Warren: I Have to Call It Like I See it on #BankLobbyistAct
"Saying Democrats are Helping to Roll Back Rules on Big Banks Doesn't Make Me the Most Popular Kid on the Team." "But Massachusetts Didn't Send Me Here to Fight for Big Banks. The People of Massachusetts Sent Me Here to Fight for Them."
Washington, DC - United States Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) today wrote a Medium post about the Senate's effort to roll back rules on the biggest banks in the country.
I ran for the United States Senate because I wanted to protect working
families from another financial crisis.
I spent most of my adult life studying how America's middle class was getting
squeezed by rising costs and stagnant wages. The 2008 financial crisis was a
punch to the gut for a lot of those families - and a lot of them are still
struggling to recover years later. I never dreamed of running for office. But
when I realized that running for the Senate from Massachusetts was my best
chance to try to help middle-class families and prevent another crisis from
ever happening again, I ran.
Since I've come to the Senate, I've worked to reduce the risk of another crisis
by pushing for stricter oversight and more accountability for the biggest
banks. I've introduced bipartisan
legislation to break up the biggest banks. I've pressed federal regulators
to impose accountability on companies like Wells Fargo that break the law and
cheat their customers - and
they've done it. I've led
a bipartisan effort to stop the Federal Reserve from re-creating the kind
of backdoor bailout of big banks that happened in 2008.
I've also worked with my colleagues to try to tailor the rules for community
banks and credit unions, institutions that didn't cause the 2008 crash. In
2015, I introduced a bill
with each of my Democratic colleagues on the Banking Committee that loosened
the rules on banks and credit unions with under $10 billion in assets - true
community institutions - while also creating new consumer protections for
servicemembers. I fought alongside my colleagues to pass that bill, and I'd do
it again. But that proposal didn't have enough goodies for Wall Street - so it
went nowhere.
This week, the Senate began advancing a bill that reduces oversight of some of
the biggest banks in the country. The independent Congressional Budget Office says
the bill will increase the risk of future bailouts. It's a dangerous proposal.
Senate Republicans voted unanimously for it - but the bill wouldn't be on track
to becoming the law without the support of more than a dozen Senate Democrats.
That's just the truth. But since I called out some of my Democratic colleagues
for their support, I've been taking heat from fellow Democrats. I get it - no
one likes to be criticized, let alone by someone on their team. And let's be
totally clear: I agree with my Democratic colleagues a heck of a lot more than
I agree with my Republican ones.
But there's a long history in Washington of members of both parties teaming up
to deregulate banks - followed soon after by a financial crisis. It happened in
the early 1980s when there was bipartisan
support for deregulating savings and loans associations - and the S&L
crisis hit a few years later. It happened in 1999 and 2000 with the repeal
of Glass-Steagall and the passage of a bill to reduce
oversight of derivatives - and a devastating financial crisis built on
giant megabanks and risky derivatives hit within a decade. And now, with help
from some Democrats, it's on track to happen again.
Saying that doesn't make me the most popular kid on the team. But that's not
why I ran for the Senate. The people of Massachusetts didn't send me here to
fight for big banks. They sent me here to fight for them. And so long as I am
privileged to hold this job, that's exactly what I'm going to do.
###
Next Article Previous Article