The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

House votes to roll back post-2008 financial rules

- By Kevin Freking and Marcy Gordon

The Republican-led House approved sweeping legislatio­n Thursday to undo much of former President Barack Obama’s landmark banking law created after the 2008 economic crisis that caused millions of Americans to lose their jobs and homes.

The largely party-line vote was 233-186, as Republican­s argued the rules designed to prevent another meltdown were making it harder for community banks to lend and hampered the economy.

“Our community banks are in trouble,” said Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis. “They are being crushed by the costly rules imposed on them by the Dodd-Frank Act. This law may have had good intentions but its consequenc­es have been dire for Main Street.”

House passage was widely expected, but the Republican overhaul of the 2010 Dodd-Frank law is unlikely to clear the Senate in its current form. Senators have said they’ll spend the next few months trying to find common ground on legislatio­n to boost the economy.

President Donald Trump had said he wants to do “a big number” on Dodd-Frank, and the House vote marks progress toward that goal.

The GOP-led overhaul of Dodd-Frank was crafted by Rep. Jeb Hensarling of Texas, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee. The bill targets the heart of the law’s restrictio­ns on banks by offering a trade-off: Banks could qualify for most of the regulatory relief in the bill so long as they meet a strict requiremen­t for building capital to cover unexpected big losses.

Democrats overwhelmi­ngly opposed the Republican bill, saying the Dodd-Frank law has meant financial security for millions of people and that undoing it would encourage the kind of risky lending practices that invite future economic shocks.

They also oppose efforts to sharply curtail a consumer protection agency’s power to pursue companies that it determines have participat­ed in unfair or deceptive practices in their financial products and services. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has returned $29 billion to 12 million consumers who were victims of deceptive marketing, discrimina­tory lending or other financial wrongdoing.

Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said the bill “takes the referee off the field one more time” and called it a dangerous piece of legislatio­n.

“All we’re doing is spending our time taking away protection­s for the American people and their futures. Have we learned nothing?” Hoyer asked.

Several Democratic lawmak-

“All we’re doing is spending our time taking away protection­s for the American people and their futures. Have we learned nothing?”

— Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md.

ers insisted they were willing to make some changes to Dodd-Frank, but that the Republican bill went much too far.

“The bottom line is we put an end to the Wild West of Wall Street, and were on a nice, steady playing field,” said Rep. Michael Capuano, D-Mass. “We should be able to adjust it, but we should not throw it out.”

The bill would repeal a

rule that bans banks from engaging in trading for their own profit using federally-insured deposits, or forming certain relationsh­ips with private equity funds. It would roll back a proposed rule that investment advisers who collect commission­s must put their clients’ interests ahead of their own.

Also, financial regulators would lose the power to dismantle a failing financial firm and sell off the pieces if they decided its collapse could endanger the system. Instead, the bill would let banks fall under an expanded part of bankruptcy law.

“The big banks are bigger, the small banks are fewer,” Hensarling said. “We’re losing a community bank or credit union a day.”

“We see free checking cut in half at banks. Bank fees are up. The ranks of the unbanked have increased,” he said. “For many credit-worthy borrowers, they are paying $500 more for an auto loan. Have you tried getting a mortgage recently? They’re harder to come by and they cost hundreds of dollars more to close.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States