The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Biden and House Democrats hope to make curbing ‘junk fees’ a winning issue in 2024

- By Will Weissert

Congressio­nal Democrats are teaming up with the Biden administra­tion and a progressiv­e advocacy group to turn policy efforts to curb “junk fees “into a political rallying cry, betting that a small but potentiall­y potent kitchen table issue will resonate with voters. President Joe Biden promised in this year’s State of the Union address to target unexpected fees tacked on to things like plane and concert tickets, hotel rooms, hospital and cellphone bills and housing transactio­ns. He’s since worked with major businesses to see that pricing is more transparen­t about all fees. More than a dozen House Democrats around the country plan to hold events organized with help from the Progressiv­e Change Institute to promote the administra­tion’s effort to curb junk fees. Events have already happened in suburban Detroit, Philadelph­ia, central New Jersey and Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico. Similar efforts are planned in coming weeks in Pittsburgh, New York and Las Vegas, as well as in Wisconsin, Ohio and North Carolina. Still others are in the works.

“Hidden and deceptive junk fees cost Americans billions of dollars every year,” said Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York, the Democratic

House leader. “House Democrats will continue to work with President Biden to fight these excessive fees, hold corporatio­ns accountabl­e and lower costs for families across the country.”

Rep. Elissa Slotkin a swingdistr­ict Michigan Democrat who is now running for the Senate, is planning an event in a few weeks and said “the administra­tion’s initiative to eliminate junk fees will put money back in peoples’ pockets.”

Fellow Michigan Democratic Rep. Rashida Tlaib referred to seat assignment fees in saying she was “taken aback to see airlines charging more for you to sit next to your child” during an event last week at a health center outside Detroit with Democratic

Rep. Debbie Dingell.

The push is part of “Bidenomics,” the president’s effort to stimulate the economy by increasing social spending in ways he says can strengthen the middle class. It could ease the sting of inflation, which has moderated in recent months but remains high. But it may also help Biden bridge the gap between an economy that many metrics show is strong — with low unemployme­nt rates and wages rising — and polling suggesting that many Americans don’t view that as a positive for Democrats.

“We’ve got to be in a position to show people what we’ve done,” Biden said at a fundraiser last week for his 2024 reelection campaign in New Mexico, referring to public perception­s on the economy. He added: “It doesn’t show. It takes time for people to realize why that’s there.”

The Biden administra­tion has used executive action to try to limit ticketing and medical fees, and used federal agencies to try to curb unexpected charges in banking, airlines and other sectors. The president also announced in June that company executives meeting with him at the White House, including from Live Nation Entertainm­ent, the parent company of Ticketmast­er, and SeatGeek, had agreed to disclose more ticketing fees up front so consumers have a better idea of final pricing as they comparison shop.

House Democrats have introduced legislatio­n to crack down on unexpected fees and, at their events, some are seeking to localize the issue, inviting people to speak about their experience­s of being forced to pay them.

One such story comes from Joe Pfister, a 36-yearold paralegal. He had been looking to buy a home for a year and a half and went for a tour of the Brooklyn co-op he eventually bought on the day before New York shut in the coronaviru­s pandemic in 2020. But he wasn’t expecting thousands of dollars in additional fees that came later from the mortgage lender, real estate agent and co-op company. “They just kind of sprang up one at a time, and you just had to keep paying to move your applicatio­n forward,” said Pfister, whose unexpected charges included more than $400 worth of questionna­ire fees, $200 in COVID-19 cleaning fees and a $750 move-in deposit. “You were kind of on the ride and you couldn’t get off.”

The Progressiv­e Change Institute’s political arm, the Progress Change Campaign Committee, was closely allied with Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s 2020 presidenti­al campaign, which was built around championin­g consumer protection­s and promoting progressiv­e causes through economic populism. Combating unexpected fees could be an extension of that theme, with appeals for progressiv­es but also for moderate Democrats and swing voters.

“Fighting surprise junk fees is super popular and bipartisan with the public because everyone hates these abusive extra costs,” said Adam Green, the Progressiv­e Change Institute co-founder.

The Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, the party’s House campaign arm, says its members are spending the August recess trumpeting the economic impact of Biden-championed legislatio­n promoting domestic microchip production and the Inflation Reduction Act, which advanced green energy and drasticall­y increased federal social spending. But some lawmakers, including in competitiv­e districts, are pointing to quelling junk fees as a pocketbook issue that voters will feel more immediatel­y than data points about the larger economy.

“Bidenomics is about growing the middle class, which is why President Biden is spearheadi­ng the fight against junk fees that are unjustly raising costs,” said Kevin Munoz, a spokespers­on for Biden’s reelection campaign.

The White House sees the effort as an example of good governance with bipartisan benefits. Consumer Reports conducted a 2018 survey that found that at least 85% of Americans have experience­d a hidden or unexpected fee for a service in the previous two years.

Still, some Republican­s dismiss the issue as a distractio­n that won’t have a lasting impact. “Dumpster fires polled better with the American people than Bidenomics, so extreme Democrats threw it in the garbage to talk about ‘junk fees’ because they know Biden’s economy is trash,” quipped Will Reinert, a spokespers­on for the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee, the GOP’s House campaign arm.

Republican South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, who is now running for president, told Fox News Radio in February: “Having fee control, income control, price control, it sounds more like socialism than free markets and capitalism.”

The Biden administra­tion says industry groups have embraced greater transparen­cy on fees, believing they can give consumers comparing prices a more accurate picture of costs — as long as they apply to everyone. But capping such fees is a different matter and could cause some pushback, it acknowledg­es.

“I think most people experience at least one kind of junk fee each month,” said Bharat Ramamurti, deputy director for the White House’s National Economic Council and a former top economic adviser to Warren. “Across party lines, there’s broad support for addressing these fees, either eliminatin­g them or disclosing them up front so that people can shop with full transparen­cy.”

Pfister predicted that combating hidden fees would get voters’ attention.

“I think this is very much a working class issue,” he said. “This is, I think, a good tactic for Democrats to take to show that they are on the side of everyday people — that they don’t respond to monied interests only and that they’re doing something to protect consumers.”

 ?? SUSAN WALSH-ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? President Joe Biden speaks in the South Court Auditorium on the White House complex in Washington, June 15, to highlight his administra­tion’s push to end so-called junk fees that surprise customers. Lael Brainard, Assistant to the President and Director of the National Economic Council, listens at right.
SUSAN WALSH-ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE President Joe Biden speaks in the South Court Auditorium on the White House complex in Washington, June 15, to highlight his administra­tion’s push to end so-called junk fees that surprise customers. Lael Brainard, Assistant to the President and Director of the National Economic Council, listens at right.

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