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Put Out the FIRE on Capitol Hill With a Consumer Financial Protection Agency
The Sunlight Foundation has documented that the Finance, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE) industries have a huge stake in everything that happens in the committee and they invest heavily in certain committee members. Just take a look at this chart by Sunlight and Opensecrets.org:

Take Congresswoman Melissa Bean (D-IL), for instance, she is the top recipient on the committee of FIRE campaign finance dollars in 2009. She is also one of the biggest threats to meaningful reform. Evidently, Bean's take away from the financial crisis – which threw 7 million Americans out of work and cost taxpayers $3 trillion – is that consumers need less protection not more. According to watchdogs at Public Citizen, Bean is planning to introduce an amendment to the CFPA bill tomorrow which would take away the right of states to protect consumers more aggressively than the feds.
That's what got us into this mess in the first place.
Many years before the 2008 financial crisis, state attorneys general (AGs) noticed a big problem in their communities. Angry consumers descended upon their offices to complain about a new type of predatory-lending in the housing sector. Consumers were being offered deceptive teaser rates on mortgages that later skyrocketed. There was a raft of undisclosed charges and fees. The interest rates eventually ballooned beyond their ability to pay, and they started loosing their homes.
Many state AGs started investigating, demanding answers and cracking down on abusive mortgage lenders. As early as 2002, a group of AGs went to court to force one of the worst offenders, Household International, to repay customers a record breaking $484 million and reform its lending practices. These state top cops recognized the predatory lending boom as a national problem, demanding a national response.
Some looked to Washington, D.C. for help. But rather than jumping on board to clamp down on the phony mortgage machine, federal regulators went in a different direction. The Federal Reserve and the Security and Exchange Commission looked the other way. Worse, in 2003, authorities at the obscure Office of the Comptroller of the Currency issued new rules that preempted many state enforcement actions and protected the banks.
Yup that’s right, top bank regulators in Washington sided with the crooks and not the cops. Just think if it all could have been stopped in the first year or two that the scams was unveiled. Just think if consumers had an advocate for them in Washington, D.C. working hand and hand with the authorities at the state level. Maybe the whole mortgage meltdown could have been avoided.
It's time to put out the FIRE on Capitol Hill. The House Financial Services Committee needs to pass a strong bill, one that does not preempt states and polices both banks and nonbanks offering a wide range of financial goods and services to consumers. Anything less will surely lead to the next conflagration.
Click here to tell Congress to pass a strong CFPA bill!

4 Comments so far
Show AllSioux Rose
Apart from writing "loosing" when it should have read "losing," I take issue with Ms. Bottari in her stating, "top regulators in Washington sided with the crooks instead of the cops." This is par for the course and thus axiomatic. The bankers ARE the crooks today! The thefts taking place in plain sight are so impossible to wrap our minds around that we're left to mostly HOPE that some powerful countervailing force will right the equation of grand larceny now operating on a global scale.
"...if consumers had an advocate for them in Washington, D.C. working hand and hand with the authorities at the state level..." Cute!
They have. They were stupid enough in their eternal consumerism and ideological banality to vote for the scum in Washington; and red or blue doesn't make any difference.
As long as the monetary system is not altered, nothing will change: "Zeitgeist Addendum" and "The empire of 'the city'".
What foolishness!
Another bogus agency to obfuscate, deceive, and intimidate with mind-numbing incapabilities.
CFPA = Completely Fraudulent Pandering Abeyance
Click here to participate in self-deception.
I was trying to say this yesterday when my server went down. We, the taxpayers are supposed to subsidize the monitoring of people who should be in jail!
Just prohibit selling mortgages, except when the entire company is sold or in bankruptcy. We would not have had this mess if those who issued the mortgage had to assume the risk rather than take the reward and socialize the risk.
It also wouldn't hurt to limit FDIC insurance to a maximum of ($25 b?) per institution and limit coverage to investments following credit union rules.