Carper Amendment Passes, Gutting Financial Reform Bill

Congress will try to tell you that it is on the verge of passing major reform that will help consumers and avoid “too big to fail” and other sound bites that the public will think are important. What the press and Congress will fail to tell you is that yesterday they gutted any real reform for consumers in this bill by passing the Carper Amendment, allowing federal preemption of state consumer protection laws against federally insured banks.

I do not believe that one federal Consumer Financial Protection Agency would have more power than 50 attorneys general and private attorneys enforcing state consumer protection laws against banks. Washington state was only able to stop predatory lending practices against Ameriquest and Household Finance on behalf of state residents because those companies were not federally insured banks. If our Attorney General had been able to sue WAMU on behalf of Washington state citizens or other banks that were swindling their clients, perhaps there would not have been a financial meltdown that almost caused another great depression.

For more information, see these articles from the Huffington Post‘s Stacy Mitchell:

And Speaking of Payday Lenders…

From today’s Washington Post:

Payday lenders and check cashers fight financial reform legislation in Congress

Payday lenders and check cashers blanketed Capitol Hill last week to challenge the scope of the financial reforms under debate in Congress and combat the industry’s reputation as the pariahs of the financial system.

During the “Hill Blitz” organized by the Financial Service Centers of America, a trade group, about 40 industry executives pushed to exempt check cashing from the purview of a proposed bureau that would oversee consumer financial products. Meanwhile, Democrats launched a new effort to contain the industry by limiting the number of payday loans that consumers can take out.

Reuters economic blogger Felix Salmon notes the inherent ridiculousness of passing “regulatory” legislation that would specifically exempt some of the worst offenders.

Check Into Cash CEO, A Millionaire through Payday Loans

If you have seven and a half minutes to kill, check out this great look at the payday lending industry from MSNBC’s The Rachel Maddow Show. The segment focuses on Allan Jones, CEO of Check into Cash, the national payday lending chain I’ve taken to court (and beaten!). Jones is a piece of work. In between playing with his $300,000 car, his $24 million yacht, the regulation-sized football field in his back yard, and his three-story treehouse, he takes to his company’s blog to complain about how rough the payday lending industry has it. Enjoy.

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