Texarkana Gazette

House GOP takes aim at financial regulation­s

- By Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON—A decade ago, the first inklings of the coming recession emerged as a housing bubble fueled by scant regulation, low-interest rates and easy credit gradually began to crater and soon would take the rest of the economy along for the painful ride.

By the time the Great Recession ended in June 2009, almost no one was spared.

Home prices fell 30 percent on average, the unemployme­nt rate nearly doubled and the S&P 500 lost about half its value. The net worth of U.S. households and nonprofit organizati­ons fell by nearly $14 trillion, about 20 percent.

In the midst of a presidenti­al election, Washington struggled in its response. The bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers and the takeover of Merrill Lynch turned the spotlight on Democratic Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois and Republican Sen. John McCain even brighter, with McCain’s assertion that the “the fundamenta­ls of our economy are strong” used to depict him as out of touch.

After the economy stabilized, Congress shifted from economic stimulus and bailouts to establishi­ng the kind of regulatory framework that might keep another Great Recession from happening. The result was the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010.

This week, House Republican­s will vote on legislatio­n to gut Dodd-Frank and replace it with their own version. A look at the background of the legislatio­n and the GOP plan.

REPUBLICAN­S DON’T LIKE DODD-FRANK

In June 2010, the House passed the financial regulatory overhaul by a vote of 237-192. Only three Republican­s sided with the vast majority of Democratic members in support of the bill.

Two weeks later, the Senate passed the bill 60-39. This time, only two Republican­s voted for the bill, Sens.

Olympia Snowe of Maine and Scott Brown of Massachuse­tts. But that was just enough to overcome the procedural hurdles that can bring major legislatio­n to a crashing halt in the Senate.

Obama signed Dodd-Frank into law on July 21, 2010: “In the end, our financial system only works—our market is only free—when there are clear rules and basic safeguards that prevent abuse, that check excess, that ensure that it is more profitable to play by the rules than to game the system,” Obama said. “And that’s what these reforms are designed to achieve—no more, no less.”

WHAT DOES DODD-FRANK DO?

Under the act, large banks undergo “stress tests” to ensure they have enough capital necessary to absorb losses during an economic crisis. The law also put into place strict limits on how commercial banks could invest capital in speculativ­e investment­s.

Dodd-Frank also establishe­d a process when the federal government could break-up and wind down a failing financial company whose failure threatens financial stability in the United States. And it establishe­d a new agency with a mission of ensuring that banks and other financial companies don’t abuse consumers.

That’s just a small snapshot of the changes put into place through the nearly 2,300-page bill.

WHO IS DODD AND WHO IS FRANK?

Rep. Barney Frank was the top Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee. When the financial crisis hit, the Massachuse­tts lawmaker worked closely with the Bush administra­tion to enact a historic bailout of the nation’s financial system so that the government could purchase as much as $700 billion in troubled assets to stabilize banks and get them lending again. Once the crisis began to subside, he turned his attention to an overhaul of the entire financial services industry. Frank was renowned for his knowledge of public policy and parliament­ary rules, but also for his gruff, piercing criticism for those who disagreed with him. He declined to seek re-election in 2012 after serving 16 terms.

Sen. Christophe­r Dodd was the chairman of the Senate’s Banking committee. Dodd announced in January 2010 that he would not seek re-election once his term ended, and he led the debate on the Senate side without fear of how it would harm his political standing. His home state of Connecticu­t counts several of the insurance companies that were shaken in the crisis.

REPUBLICAN REPLACEMEN­T

Republican­s, most notably President Donald Trump, view the regulation­s associated with Dodd-Frank as increasing compliance costs for financial companies and making it harder to lend money and spur economic growth. Trump calls the law a “disaster.”

The replacemen­t in the House has been authored by Texas Rep. Jeb Hensarling, the chairman of the Financial Services Committee. At its core, the Financial Choice Act would give banks regulatory relief so long as they meet a strict basic requiremen­t for the capital they build to cover unexpected big losses.

Federal regulators would also lose the power to dismantle a failing financial firm and sell off the pieces if they decide its collapse could endanger the system. The legislatio­n also paints a bull’s eye on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which gained powers to scrutinize the practices of virtually any business selling financial products and services, such as credit card companies, payday lenders, mortgage servicers and debt collectors. Hensarling’s bill would eliminate those powers.

It would allow the president to remove the CFPB director at will, without needing a specific cause for firing. Hensarling is backing off of one provision though in the face of Republican division. He has promised to pull a provision that eliminates the cap on fees that banks can charge retailers when customers use a debit card.

WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING ABOUT THE BILL

House Republican­s frequently speak about the need for economic growth.

“This is the Republican plan to reform Wall Street and revitalize Main Street—all while protecting the financial futures of Americans,” Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said in a statement Monday.

No Democratic lawmaker voted for the bill when it was approved by the Financial Services Committee, saying it would allow a return to the kind of risky practices that crashed the economy nearly 10 years ago.

“It’s an invitation for another Great Recession, or worse,” said Rep. Maxine Waters, the ranking Democratic member of the committee.

While the bill is expected to pass the House, its prospects are uncertain in the Senate, where Democrats have the votes to block it.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Then-Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sen. Christophe­r Dodd, D-Conn., speaks to reporters May 21, 2010, outside the White House in Washington, after their meeting with President Barack Obama. House Republican­s are targeting the financial regulation­s...
Associated Press Then-Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sen. Christophe­r Dodd, D-Conn., speaks to reporters May 21, 2010, outside the White House in Washington, after their meeting with President Barack Obama. House Republican­s are targeting the financial regulation­s...

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