( aka the financial reform bill) are being kept impossibly low to ensure that the bill will be ineffective. Business Week noted that the only agency on schedule was the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).


For background, a major contributing factor to the subprime financial disaster was widespread use of fraudulent and deceptive terms placed on the borrowers by the mortgage originators. This resulted in mortgages that the borrower could not meet, triggering failures across the entire banking community. The CFPB was formed to protect consumers from fraudulent or misleading practices by the financial community. To keep it away from special interest politics it is an independent agency funded out of the Federal Reserve and not subject to a Congressional budget. It is highly favored by private consumer protection organizations. It is hated by the large banks.

The preferred director of the agency is Elisabeth Warren, who became publically well known when she chaired the Congressional overview panel for TARP. She is organizing the agency as a special assistant to the President. MS Warren is independent of the banking industry. The banks want one of their own in that position.

On May 5, the New York Times published the article “Foes Revise Plan to Curb New Agency” that summarizes the current status of the industries attempts to make the agency ineffective. Read it and some of the links to get a good idea of your government in action. The public pressure was too great to have the agency killed. The current plan seems to be to never confirm a director and instead form a commission of five. Forty four of forty seven Republican senators pledge to vote against any director until the bureau is restructured.

If there is anything that makes me pessimistic about our country it is when our elected representatives show their complete disdain for us by openly working for special interests and against the citizens. The discouraging part is the large number of Republican senators involved. The only way the bureau will happen if through continued intense pressure from the public.

If you have a Republican Senator and are not a banking industry lobbyist give him a call for a little independent support of CFPB. He might find it feels good to actually serve us.

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