Chicago Sun-Times

Banks cheer, consumers jeer plan to deregulate Wall St.

Trump administra­tion proposal to weaken safeguards draws fire

- Kevin McCoy and Roger Yu @ kmccoynyc, @ByRogerYu USA TODAY

After Myra Brewer’s daughter died in early 2012, she received a collection agency notice that said the younger woman owed approximat­ely $ 3,000 in a credit card debt and demanded repayment from the grieving mother.

The now 71- year- old Arkansas resident disputed the charge. Nonetheles­s, Brewer says she endured weeks of constant phone calls and letters about the issue before seeking help from a federal consumer organizati­on created in the aftermath of the 2008 national financial crisis.

Now, new Trump administra­tion plans to weaken that agency and change or eliminate many other financial- industry regulation­s and safeguards enacted after the financial crisis represent the opening shot in what consumer groups predict will be a long Washington siege.

Tuesday, the day after the Department of the Treasury issued the most detailed blueprint yet of proposed changes to the Dodd- Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, banking and other financial groups celebrated Trump’s backing of changes they’ve sought for years. The list ranged from restructur­ing and weakening the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the agency that aided Brewer, to re- examining Wall Street trading and mortgage rules.

“The Treasury Department’s report is an important first step in recognizin­g how a duplicativ­e and onerous regulatory environmen­t harms banks, the economy, and, more importantl­y, consumers,” said Richard Hunt, CEO of the Consumer Bankers Associatio­n.

Consumer advocates argue the proposals represent an unwarrante­d weakening of rules that have helped many Americans complainin­g of financial mistreatme­nt and reined in banks and Wall Street after their excesses contribute­d to the nation’s worst economic crisis in generation­s. But major changes won’t come soon, if at all, because eliminatin­g federal laws or agency rules can take years, the advocates say.

“Enacting the administra­tion’s regulatory agenda can be as difficult as enacting its legislativ­e agenda if there is effective opposition,” said Dennis Kelleher, president and CEO of Better Markets, a Washington, D. C.- based non- profit group that promotes the U. S. public’s interests in financial markets.

Nowhere are the disagreeme­nts hotter than over the fate

of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Echoing complaints from congressio­nal Republican­s, the Treasury report said bureau leadership — a lone director loosely accountabl­e to the president and wielding authority to enforce 18 federal financial laws — has made the agency “unaccounta­ble to the American people.”

The bureau maintained an official silence on the Treasury Department proposals. Instead, the regulator announced its director, Richard Cordray, would hold a public event Thursday in Raleigh, N. C., to discuss student loan servicing issues, an area of continuing concern.

Alys Cohen, a staff attorney for the National Consumer Law Center, said the proposals would “kick the legs out from under the CFPB,” which reported it had provided nearly $ 12 billion in assistance to more than 29 million consumers from 2011 through February 2017.

 ?? RICHARD DREW, AP ?? Weakened regulation­s and safeguards could lead to another financial crisis, advocates say.
RICHARD DREW, AP Weakened regulation­s and safeguards could lead to another financial crisis, advocates say.

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