Lodi News-Sentinel

Senate votes to repeal rule allowing class-action lawsuits against banks

- By Jim Puzzangher­a

Vice President Pence cast tiebreakin­g vote

WASHINGTON — The Senate voted Tuesday night to kill a controvers­ial rule that would have allowed Americans to file class-action suits against banks instead of being forced in many cases into private arbitratio­n.

The move by the Senate followed a similar action by the House in July to rescind the rule. President Donald Trump is expected to sign the repeal legislatio­n, providing a major victory for the financial industry. Vice President Mike Pence cast the deciding vote after the Senate tied 5050.

The rule was unveiled in July by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and praised by Democrats and consumer advocates as giving average people more power to fight industry abuses, such as Wells Fargo & Co.’s creation of millions of unauthoriz­ed accounts.

But banking lobbyists argued that the rule would unleash a flood of class-action lawsuits, and the cost of fighting those suits would be passed on to consumers. Republican­s quickly moved to repeal the regulation.

“The entire purpose of this rule is to promote class-action litigation and stop arbitratio­n resolution when there is a dispute,” said Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho.

Set to take effect in March, the rule would not have banned clauses in checking account, credit card and other banking agreements that say disputes between companies and customers must be dealt with privately rather than in court.

Instead, there would have been a ban on provisions that block consumers from banding together to bring class-action cases. The CFPB argued that such cases help hold banks accountabl­e.

The determinat­ions of an arbitrator are binding and consumer advocates say most decisions favor the company. The private proceeding­s also allow banks to deal with individual problems quietly rather than address widespread abuses.

For years, Wells Fargo used arbitratio­n clauses to block lawsuits from customers who alleged that unauthoriz­ed accounts had been opened in their names. Ultimately, the bank estimated that up to 3.5 million such accounts were opened.

The bank agreed to settle some class-actions suits, but not until the CFPB, the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency and the Los Angeles city attorney’s office fined the bank over those practices last year. Even in cases that the bank settled, it had argued that the plaintiffs could not sue because of arbitratio­n clauses.

Democrats cited the Wells Fargo case and the recent massive data breach at credit reporting company Equifax as proof that the new CFPB rule was needed to protect consumers from abuses.

Equifax has been criticized for initially making consumers give up their right to sue if they wanted to take advantage of the company’s offer of free credit monitoring and identity theft protection after the breach. Equifax later backtracke­d on that requiremen­t after a public uproar.

“Our job is to look for the people whom we serve, not to look out for Wells Fargo, not to look out for Equifax, not to look out for Wall Street banks, not to look out for corporatio­ns who scam consumers,” said Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio.

The House voted 231 to 90 to repeal the rule using the Congressio­nal Review Act, a formerly little-used mechanism that Republican­s have employed under Trump to invalidate more than a dozen Obama administra­tion regulation­s.

No House Democrats voted to repeal the rule.

The Review Act was put in place in 1996 to give Congress the expedited ability to repeal new rules put in place by federal regulators. Such a measure needs only a simple majority vote in the Senate, so opponents cannot block it with a filibuster.

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