Tag Archives: CFPB

Big Victory, With Help All Around


www.MoveOn.org

That’s how good things can happen in Washington. After a two-year campaign of obstruction, a group of Senators finally relented, voting to end debate and bring the nomination of Richard Cordray to a vote. The Senate confirmed Cordray later yesterday, and he was sworn in this morning.

We wanted you to know, as one of the more than 160,000 signers of petitions telling the Senate to Confirm Director Cordray and Let the CFPB Do Its Job. In recent weeks, AFR and allied groups have delivered these petitions physically to the offices of 13 Senators, and electronically to the entire Senate. Meanwhile, around the country, editorials, op eds, and blog posts have demanded Cordray’s confirmation, while refuting false claims made about the CFPB’s supposed lack of accountability and “unprecedented” funding and structure.

It made a difference. The public interest prevailed. “The political stalemate is over,” Senator Elizabeth Warren (who first conceived the idea for the CFPB) declared. “There is no doubt the consumer agency will survive beyond the crib.”

The creation of this agency stands as one of the biggest and clearest victories yet won in the struggle for fundamental reform of the financial system. In its short life, the CFPB has already:

  • Moved to rid the mortgage market of loans designed to self-destruct
  • Shielded military families against various financial scams
  • Warned auto lenders against practices that jack up the price of credit for African-Americans, Latinos, women or seniors
  • Returned nearly half a billion dollars to consumers cheated by credit card companies; and
  • Begun to tackle a host of other problems, including predatory payday loans, excessive bank overdraft fees, abusive debt collection practices and the plight of students and families trapped in high-cost private education loans.

Now its invaluable work can go on.

Congratulations, all of us. And back to work.

What the banks don’t want you to know!


Policy and Action from Consumer Reports

They’re out to weaken your rights – and your watchdog!

Our financial watchdog is under attack right now in the Senate. Without a confirmed director to hold them accountable, the financial industry can get away with a lot more tricks! Tell your Senators to hold the banks accountable!

Lax banking and mortgage oversight tanked our economy, so Americans like you demanded a real financial watchdog, not a bank lapdog.

You got one in the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. In a little more than a year, this watchdog made the banks pay back $425 million to consumers they duped, made sure borrowers can pay back their loans, and demanded an end to hidden credit card fees.

But rather than being celebrated, your watchdog is under attack. A minority of Senators is holding up the CFPB director’s confirmation unless they can weaken his ability to protect the public – and turn him into a lapdog!

If you’re tired of these politics, email your Senators now and demand the accountability you were promised! 

For more than a year Richard Cordray has successfully led the CFPB, not only holding the banks accountable but going after the giant credit reporting and student loan industries. 

But this success is rubbing the financial lobbyists the wrong way. They want to weaken the bureau by subjecting it to the highly politicized and sluggish Congressional funding process; replace the director with a five-member commission; and let other bank regulators (those who failed to prevent the economic meltdown) veto the bureau’s decisions.

A block of Senators is holding up Cordray’s confirmation for a new term until they get these changes. And without a confirmed director, each of us is at greater risk of being scammed – the CFPB can’t exercise its full powers over payday lenders and certain mortgage operators, as well as student loan servicers and credit reporting agencies.

Email your Senators here and tell them you want a watchdog that holds the financial industry accountable!

The best way to stymie this plan is to flood the Senate with a tidal wave of constituent messages demanding the watchdog we were promised. Please take action, then forward this to as many people as you can so they can act too.

Sincerely,

Pamela Banks, DefendYourDollars.org
Consumers Union, policy and action from Consumer Reports

Protect the 99% …Ben Betz, People For the American Way


crowd

Does the picture above look like a MOB?

The Occupy Wall Street protests — which have now become the Occupy Everywhere protests — and the announcement by Bank of America and other banks of new banking fees, such as monthly debit card usage fees, underscore the urgent need for a working Consumer Financial Protection Bureau … and for the confirmation of the nominee to head that bureau, Richard Cordray.

After using tens of billions in taxpayer bailouts to pay executive bonuses instead of reinstituting the lending our economy needed, big banks are again choosing to pad their profits by exploiting consumers with new monthly debit card fees which would make customers shell out additional payments just to use their own money. It’s no wonder that it’s being seen a final straw by many in “The 99%” — the bulk of Americans victim to an inadequate job market, stagnating wages, disappearing benefits and consumer abuse at the hands of companies like the big banks.

Defenders of the new bank fees say that as private companies, banks have the right to make a profit, and if they are losing revenue elsewhere, they should be able to make it up by charging fees, and if consumers don’t like it they can take their business to another bank. The problem with that argument is that new fees like this are becoming the industry standard — so consumers won’t have other options. That’s what happens when you have an industry that is not only shielded from government regulation, but is shielded from the market forces which would make banks compete against each other for customers … in short, it’s what happens when the companies that make up an industry are allowed to be “too big to fail.”

In discussing the bank debit-purchase fees, President Obama noted, this is “exactly why we need somebody whose sole job it is to prevent this kind of stuff from happening.” He was referencing Richard Cordray, the president’s nominee to direct the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) — an agency, created by the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, which Americans desperately need but which remains hamstrung and ineffective as long as it does not have an official director.

The Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs approved Richard Cordray’s nomination just yesterday, but the committee’s Republican members voted unanimously against him and are intent on keeping the nomination from coming to the Senate floor for confirmation. Despite the party-line vote, Republican senators are quite clear that they know Cordray is qualified for the position — it’s the position itself, the CFPB and consumer protections in general to which they are opposed.

Even though the legislation creating the CFPB was passed by Congress, Republicans are refusing to let the bureau function unless they can force structural changes which would render it wholly ineffective.  Rep. Barney Frank — the House’s chief sponsor of the bill that created the CFPB — explained:

“Forty-four Republicans have announced that in disregard of their constitutional duty to consider nominations on the merits. They will not confirm anyone until the Senate majority reverses itself to once again put bank regulators in a position to overrule virtually all of the policies that would be set by the consumer agency.”

This unconscionable obstruction shows exactly whose interests Republicans care about and are fighting for … and it’s not the 99%.

If you haven’t already, sign our petition now telling senators to CONFIRM Richard Cordray.

And check out more coverage of The 99% movement on our blog.

Thank you for your ongoing support, your activism and your commitment to fighting Government By the People (NOT the Corporations) — the American Way.

— Ben Betz, Online Strategy Manager