Austin American-Statesman

Bank rules bill gets path to passage

Bill that rolls back banking regulation­s moves to House.

- By Erica Werner

The House will take up a Senate-passed bill rolling back banking regulation­s, breaking an impasse that imperiled passage of the legislatio­n that is backed by the White House, Republican­s and some Democrats.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., told reporters Tuesday that an agreement had been reached and that “we will be moving the DoddFrank bill” along with a companion package of legislatio­n supported by House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas.

Hensarling had been pushing to amend the Senate version of the bill undoing or shrinking portions of the Dodd-Frank Act that was passed in the wake of the financial crisis a decade ago. But the bipartisan coalition of senators who got the bill through the Senate - over the objections of liberals like Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. warned that changing their delicate compromise would end up killing the bill.

In the end Hensarling backed down, leaving the legislatio­n a clear path to passage. It has moved through the Senate and appears to have plenty of support to pass the House. The House will now vote on the Senate’s version of the bill unchanged and send it to President Trump for his signature.

“I had a good meeting with the majority leader over break on this, and so we’ve got an agreement,” Ryan said.

To satisfy Hensarling’s demands, the House will also vote on - and almost certainly pass - a separate package of bills passed by the Financial Services Committee that makes additional changes to banking rules.

The legislatio­n passed by the Senate in March with a rare bipartisan vote amounted to the biggest rollback of banking regulation­s since the financial crisis a decade ago. It left in place major provisions of DoddFrank but would exempt about two dozen financial companies with assets of between $50 billion and $250 billion from the toughest banking regulation­s. These banks would no longer have to automatica­lly undergo a yearly stress test to prove they could survive economic turmoil. The legislatio­n also delivers relief to small banks from mortgage and other rules put in place after the financial crisis.

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