All,
As usual the spineless, cowardly, opportunist, and relentlessly fullashit Democratic Party is an active codependent and servile enabler of the always heinous, voracious, and openly tyrannical righttwing mob known as the Republicans. And it's only going to get much worse very soon. Which is to say as long as we all put up with/and or support it...Stay tuned...
Kofi
https://newrepublic.com/…/democrats-helping-trump-dismantle…
How Democrats Are Helping Trump Dismantle Dodd-Frank
Republicans are on the verge of attaining a long-coveted prize—with the assistance of Senate Democrats who have ties to the financial industry.
by Talmon Joseph Smith
March 1, 2018
The New Republic
PHOTO: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
As the U.S. approaches the tenth anniversary of the 2008 financial
meltdown, it faces a massive test of the post-crisis regulatory
apparatus—thanks in no small part to Democrats in Congress.
A
deregulatory bill, S.2155, introduced by Republican Senator Mike Crapo
of Idaho, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, proposes a major
rollback of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act. Dubbed The Economic Growth,
Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act, it cruised through the
committee in January. Although there are several elements to the bill,
the most eye-popping provision is a significant shift in which banks are
considered “systemically important” and thus subjected to greater
oversight and tighter rules. Currently, banks with $50 billion in assets
fall into that category. The proposal would move the threshold to $250
billion—a 500 percent jump that would erase the mandate of enhanced
scrutiny for 25 of the 38 largest banks in the country.
The
measure’s framework is expected to eventually pass the Senate thanks to a
dozen finance-friendly and swing-state Democrats who have openly
announced their co-sponsorship. With Republicans in control of the
House, the bill seems destined to reach President Donald Trump’s desk
this year.
Despite the vocal opposition of more liberal
colleagues such as Senators Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and
Sherrod Brown of Ohio, the bill’s leading Democratic co-sponsors expect
it to be debated as soon as next week, according to a senior Senate aide
involved in the process. The intra-party debate regarding the
regulatory rollback is giving new insight into the battle for the
direction and identity of the party ahead of this year’s midterms,
hardening a divide between those who would move the party left to
energize the base as well as populist independents and those attempting
to appease more conservative voters and the party’s deep-pocketed
donors.
Many progressive activists, led by the anti-corruption
organization Rootstrikers, have taken to calling the Democratic
co-sponsors the #bailoutcaucus.
Nine of the twelve Democrats supporting the deregulatory measure count
the financial industry as either their biggest or second-biggest donor,
according to an analysis of Federal Election Commission data listed by
The Center for Responsive Politics.
When questioned about this
correlation, and whether it would aggravate concerns that the Democrats
in support of this bill are being affected by industry money, a
spokesperson for Senator Tim Kaine responded, “Campaign contributions do
not influence Senator Kaine’s policy positions. He supports this bill
because it provides relief for small community banks and credit unions
in Virginia, helps prevent further harmful consolidation in the banking
industry, and strengthens consumer protections for all Americans.”
Hillary Clinton’s former running mate was not alone. Mark Warner,
Kaine’s fellow senator from Virginia, is also co-sponsoring. “Campaign
contributions have never influenced Senator Warner’s decision making on
policy matters and never will,” his press office asserted in an email.
Senator Joe Donnelly’s office characterized his co-sponsorship as
simply resulting from a long-held conviction that smaller financial
institutions have been inadvertently burdened by well-intentioned rules
and regulations meant to hold Wall Street accountable. Sarah Rothschild,
Donnelly’s communications director, emphasized the Indiana politician’s
continued support of other reforms resulting from Dodd-Frank.
Supporters are championing consumer benefits that have been tacked to
the legislation, particularly a provision meant to protect veterans’
credit from medical debt and another that, inspired by the Equifax
debacle, allows people to freeze and unfreeze their credit at will.
Americans for Financial Reform, a group that has been fighting for the
strict enforcement of Dodd-Frank since its inception, have characterized
those provisions as “tokens” designed to give cover to a bill that is
largely made up of financial sector “giveaways.”
AFP also accuses
the bill of rolling back certain mortgage-lending protections and
weakening the Volcker Rule—a centerpiece of Dodd-Frank that prevents
banks from using their own money to trade in certain higher-risk,
speculative securities. The purpose of the Volcker Rule was to reduce
the industry’s exposure to the highly leveraged derivative instruments
that played a large role in the 2008 market crash. The rule, in essence,
blocks additional sources of revenue and imposes some compliance costs,
creating tighter margins, so the industry has longed harbored an
antipathy towards it, despite continued overall profits.
Volcker
himself has given a mixed review of Crapo’s bill, expressing conditional
support for certain provisions and firmly rejecting others. “I am
pleased that the Senate Banking Committee has forged ahead with
meaningful bipartisan financial reform to ease the unnecessary strain on
small banks,” he said in a letter addressed to Senator Brown. However,
“an increase to $250 billion would go too far,” Volcker added, referring
to the bill’s most controversial provision.
Pointing out that
many banks below this valuation had to be bailed out by the U.S.
government, Volcker suggested a $100 billion threshold or lower would be
more reasonable. He rejected relaxing the amount of cash on hand—or
capital requirements—banks have to keep. And while he said he was in
“strong agreement” with exempting banks with less than $10 billion in
assets from the Volcker Rule, he advocated for “alternative” rules to
ensure “small loopholes” aren’t “gamed and exploited with unfortunate
consequences.”
Despite Volcker’s reservations, his letter
bolsters the complaint that the 2010 reforms geared towards ending “too
big too fail” created a system of “too small to succeed.” That grievance
has found sympathetic ears at the nexus of academia, Washington, and
economic think tanks. Alan Krueger, chairman of the White House Council
of Economic Advisers during the Obama administration, also expressed
openness to “a smart way” to “maintain strict requirements on the
systemically important financial institutions ... and then ease up on
some of the unnecessary burden on the smaller banks” during an interview
on Bloomberg TV last year.
Still, plenty of other progressive
economists like Paul Krugman, pointing to 75 straight months of job
growth under Obama, have argued there is “zero evidence that Dodd-Frank
has been holding back the economy.”
The elimination of so-called
“job killing regulations” was a vocal campaign priority for President
Trump. And though Republicans in Congress were able to slash some
loopholes into Dodd-Frank by coaxing concessions from the Obama
administration (what advocates called “death by a thousand cuts”), the
GOP and their interest group allies have been licking their chops for a
chance to dismantle the law.
The CHOICE Act, a deregulation
package that passed the House last year, was too extreme for many
Democrats. This new Senate bill may risk some opposition from the far
right for not shedding enough rules, but so far the GOP looks to have
effectively triangulated the issue.
Even under the watchful eye
of a rising populist wing, Democrats remain close to the financial
sector. Commercial banks, in particular, have stepped up campaign
contributions to the bill’s supporters ahead of the vote. Crapo’s bill
ostensibly gives centrist-leaning members the chance to both please an
important donor base that has been howling “overreach” for a decade and
to wave the flag of bipartisanship in an election year with a seemingly
tough map for red-state Democrats.
Five of the Democrats
co-sponsoring the bill are running for reelection in 2018 in states
Trump won, and many of them faced competitive elections last time they
ran in 2012.
Indiana: Joe Donnelly (Won with 50 percent of the vote in 2012)
Missouri: Claire McCaskill (55 percent)
Montana: Jon Tester (49 percent)
West Virginia: Joe Manchin (61 percent)
North Dakota: Heidi Heitkamp (50 percent)
Missouri: Claire McCaskill (55 percent)
Montana: Jon Tester (49 percent)
West Virginia: Joe Manchin (61 percent)
North Dakota: Heidi Heitkamp (50 percent)
The decision of these Democrats to tack towards Trump and the GOP not
only operates under the assumption that the financial industry and
Republicans are right that overreach is strangling growth; it also
presupposes that working with Trump and the GOP to relax rules on
bankers is a winning electoral strategy—that the bipartisanship itself
is a selling point to swing voters. But there’s little evidence to
suggest this is true, with studies showing that negative
partisanship—i.e. hostility toward the opposing side—has been a stronger
force in American politics in recent years. And while polls show that
voters are sympathetic toward small banks, they support strong
regulations of the banking industry as a whole.
There are three
Senate Democrats from Trump states—Ohio’s Sherrod Brown, Pennsylvania’s
Bob Casey, and Wisconsin’s Tammy Baldwin—who are running for re-election
and who so far do not support the bill. Notably absent from the
co-sponsoring crop of Democrats are those senators rumored to be mulling
a run for president in 2020, including Senators Kirsten Gillibrand and
Kamala Harris.
In an emailed statement, a spokesman for Harris
said she “will oppose this legislation because it props up big banks at
the expense of California homeowners and guts protections for
consumers.”
This concern—that a bill sold on the bona fides of
its regional and community bank support may actually engender more
market concentration—is shared by watchdog groups. “This bill lets
larger banks get even bigger by acquiring smaller banks without
triggering any increased regulatory scrutiny,” Marcus Stanley, policy
director at Americans for Financial Reform, told The Financial Times.
According to a Senate staffer close to the negotiations on the
Democratic side, there is cautious optimism that there will be an
open-amendment process, during which the senators currently opposed to
the bill may propose amendments that might then allow them to reconsider
their opposition. But advocacy groups like Indivisible and Public
Citizen are rallying opposition on social media, furiously tweeting out
damning quotes from fact sheets and citing polls showing support for
more banking regulation. They are even hinting at primarying Democrat
co-sponsors.
“Remember Countrywide?” Warren said in an interview
with The New York Times, referring to the mortgage lender infamous for
sub-prime lending abuses during the crisis. “It was about $200 billion,
which is smaller than some of the banks that will be deregulated by this
bill. ... [It] increases the risk of another taxpayer bailout, and I
will continue to challenge supporters of this bill—from both parties—to
explain why they stand on the side of big banks instead of working
families.”
The biggest gamble in deregulating financial
institutions is that banks could once again load up on highly leveraged,
risky assets, precipitating another credit crisis. The political
corollary of that gamble is this: In the event of a crisis, Democrats
will not be able to point the finger at Republicans and Wall Street
greed.
Share prices have now reached heights not seen since the
dotcom bubble in 2000 and the crash of 1929. Goldman Sachs analysts are
forecasting that the market is currently defined by a “rational
exuberance” that could prolong the rally through 2020. But not all
market analysts are so chipper. In a recent foreboding report, veteran
strategists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch warned that the bullish
mood could possibly end as early as 2019 in devastating fashion, citing
signs of “bubble-like behavior” like record-high art prices and rapidly
increasing global debt. “The big risk,” the report argues, is that “the
tech stock euphoria ends” and America enters an era of “Occupy Silicon
Valley, and war on inequality politics in 2019.” Whether a dip as severe
as that comes soon or not at all, consensus is that the bull market is
in its later stages.
If the bipartisan co-sponsors of S.2155
manage to put their bill on President Trump’s desk in its current
framework, then they’ll certainly claim credit for any upswing in the
fortunes of community and regional banks. The true test of success
though, will occur in the years to come, when the system’s weakened
shock absorbers are invariably put to the test.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Talmon Joseph Smith is a writer and editor based in Brooklyn. A former
campaign finance researcher for Issue One and member of GQ’s editorial
staff, he contributes to VICE, The American Prospect, The Huffington
Post, The Village Voice, and other outlets.@talmonsmith
All,
As usual the spineless, cowardly, opportunist, and relentlessly fullashit Democratic Party is an active codependent and servile enabler of the always heinous, voracious, and openly tyrannical righttwing mob known as the Republicans. And it's only going to get much worse very soon. Which is to say as long as we all put up with/and or support it...Stay tuned...
Kofi
Kofi
Business
10 years after financial crisis, Senate prepares to roll back banking rules
by Erica Werner and Damian Paletta
March 4, 2018
The Washington Post
March 4, 2018
The Washington Post
PHOTO:
Senate Banking Committee member Jon Tester (D-Mont.), a moderate,
supports Republicans’ bill to roll back portions of the Dodd-Frank
financial regulations. (Susan Walsh/AP)
The Senate is preparing to scale back the sweeping banking regulations
passed after the 2008 financial crisis, with more than a dozen Democrats
ready to give Republicans the votes they need to weaken one of
President Barack Obama’s largest legislative achievements.
Congress’s appetite for pulling back bank regulations shows the renewed
clout of the financial sector in Washington, not just in the GOP but
also among Democrats. Eight years after nearly every Senate Democrat
backed a sweeping set of new rules for financial firms large and small,
the party is now split, with moderates, several of them facing tough
midterm election contests, working with the opposing party.
The
core of the new bill exempts about two dozen financial companies with
assets between $50 billion and $250 billion from the highest levels of
scrutiny by the Federal Reserve, the nation’s central bank. Supporters
argue that the legislation would bring much-needed relief to midsize and
regional banks that were treated like their much larger counterparts
under the 2010 legislation known as Dodd-Frank. Opponents say it would
weaken the oversight needed to stave off the type of dangerous lending
and investing that brought the U.S. economy to its knees.
“We
invest in women at all levels of our company because it is the only way
to ensure we have the most talented teams we need to work with our
clients and to operate in the communities we serve”—Brian Moynihan, CEO
of Bank of America.
The Senate is slated to take an
initial procedural vote this week to move the measure forward, and if it
eventually becomes law, it would be the most substantial weakening of
Dodd-Frank since it was passed.
“On the 10th anniversary of an
enormous financial crash, Congress should not be passing laws to roll
back regulations on Wall Street banks,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.)
said in an interview. “The bill permits about 25 of the 40 largest banks
in America to escape heightened scrutiny and to be regulated as if they
were tiny little community banks that could have no impact on the
economy.”
VIDEO: 1:19
Trump on cutting regulations: ‘We’re looking now at Dodd-Frank’
Embed
Trump on cutting regulations: ‘We’re looking now at Dodd-Frank’
Embed
While discussing his policy of cutting federal regulations, President
Trump on Jan. 16 said that “we’re looking now at Dodd-Frank” banking
rules. (The Washington Post)
Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.), a Banking
Committee member and one of the new bill’s leading Democratic
supporters, said banks in his largely rural state have been going out of
business in part because of the regulations imposed by Dodd-Frank.
“The Main Street banks, community banks and credit unions didn’t create
the crisis in 2008, and they were getting heavily regulated,” Tester
said, contending that “there’s not one thing in this bill that gives
Wall Street a break.”
Critics dispute those claims, echoing a
Democratic Party schism over financial regulations that pits liberals
such as Warren and top Banking Committee Democrat Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio)
against moderate-leaning Democrats including Tester and Sens. Heidi
Heitkamp (N.D.) and Joe Donnelly (Ind.).
Many of the moderates
face political pressure to establish a centrist voting record,
particularly after voting against the GOP tax cuts in December. Tester,
Heitkamp and Donnelly are all up for reelection in November in states
President Trump won by large margins. All three helped negotiate the
banking legislation with its GOP sponsor, Banking Committee Chairman
Mike Crapo (R-Idaho).
Yet the coalition of Democrats supporting
the bill also includes lawmakers such as Tim Kaine (Va.), Hillary
Clinton’s running mate in the 2016 election, and Mark R. Warner (Va.),
who was among the lead authors of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act but also voiced concerns about
over-regulating smaller banks.
The GOP-led bill appears to have a
clear path to becoming law. The level of Democratic support all but
guarantees that the bill will have the 60 votes needed to pass the
Senate, which will move toward debate on the legislation with a
procedural vote set for Tuesday. And the Trump administration has been
broadly supportive.
The House has already passed legislation that
would repeal larger chunks of Dodd-Frank, so proponents’ biggest
remaining challenge may be to reconcile the House and Senate versions.
Senate Democrats backing their version say they’ll resist any
significant changes.
Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer
(D-N.Y.), who represents Wall Street and is often motivated by the
desire to protect his vulnerable red-state incumbents, opposes the bill,
but he has taken a largely hands-off approach to the debate thus far.
That a Wall Street regulatory rollback is possible is a testament to
the financial sector’s improved standing on Capitol Hill — as well as to
the lobbying muscle of local banks and credit unions present in every
state.
Financial firms upped their campaign contributions to key
Senate Democrats over the last year, with Heitkamp, Donnelly and Tester
becoming the top three Senate recipients of donations from commercial
banks so far in the 2018 campaign cycle , according to the Center for
Responsive Politics. The senators disputed any connection between the
donations and their support for the Dodd-Frank rewrite legislation.
Lobbying efforts ramped up as the Senate debate approached. The Credit
Union National Association descended on Washington in late February to
meet with lawmakers. More than 5,000 credit union advocates, including
employees and chief executives from every state, arrived on Capitol Hill
wearing “vote yes” pins and stickers. They held 600 meetings with
lawmakers.
The in-person push started with a White House meeting
with Trump and Gary Cohn, the director of the National Economic Council,
during which credit union advocates pitched the bill as a way to
rectify Dodd-Frank’s overreach. “We understand the concerns that banks
perpetuated the crash, but those were not credit unions,” said Jim
Nussle, president of the Credit Union National Association, who attended
the meeting.
Small and regional banks have complained that
Dodd-Frank has put them under an unfair supervisory squeeze, punishing
them for the sins of Wall Street. Many lawmakers from both parties have
proved sympathetic to these claims, helping fuel bipartisan backing for
Crapo’s bill.
While the bill’s effects on the financial sector
would only become fully clear after passage, the legislation aims to
strike a middle ground between those seeking to gut Dodd-Frank and those
who want the law left intact — or, at most, to be modified by tweaks
and technical corrections.
The new measure centers on an
exemption for some two dozen financial companies from stricter
supervision by the Federal Reserve. It would lift the asset limit for
this scrutiny from $50 billion to $250 billion, easing — at least
temporarily — scrutiny on banks such as SunTrust and BB&T. Fewer
than 10 U.S. banks have more than $250 billion in assets, although the
Fed would reserve the right to apply tougher scrutiny to a smaller bank
if it felt this was justified.
Critics charge that advocates of
deregulation are guilty of overly short memories and a false sense of
security. There has not been a banking crisis since the Dodd-Frank law —
named for its sponsors, former senator Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) and former
congressman Barney Frank (D-Mass.) — passed a Democratic-controlled
Congress in 2010 on nearly party-line votes and was signed by Obama.
The law was a response to the 2008 financial crisis that felled
hundreds of banks and large financial companies, nearly toppling some of
the largest U.S. financial institutions, including Bank of America and
Goldman Sachs. The Bush administration was forced to seek a $700 billion
rescue package that stabilized the economy by keeping some of the
largest firms afloat.
The crisis was fueled by risky investments
at all levels of the financial system. Local banks and mortgage brokers
offered subprime home loans to people who had little chance of keeping
up with their payments, and then sold those loans to firms up the chain.
They were in turn bundled by larger firms and used for a string of
exotic financial instruments sold around the world. When homeowners
defaulted on their loans en masse, the bonds they’d been bundled into —
as well as other assets based on those bonds — collapsed in value,
threatening to take the global financial system down with them.
The Dodd-Frank law, which tightened supervision of the largest financial
companies, made it harder for banks to use exotic financial instruments
that could destabilize the financial system, tightened mortgage lending
rules and created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to prevent
companies from ripping off borrowers. The law also created a system to
wind down a large failing financial company in a way that limits
taxpayer exposure in the future.
The system for winding down
failing banks has never been tested, and banks have been subjected to
rigorous stress tests to determine whether they can withstand another
shock. A number of large banks have been caught engaging in risky
practices.
Supporters say the bill includes a number of new
consumer protections, including a one-year fraud alert in consumers’
files and a provision aimed at protecting veterans’ credit. Opponents
point to the weakening of stress-test requirements and the elimination
of some homeowner protections, including the blocking of homeowners from
going to court to prevent wrongful foreclosures.
“The public is
not asking for bank deregulation,” argued Brown, who sought compromise
with Crapo on the issue last year before concluding that the bill was
going in a direction he couldn’t support. “This is not a community bank
bill. They say it is. It’s like the tax cuts weren’t a middle-class tax
bill; they want to say it is. This is a bill that helps some of the
largest banks.”
Frank, whose signature law stands to be partially
dismantled by the Crapo bill, opposes the new legislation. But he has
been in touch with senators on both sides and agrees that it leaves the
major protections of Dodd-Frank in place.
He and others have
argued over the years that Dodd-Frank did need adjusting, but — much as
with Obama’s signature law, the Affordable Care Act — most efforts for
small-scale corrections stalled after being swept up into bids for
full-on repeal.
In an interview, Frank disputed the suggestion
that the Crapo bill might lead to another financial crisis, arguing that
the rules on mortgages and derivatives remain essentially unchanged.
And Frank said he’d rather see Heitkamp, Tester and Donnelly vote for
the legislation and get reelected in November than vote against it and
lose.
“If they were defeated, in the next Congress you’d get a
much worse bill,” Frank said. “The community banks drive this. They’re
in everyone’s district.”
Democrats have been lured into supporting bank-friendly laws in the past only to regret it years later.
The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act passed in 1999 with the support of 138 House
Democrats, and it was signed into law by President Bill Clinton. That
law allowed commercial banks and investment banks to merge, a phenomenon
that many analysts later argued paved the way for the 2008 financial
crisis by creating wobbly behemoths such as Citigroup.
In 2000,
Clinton signed the Commodity Futures Modernization Act, a law that led
to the rapid expansion of certain complex financial instruments that
were at the heart of the financial crisis eight years later.
Renae Merle and Jeff Stein contributed to this report.
3115 Comments
ABOUT THE AUTHORS:
Erica Werner has worked at The Washington Post since 2017, covering
Congress with a focus on economic policy. Before that, she worked at the
Associated Press for more than 17 years, starting in the Los Angeles
bureau and going on to cover the White House and Congress.
Follow @ericawerner
Damian Paletta is White House economic policy reporter for The Washington Post. Before joining The Post, he covered the White House for the Wall Street Journal.
Follow @damianpaletta
Damian Paletta is White House economic policy reporter for The Washington Post. Before joining The Post, he covered the White House for the Wall Street Journal.
Follow @damianpaletta
“To me this bill says it all about how Washington works,” Warren said in an interview. “This is Washington working for the rich and powerful, not for the American people.”--Senator Elizabeth Warren
All,
As usual the spineless, cowardly, opportunist, and relentlessly fullashit Democratic Party is an active codependent and servile enabler of the always heinous, voracious, and openly tyrannical righttwing mob known as the Republicans. And it's only going to get much worse very soon. Which is to say as long as we all put up with/and or support it...Stay tuned...
Kofi
Victory in sight for Democrats defying Warren on bank bill.
For the bill’s supporters, the legislation is a chance to show voters that it’s still possible to get things done in an often paralyzed Congress.
by ZACHARY WARMBRODT
03/05/2018
Politico
03/05/2018
Politico
Republicans and Democrats in the Senate are poised to pass a bill this week that would relax key banking regulations, steamrolling opposition from outspoken liberals like Sen. Elizabeth Warren who have built their careers calling for tougher oversight of Wall Street.
A core group of moderate Democrats is brushing off an escalating opposition campaign by the Massachusetts senator and other progressives like Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio, instead joining with GOP colleagues to reverse restrictions on large and small banks that were enacted in the wake of the 2008 financial meltdown.
For the bill’s supporters, the legislation is a chance to show voters that it’s still possible to get things done in an often paralyzed Congress. They include at least 12 Democrats, several of whom face tough reelection campaigns in states that President Donald Trump won in 2016.
"I hope that our bipartisan work can rub off on the rest of Congress so we can break through the partisan gridlock that has plagued Washington for too long," said Sen. Jon Tester of Montana, one of the Democrats who has negotiated the bill.
As supporters work to attract even more votes from Democrats, they argue that the bill would right-size post-crisis rules imposed on small and regional lenders and help make it easier for them to provide credit.
Still, most Senate Democrats are expected to oppose the legislation, including Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who announced his opposition Friday afternoon after declining for months to take a public position on the divisive issue.
“There will be a split in the caucus,” said Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), who was also part of the group that negotiated the legislation. "But I believe we’ll get between 65 and 70 votes.”
The bill marks the biggest legislative change to banking industry oversight since Democrats enacted the Dodd-Frank Act, the historic 2010 law that imposed reams of new rules on lenders after the global financial crisis. The first procedural vote on the bill is scheduled for Tuesday.
Yet while the ink was still drying on Dodd-Frank, the seeds of the bill on the floor this week were being planted.
“Literally, from the night of the conference on Dodd-Frank, there have been discussions about the need to go in and make some fixes,” said Senate Banking Chairman Mike Crapo, the lead author of the deregulation bill.
“Almost absolute resistance” by President Barack Obama and former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid stopped it from happening sooner, Crapo said. Trump has pledged to scale back Dodd-Frank and is expected to sign the bill once it hits his desk.
Obama and Reid themselves faced pressure from Warren, who in 2014 tried to rally support for shutting down the government over a Dodd-Frank rollback that was slipped into a must-pass appropriations bill.
She was unsuccessful in stopping the repeal from becoming law, though the event illustrated the leverage she could wield by focusing her millions of followers on fighting attempts to deregulate the finance industry.
But even after that event, centrist Democrats began negotiating with Crapo and other Republicans on the proposals that are about to appear on the Senate floor.
“We have been negotiating for about four years,” said Crapo, who has irked conservatives and big banks such as Citigroup and Capital One by compromising in the talks. “We’ve been working toward those areas where we have been able to find consensus. This year it came together.”
The bill would make numerous changes to safeguards sitting between lenders, consumers and the broader economy.
Among the provisions: Easier mortgage regulations for small banks; new exemptions from tougher oversight for regional banks with $50 billion to $250 billion in assets; a directive to the Federal Reserve to tailor its rules for large banks and relaxed capital and liquidity requirements for some of the nation's biggest financial institutions.
The legislation includes a handful of consumer protection measures that critics have panned as an insufficient trade-off for the regulatory rollbacks in the bill.
One is a proposal pushed by Delaware Democrats Tom Carper and Chris Coons that would require free credit monitoring for military members.
The provision has rankled credit-reporting agencies that will be forced to offer millions of dollars worth of free products, as well as conservatives such as Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform, who has complained to Crapo that the proposal would expose the credit-reporting companies to "new liability which the trial bar will certainly try to exploit."
Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) has concerns with the provision and hasn't decided whether he will support the bill, a source familiar with his thinking said.
While Warren will likely be unsuccessful in stopping the package, she is again trying to activate her base to fight it.
On Friday, she sent an email to supporters in which she attacked “Republicans AND Democrats" for supporting the bill. She warned that “the bank lobbyists are getting ready to pop champagne and light their cigars.” Warren is expected to offer amendments that could force her colleagues to take tough positions as they stick together to defend the bill and avoid fracturing the political coalition underpinning it.
While the bill has enough support to escape a filibuster, aides and lobbyists identified a handful of additional Democrats beyond the legislation's co-sponsors who could potentially support it. They include Sens. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) and Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.).
For the team of moderate Democrats who have been negotiating with Crapo and other Republicans, it’s a positive story in which they will likely have the upper hand when the Senate votes to pass the bill. In addition to Warner and Tester, Sens. Heidi Heitkamp (D-N.D.) and Joe Donnelly (D-Ind.) have been trying to assemble the bill for years.
Democrats who support the legislation are proud they were able to convince colleagues to get over the stigma around reopening Dodd-Frank, a signature achievement of Obama's.
They won’t be shy about attending a signing ceremony with Trump, whom their constituents helped send to the White House.
"I would not understate the influence of Elizabeth Warren, but in this particular case, on this particular bill, what's prevailing is the pretty strong belief of this group of moderate Democrats and also their political survival," Capital Alpha Partners Director Ian Katz said. "If you're running for reelection in states like Indiana, North Dakota and Montana, which Trump won very decisively, agreeing with Elizabeth Warren isn't necessarily helpful.
Labels: Corporate capitalism, Dodd-Frank law, financial regulation, Lobbyists, Matt Taibbi, Political corruption, Wall Street
FROM THE PANOPTICON REVIEW ARCHIVES
(Originally posted on June 4, 2012):
Monday, June 4, 2012
Matt
Taibbi On Why The Obama Administration Has Failed To Regulate Wall
Street And How The Banks Continue To Ruthlessly Exploit the United
States
All,
This
is the biggest and by far the most important and relevant story in all
of American politics (and economics) today. The massive tragedy is that
relatively few people are even paying any attention at all given the
ongoing sideshow spectacle of the upcoming presidential elections whose
outcome will--as always--be ruthlessly controlled and criminally
directed by the super wealthy elites represented by the banks,
corporations, and other Wall Street financial institutions no matter who
"wins" the election. As usual the brilliant political journalist and
economic analyst Matt Taibbi does a masterful and very revealing job of
telling us exactly how and why this is so and what it really means...
Kofi
How Wall Street Killed Financial Reform
It's bad enough that the banks strangled the Dodd-Frank law. Even worse is the way they did it - with a big assist from Congress and the White House.
by Matt Taibbi
May 10, 2012
Rolling Stone
Two years ago, when he signed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, President Barack Obama bragged that he'd dealt a crushing blow to the extravagant financial corruption that had caused the global economic crash in 2008. "These reforms represent the strongest consumer financial protections in history," the president told an adoring crowd in downtown D.C. on July 21st, 2010. "In history."
This was supposed to be the big one. At 2,300 pages, the new law ostensibly rewrote the rules for Wall Street. It was going to put an end to predatory lending in the mortgage markets, crack down on hidden fees and penalties in credit contracts, and create a powerful new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to safeguard ordinary consumers. Big banks would be banned from gambling with taxpayer money, and a new set of rules would limit speculators from making the kind of crazy-ass bets that cause wild spikes in the price of food and energy. There would be no more AIGs, and the world would never again face a financial apocalypse when a bank like Lehman Brothers went bankrupt.
Most importantly, even if any of that fiendish crap ever did happen again, Dodd-Frank guaranteed we wouldn't be expected to pay for it. "The American people will never again be asked to foot the bill for Wall Street's mistakes," Obama promised. "There will be no more taxpayer-funded bailouts. Period."
Two years later, Dodd-Frank is groaning on its deathbed. The giant reform bill turned out to be like the fish reeled in by Hemingway's Old Man – no sooner caught than set upon by sharks that strip it to nothing long before it ever reaches the shore. In a furious below-the-radar effort at gutting the law – roundly despised by Washington's Wall Street paymasters – a troop of water-carrying Eric Cantor Republicans are speeding nine separate bills through the House, all designed to roll back the few genuinely toothy portions left in Dodd-Frank. With the Quislingian covert assistance of Democrats, both in Congress and in the White House, those bills could pass through the House and the Senate with little or no debate, with simple floor votes – by a process usually reserved for things like the renaming of post offices or a nonbinding resolution celebrating Amelia Earhart's birthday.
The fate of Dodd-Frank over the past two years is an object lesson in the government's inability to institute even the simplest and most obvious reforms, especially if those reforms happen to clash with powerful financial interests. From the moment it was signed into law, lobbyists and lawyers have fought regulators over every line in the rulemaking process. Congressmen and presidents may be able to get a law passed once in a while – but they can no longer make sure it stays passed. You win the modern financial-regulation game by filing the most motions, attending the most hearings, giving the most money to the most politicians and, above all, by keeping at it, day after day, year after fiscal year, until stealing is legal again. "It's like a scorched-earth policy," says Michael Greenberger, a former regulator who was heavily involved with the drafting of Dodd-Frank. "It requires constant combat. And it never, ever ends."
That the banks have just about succeeded in strangling Dodd-Frank is probably not news to most Americans – it's how they succeeded that's the scary part. The banks followed a five-point strategy that offers a dependable blueprint for defeating any regulation – and for guaranteeing that when it comes to the economy, might will always equal right.
STEP 1: STRANGLE IT IN THE WOMB
The first advantage the banks had lay in the fact that for all Obama's bluster, Dodd-Frank was never such a badass law to begin with. In fact, Obama's initial response to the devastating financial events of 2008 represented a major departure from the historical precedent his own party had set during the 1930s, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt launched an audacious rewrite of the rules governing the American economy following the Great Crash of 1929.
Upon entering office, FDR was in exactly the same position Obama found himself in after his inauguration in 2009. Then, as now, the American economy was in tatters after the bursting of a massive financial bubble, brought on when speculators borrowed huge sums and gambled on unregistered securities in largely unregulated exchanges. This mania for instant riches led to an explosion of Wall Street fraud and manipulation, creating a mountain of illusory growth divorced from the real-world economy: Of the $50 billion in securities sold in America in the 1920s, half turned out to be worthless.
Roosevelt's response to all of this was to pass a number of sweeping new laws that focused on a single theme: protecting consumers by forcing the business of Wall Street into the light. The Securities Act of 1933 required all publicly traded companies to register themselves and offer prospectuses to investors; the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 forced publicly traded companies to make regular financial disclosures; and the Commodity Exchange Act of 1936 required all commodities and futures to be traded on organized exchanges. FDR also created the FDIC to protect bank depositors (through an insurance fund paid for by the banks themselves) and passed the Glass-Steagall Act to separate insurance companies, investment banks and commercial banks. Post-New Deal, if you put money in a bank, you knew it was safe, and if you bought stock, you knew what you were buying.
This reform strategy worked for more than half a century – and it offered Obama a clear outline of how to respond to the crash he faced. What made 2008 possible was that Wall Street had moved its speculative frenzy away from the regulated exchange system created by FDR, and into darker, less-regulated markets that had coalesced around brand-new financial innovations like credit default swaps and collateralized-debt obligations. It wasn't that the old system had broken down; Wall Street had just moved the playground.
All Obama needed to do to rescue the economy and protect consumers was to make sure that the new playground had some rules. That meant moving swaps and other derivatives onto open exchanges, making sure that federally insured banks that dabbled in those dangerous markets retained more capital, and coming up with some kind of plan to prevent the next AIG or Lehman Brothers disaster – i.e., a plan for unwinding failing companies that wouldn't require federal bailouts.
The initial proposal for Dodd-Frank addressed most of those concerns. As drafted, it would have created a system for shutting down failing megafirms, required swaps to be traded and cleared on regulated exchanges, and restored the spirit of Glass-Steagall through the so-called Volcker Rule, which would have prevented federally insured banks from engaging in dangerous speculation. It envisioned a powerful new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to represent the interests of consumers against Wall Street, a bureau headed not by some banker stooge but by an actual consumer advocate and financial expert like Elizabeth Warren, the Harvard professor who came up with the idea. And it would have cleaned up the mortgage markets by ending predatory home-lending and forcing everyone in the market, from homeowners to banks to investors buying mortgage securities, to post real cash and keep "skin in the game" when buying or selling a mortgage.
Then, behind the closed doors of Congress, Wall Street lobbyists and their allies got to work. Though many of the new regulatory concepts survived in the final bill, most of them wound up whittled down to such an extreme degree that they were barely recognizable in the end. Over the course of a ferocious year of negotiations in the House and the Senate, the rules on swaps were riddled with loopholes: One initially promising rule preventing federally insured banks from trading in risky derivatives ultimately ended up exempting a huge chunk of the swaps market from the new law. The Volcker Rule banning proprietary gambling survived, but not before getting its brains beaten out in last-minute conference negotiations; Wall Street first won broad exemptions for mutual funds, insurers and trusts, and then, with the aid of both Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, managed to secure a lunatic and arbitrary numerical exemption that allows banks to gamble up to three percent of their "Tier 1" capital, a number that for big banks stretches to the billions.
Then there was the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which went from being a powerful, independent agency run by Elizabeth Warren to a smaller bureau within the Federal Reserve System run by - well, anyone but Elizabeth Warren. With Geithner and Republicans in Congress blocking her once-inevitable appointment, we no longer had Warren playing watchdog to Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke - instead we had new CFPB head Richard Cordray, a former Ohio attorney general who enjoys far less of a popular mandate than Warren, forced to operate within the bureaucracy of Bernanke's Fed.
But the best example of how the watering-down process helped make Dodd-Frank ripe for a later killing was the question of Too Big to Fail. Obama, Geithner and the Democratic leadership in Congress never seriously entertained enacting the most obvious and necessary reform at all – breaking up the so-called "systemically important financial institutions" (the congressional term for "banks so huge we'll have to bail them out if they collapse"). Rather than simply stopping these firms from getting so big that they'd blow up the universe in a collapse, the Democrats opted for a half-clever semantic trick, claiming they had solved the future bailout question with Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act, known as the "Orderly Liquidation Authority" or "OLA" section of the bill.
In a nod to FDR, Title II would have forced major financial companies to pay $19 billion into an FDIC-style fund that would cover the cost of any future bailouts. But then the balance of power in the Senate was upset by the election of Republican Scott Brown to Ted Kennedy's seat in Massachusetts. As the clock wound down toward the bill's passage, Brown insisted on a change: Instead of making ginormous companies pay $19 billion in advance, the FDIC would first use taxpayer money to pay for any bailouts, and then spend years trying to recover that money from Wall Street by means of an assessment process so convoluted that you could grow a four-foot beard in the time it would take to understand it. Republicans managed to wrangle support, in conference, for the "bailout now, pay later" idea, and it made its way into the final bill.
Fast-forward to 2012. Rep. Paul Ryan, the self-styled Edward Scissorhands of Republican budget slashing, gathers the GOP leadership together and tells the chairman of each committee that he wants them, collectively, to come up with $261 billion in cuts. Ryan demands $35 billion of the cuts come from the Financial Services Committee, which oversees much of the regulatory apparatus that would enforce Dodd-Frank. The committee is now chaired not by the reform bill's namesake, Rep. Barney Frank, but by median-intellected Spencer Bachus of Alabama, who last year voted to delay Dodd-Frank reforms designed to prevent swaps disasters like the one that drove his home turf of Jefferson County into bankruptcy.
Bachus' solution to coming up with massive budget cuts? Eliminate the entire Title II section of Dodd-Frank. If another bank failed, Bachus argued, it would take way too long to recoup the bailout money from Wall Street through that crazy assessment process that Republicans themselves had insisted on only two years earlier. In the end, the logic went, taxpayers would wind up footing the bill anyway, so better just to scrap the entire plan to have the FDIC pay for the bailouts upfront – thus "saving" taxpayers some $22 billion.
The logic, of course, is complete nonsense. Without Title II, we'd be right back where we started – rushing to implement an expensive bailout in the midst of a crisis, without any way to make Wall Street repay the money. But because Democrats had preemptively surrendered on the original idea of forcing Wall Street to pay into an FDIC-style kitty ahead of time, Republicans were now in a position to push the whole bailout plan off the pier via a simple budget resolution.
To make up the rest of the $35 billion in budget cuts ordered by Paul Ryan, Bachus also proposed slashing Obama's mortgage-aid program and making the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau subordinate to a congressional appropriations process – meaning that its budget could be subjected to never-ending attacks by the GOP. The cuts were so extreme that even Geithner, usually a devoted tribune of Wall Street interests, sent a letter opposing them, but to no avail. The budget-slashing resolution passed the House this April.
The problem with attacking laws in Congress, of course, is that you need to control both chambers to make it stick. The Bachus-budget gambit may not have much of a chance of passing in the Senate, which is still controlled by the Democrats, but that won't faze opponents of Dodd-Frank, who have found an even more dependable arena for gutting the new law:
STEP 2: SUE, SUE, SUE
While death and taxes may be only relative certainties in today's economy – failing megabanks neither die nor pay taxes anymore – one thing that was always absolutely certain from the start was that Wall Street was going to sue the living hell out of Washington before the ink was even dry on Dodd-Frank. It took a little while, but the banks very quickly found a tried-and-true method of tying up the reforms in court.
Wall Street's first big win involved a small-but-important change known as the "proxy access" rule, which made it easier for people who own stakes in a company to remove directors from the board – giving shareholders more power to rein in corrupt or overpaid company executives. More democracy in business sounded like a good idea to almost everyone. But Wall Street has a dependable playbook for getting rid of any reform, no matter how small, that leads to greater accountability. "First, they hire a shit-ton of lobbyists to go to the regulators," says Jim Collura, spokesman for the Commodity Markets Oversight Coalition. "Then, they beat the crap out of them during the rulemaking process. And then, when that's over, they litigate the hell out of them."
Sue their asses! For all the right's supposed hatred of "activist judges," conservatives immediately flocked to the courts in search of magistrates willing to casually overturn the work of elected officials. In the case of the proxy access rule, Wall Street convinced its two favorite lobbying arms, the Business Roundtable and the Chamber of Commerce, to sue the Securities Exchange Commission over a technicality, claiming that the agency had not done a proper cost-benefit analysis before it instituted the new rule. In an appropriately loathsome touch, the Chamber's legal team was led by one Eugene Scalia, son of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. The younger Scalia, who looks like the product of a twisted test-tube experiment that crossed his father with Ari Fleischer, pitched a federal appeals court on the idea that the proxy access rule was "arbitrary and capricious," and that the SEC hadn't spent enough time studying the rule's effects on "efficiency, competition and capital formation."
In fact, the agency had produced 60 pages of cost-benefit analysis and had spent, according to SEC chief Mary Schapiro, some 21,000 man-hours working on the bill and studying its effects. Still, the court wasn't impressed. In his opinion, presiding judge and Reagan appointee Douglas Ginsburg peed all over Dodd-Frank, vacating the rule, which he dismissed as "unutterably mindless." With striking chutzpah, considering that he was ruling in a case brought by the mother of all special interest lobbies, Ginsburg also denounced the shareholder rule as a gift to special interests, particularly "unions and government pension funds."
Almost immediately after the win, the gloating Scalia issued a thinly veiled threat to regulators, letting them know that any attempt to implement more limits on Wall Street would likely result in the same kind of lawsuit. "I would hope the agencies are taking to heart the potential consequences for Dodd-Frank rules," he chirped.
The success of the lawsuit cemented Wall Street's strategy for doing away with Dodd-Frank. Rather than challenge the constitutionality of the bill in one broad suit, the finance industry would take the bill apart by pulling out one fingernail at a time. "Dodd-Frank is not one thing but many," Margaret Tahyar, a partner at the white-shoe corporate defense firm Davis Polk, told reporters last year. "There is no reasonable constitutional or statutory challenge on the whole – only on the bits and pieces."
Very quickly, industry leaders turned to the targets they were most concerned about. This time, two bank-friendly industry groups sued the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) to stop it from implementing "position limits" in the derivatives market. Unlike the proxy access rule, which was essentially a procedural issue, position limits got right to the heart of a monstrous international problem – the perversion of fuel and food prices by financial speculators. The oil bubble of 2008, in which a barrel of oil rose to a preposterous $146 before falling to an equally preposterous $35, was one result of such wanton speculation; the surge in global food prices that led to the Middle East revolutions last year was another.
The position limits set by Dodd-Frank were designed to prevent any one speculator from controlling more than 25 percent of a commodities market at any given moment. To say that this is an issue that shouldn't be litigated over a technicality is an understatement; it's not a stretch to say that the viability of capitalism itself is at least partially at stake here. The rule, after all, would help ensure that prices are pegged to the real supply and demand of real producers and consumers, not to fantasy bets placed by market-monopolizing speculators. But the industry sued the CFTC over the exact same issue – the supposed lack of sufficient cost-benefit analysis – that the Chamber of Commerce used to derail the proxy access rule. And once again, the industry hired the ass-kicking Scalia, who argued that the CFTC had failed to provide "sufficient evidence" for its decision to establish position limits.
In an even more awesome demonstration of sheer balls, Scalia & Co. also argued that the CFTC's vote to establish position limits was invalid because one of the agency's commissioners, Michael Dunn, did not really believe in the law. Dunn had quit the CFTC to take a cushy job at a Wall Street-friendly law firm, and on the way out the door, he whined that he had only voted for position limits because Dodd-Frank forced him to, calling the rule a "cure for a disease that does not exist." So under the novel test offered by Scalia, rules like position limits – approved by Congress after months of debate – could be invalidated simply because a federal commissioner who signed off on the details wasn't emotionally on board at the moment of the rule's conception.
The lawsuit by Scalia & Co. succeeded in gumming up the works. The industry has tried to get the court to issue an immediate stay on the implementation of position limits, and the case is likely to drag on for months. Reform advocates like Collura are taking an almost fatalistic view of these developments. "Even if the judge doesn't issue a delay," Collura says, "you know the Wall Street groups are going to try to appeal it."
STEP 3: IF YOU CAN'T WIN, STALL
You might think otherwise, but it doesn't naturally follow that because a law has been passed by Congress and signed by the president, said law actually has to be implemented. With Dodd-Frank, the SEC took a brilliant approach to submarining one of its own regulations. The agency was supposed to begin enforcing the new proxy access rule by late 2010. Instead, in October 2010, it granted speculators a last-minute stay – essentially giving the Chamber of Commerce time to prepare its lawsuit to permanently kill the rule.
Position limits are another example. Dodd-Frank ordered the CFTC to begin enforcing the new rule no later than January 17th, 2011. But January 17th came and went, and – no position limits! Gary Gensler, the head of the CFTC and a former executive of Goldman Sachs, then announced that he hoped to implement the rule by September 2011. But September came and went, and soon it was 2012, and before you knew it, the CFTC, like the SEC, was in court, facing a lawsuit that would permanently kill the rule.
Even the president got into the stalling game. During the year of nonaction on position limits, the "disease that did not exist" – energy speculation – returned to ravage the American gasoline market. In the winter of 2011, oil soared above $100 a barrel, despite fundamentals of supply and demand that would have suggested a price drop. Obama blasted fuel speculators for the price hike and announced that he was creating the Oil and Gas Price Fraud Working Group to "root out any cases of fraud or manipulation in the oil markets." He added, in stern and stirring tones, "We're going to make sure that nobody is taking advantage of American consumers for their own short-term gain."
This was a curious decision. If Obama really wanted to stop speculation in the oil markets, he didn't need to create a brand-new task force that would have to start from scratch to deal with a hellishly complex problem that Congress and the CFTC had already spent years studying. "An easier way to deal with excessive oil speculation," one senior Senate aide explains, "is for the president to just pick up the phone, call Gary Gensler and say, 'The Dodd-Frank Act required you to put in strong position limits by January 17th, 2011. Get off your butt and act.'"
The Oil and Gas Working Group turned out to be a complete sham. In its year of ostensible existence, the panel met only a few times, then never bothered to convene again. One source on the Hill tells me that some of the members were not even aware that they'd been named to the task force for months. It was such a Potemkin committee that when oil prices once again shot up past $100 a barrel this year, Obama was hilariously forced to announce that he was "reconstituting" the task force, even though it had never officially disbanded. "It's a joke," says Greenberger, the former regulator. "They've done absolutely nothing."
Many key sections of Dodd-Frank, in fact, are now experiencing such "unforeseen" delays. The Volcker Rule, which severely restricts the ability of banks to gamble with taxpayer-insured money, is in the midst of an impressive double delay. Regulators have been so slow to wade through the flood of 17,000 comment letters submitted on the rule, most of them from Wall Street interests, that they may not be finished writing the regulation by the Dodd-Frank-mandated deadline of July 21st, 2012 – two years after the bill passed.
But instead of kicking regulators in the pants, six senators, led by Republican Mike Crapo of Idaho, introduced legislation to give regulators more time to (not) finish writing the law. On April 19th, the Federal Reserve announced that it won't implement the Volcker Rule until 2014 – an extra two years that will give Wall Street plenty of time to find a way to kill the thing for good.
STEP 4: BULLY THE REGULATORS
A seldom-considered factor in Dodd-Frank is that Congress controls the funding for the federal regulators who are charged with carrying out the new law. Last year, after Republicans attempted to slash the CFTC's funding by more than 33 percent, Congress settled for freezing the agency's budget, despite the fact that under Dodd-Frank, the market that the CFTC is responsible for overseeing soared from $40 trillion to $340 trillion. That same year, Republicans tried to cut the SEC's budget by more than $25 million.
This results in a curious dynamic: When Wall Street is frustrated by regulators in the rule-making process, it can simply lobby Congress to rein them in. The regulators are then forced to strategically surrender on the rules in order to stave off budget cuts, Eugene Scalia or whatever other horror-show phenomena Congress and the financial industry might throw their way.
Take those huge Paul Ryan-led budget cuts that the House passed in April, scrapping the entire bailout portion of Dodd-Frank. The cuts may not survive in the Senate, which is still controlled by Democrats. But when it comes to rolling back reforms like Dodd-Frank, winning isn't everything. These continual whippings of the new law in the House serve a larger purpose, which is to frighten and intimidate regulators like the SEC and the CFTC, who aren't even finished writing the law's actual rules. The message is clear: If you don't write the rules in the weakest way possible, we have the juice to overturn you in Congress.
"What this is, above all else, is a play to put the House on record," says one congressional staffer familiar with the budget-cutting battle. "It's a leverage tactic. If they have 75 percent of the Financial Services Committee that says, 'You've made mistakes,' or 'This is too gray,' that is a huge hole card."
Even the CFTC admits this pressure exists: Commissioner Bart Chilton warned in March that his regulators risk being "scared into making rules and regulations that are weak or ineffective because we are overly concerned about what we call 'litigation risk.'" According to Marcus Stanley, policy director for Americans for Financial Reform, one regulator admitted that he worries in advance about Wall Street going over his head. "If we make this rule too tough," the regulator told Stanley, "industry is just going to go to Congress and punch it full of holes."
A prime example of the crack suicide-squad preemptive-surrender strategy practiced by regulators involves the provisions of Dodd-Frank designed to curtail complex derivatives, like swaps, which caused disasters like the crash of AIG and the bankruptcy of Jefferson County, Alabama. Under the law, the SEC and the CFTC must decide which swaps dealers will be governed by new rules, requiring them to maintain more capital and collateral. Originally, the agencies were thinking of regulating any dealer who manages more than $100 million in swaps. But then Rep. Randy Hultgren, a Republican from Illinois, proposed H.R. 3727 – one of the nine GOP-sponsored bills to kill Dodd-Frank – that would raise the threshold to $3 billion in swaps. Overreacting to industry pressure, both the SEC and the CFTC then volunteered to raise the threshold to $8 billion. That means at least two-thirds of all swaps dealers in America will now be exempt from Dodd-Frank. Given the new threshold, consumer advocates calculate, you could make 1,600 swaps transactions a year, each worth $5 million, and still not have to so much as register as a swaps dealer.
The thought provokes something verging on despair in those who have devoted themselves to fighting for real financial reform. "If I didn't have to spend my whole life in this," Stanley says sadly, "it would be funny."
STEP 5: PASS A GAZILLION LOOPHOLES
By the beginning of this year, as a result of all of these threats, delays and lawsuits, Americans could barely see Dodd-Frank's footprint in their everyday economic life. Yet Wall Street was still insufficiently convinced that key portions of Dodd-Frank were really dead. So it went over the heads of regulators and impelled Republicans in the House to create an avalanche of new laws designed to undercut the rules the CFTC and SEC were already heroically failing to write.
You might wonder how a bunch of lunkhead Republican congressmen would even know how to write a coordinated series of "technical fixes" to derivatives regulation, a universe so complicated that it has become hard to find anyone on the Hill who truly understands the subject. (One congressman who sits on the Financial Services Committee laughingly admitted that when the crash of 2008 happened, he had to look up "credit default swaps" on Wikipedia.) It turns out, they had help from the inside. Scott O'Malia, a Republican commissioner on the CFTC who formerly served as an aide to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, apparently sent a member of his staff over to the House to help the Republicans write bills to undercut the CFTC's authority. Originally a Bush appointee, O'Malia ignited a controversy when he was renominated to the CFTC by Obama because he had once been a lobbyist for Mirant, an energy company that was caught withholding power from California during blackouts. One of Mirant's subsidiaries was even fined $12.5 million for attempting to manipulate natural gas prices.
Now, Obama's own appointee is reportedly leading the charge against finance reform. "O'Malia has assigned a staffer to quarterback all of these bills," says Greenberger. "He's orchestrating a sort of under-cover-of-darkness approach to driving holes in Dodd-Frank."
The nine bills being contemplated by Congress take a variety of approaches to gutting Dodd-Frank. Two bills, H.R. 1840 and H.R. 2308, are essentially stalling tactics, requiring regulators to undertake more of those sweeping cost-benefit analy ses that result in lengthy delays. Another bill, H.R. 3283, is more substantive: Sponsored by Connecticut Democrat and hedge-fund industry BFF Jim Himes, it exempts foreign affiliates of U.S. swaps dealers from all Dodd-Frank oversight. The rule, if implemented, would make the next AIG possible, given that AIG was undone by half a trillion dollars in derivative bets produced by such a foreign affiliate – its London-based financial products outfit, AIGFP. If passed, says Rep. Brad Miller, a Democrat from North Carolina, H.R. 3283 would leave a "massive, gaping hole" in Dodd-Frank. "It would be very easy to move those trades to whatever the most indulgent country would be," Miller explains.
The bill also exempts from oversight any swaps deals between company affiliates – meaning that Goldman Hong Kong can sell swaps to Goldman New York without having to deal with Dodd-Frank. That sounds harmless, but when you combine it with the AIG-style exemption, a bank would basically be able to get around Dodd-Frank entirely by creating its swaps products at an overseas branch, or moving them back and forth between affiliates.
An even more distressing bill, which recently raced through the committee process with a simple voice vote, is H.R. 3336, granting broad exemptions from swaps regulations to any company that offers "extensions of credit" to customers. There are some who are convinced that once the financial industry's lawyers get hold of this "extensions of credit" line, they will use it to win exemptions for banks engaged in almost any kind of lending activity – including those involved with municipal-bond offerings, one of the most dependably corrupt businesses in the American economy.
"If all of these bills pass," says Stanley, "I don't know why we wouldn't just invite the industry lobbyists in to rewrite the rules."
All of these derivatives issues are oppressively dull and technical, and it's extremely difficult for most people to imagine how something like Jim Himes' exemption for foreign affiliates can actually affect their daily lives. But having an unregulated market instead of a regulated one might mean you'll pay an extra 50 cents for every gallon of gas (or possibly more, even according to Goldman Sachs). Or you might have to pay hundreds or thousands more in taxes every year because your town or county or country, if you happen to live in Greece, grossly overpaid an investment bank when it borrowed money. An unregulated derivatives market essentially gives Wall Street a way to place hidden taxes on everything in the world.
The best way to explain where those hidden taxes come from is to compare a regulated market to an unregulated one. It's the difference between buying soap and buying drugs. You go into a corner store and there's a price tag on the soap, but you can always go across the street, or on the Internet, to see what soap costs someplace else. But when you go to buy an eight ball of coke, you have to ask your dealer what the price is, and it's not like you can compare prices online. If you're tough and streetwise and you know what coke costs, you might get it for a couple hundred bucks. But if you're some quivering Ivy Leaguer idling in a Lexus, the price might be $400.
That's how the swaps market works. It operates completely in the dark. If you're some Podunk town in Texas or Alabama and you need swaps financing, you've got to ask Goldman Sachs or Morgan Stanley what it costs. There's no exchange where you can compare prices. And modern investment bankers are ethically a notch below your average drug dealer. They will extract from their customer – a town, an airline, a chain of retail stores – whatever they think he'll pay. And that extra cost will be passed on to you by the overcharged customer, in the form of higher taxes, bigger home-heating bills, higher sewer rates or pricier airline tickets. Wall Street will be taking a bite out of you every time you write a check.
Under normal circumstances, seeing the Republicans send a bunch of evil bills like the derivatives exemption to the Democrat-controlled Senate wouldn't scare reform advocates too much. But in March and April, something happened that sent progressives into a veritable panic – the passage of the so-called JOBS Act, a sweeping, bank-fellating deregulatory law that rolled back a smorgasbord of regulations designed to protect investors from fraud in the IPO markets. The White House, eager to greenlight "crowdfunding" investments and a handful of other sensible reforms contained in the bill, leaned on the Senate leadership to send the measure straight to the floor for a vote. That meant this monster deregulatory bill went directly into the books with minimal testimony, no committee hearings and no real debate of any kind.
Now, in the wake of the JOBS Act fiasco, many reform advocates expect the same scenario to repeat itself with the nine bills to roll back Dodd-Frank. In the House, a number of the most dangerous derivatives bills have been passed by "suspension," a simplified voice-voting process usually reserved for uncontroversial items. The truly sinister thing is that, in order for a bill to be put on the suspension calendar, the two parties must agree – meaning that Democrats signed off on this Trojan-horse method of treating complex, economy-altering bills as minor technical "fixes."
The truth is that Dodd-Frank is so huge, and contains so many complicated new rules, that there are, in fact, many areas where small technical fixes are needed. H.R. 4235, one of the nine bills brought before Congress, resolves a real problem with the way swaps data is collected, an issue that was preventing foreign swaps dealers from getting onboard with the reform. But when needed fixes like this are thrown in side by side with a mind-boggling exemption for swaps dealers like H.R. 3336, which hits the floor as the innocuously named "Small Business Credit Availability Act," all those members of Congress who don't sit on the Financial Services Committee will have no way of telling which bill is the minor technical fix and which is the sweeping repeal. Moreover, when those members see that some bills are co-sponsored by Democrats, and that the Democratic leadership agreed to put the bills on the suspension calendar for a simple voice vote, many will take it as a cue that it's OK to vote for the rollbacks.
That's particularly true because most members of Congress know that the public seldom pays any attention to the fiendish complexities of things like derivatives reform. "I've never had someone back in the district say to me, 'I think derivatives need to be traded on an exchange,'" says Miller. "These are the kinds of issues that aren't going to have any pop in a 30-second ad."
The nine bills to gut Dodd-Frank could also receive a JOBS Act-style welcome when they reach the Senate. There are only two Senate committees with the jurisdiction to tackle these bills, and neither appears to be planning to take a whack at any of the new measures. The Agriculture Committee, which oversees the CFTC, has been busy dealing with a huge farm bill. The Banking Committee, which oversees the SEC, is dominated by Democrats who wouldn't mind at all if Dodd-Frank had both its legs broken, including Chuck Schumer of New York and Mark Warner of Virginia. What's more, the committee's understated chairman, Sen. Tim Johnson of South Dakota, seems weirdly willing to let pretty much anything touching the financial world roll straight to a vote without his changing a comma – a sharp contrast to the days when fist-shaking politcal Godhead Chris Dodd ran the committee.
"Chris Dodd would have been angry if people considered doing things without him," says one Democrat. "He'd be like, 'You, out of my sandbox.'"
That means all those thousands of hours of debate and fierce negotiation spent hammering out Dodd-Frank two years ago might now go up in smoke in a matter of a few quiet minutes. Of the big-ticket items that were actually passed two years ago, the derivatives reforms have been completely gutted by loopholes, the Volcker Rule has been delayed for two years, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau may be thrust under the budgetary control of Congress, which is determined to destroy it. And much of this is taking place with the assent of Democrats, for a very simple reason: because the name of the game isn't cleaning up Wall Street, it's cleaning out Wall Street – throwing a "yes" vote at a bank-approved bill to get them to pony up in an election year. "All this is aimed at the financial services industry," admits one senior Democratic congressional aide. "It's to let them know, 'Hey, you're OK, we're not going to destroy your business – and give us your money, because we're trying to raise it for an election.'"
That's the underlying problem with cracking down on Wall Street: Our political-economic system has grown too knotted and unmanageable for democratic rule. While it's incredibly difficult to get a regulatory reform passed, it's far easier – and more profitable to politicians – to kill it. Creating legislation is a tough process. But watering down legislation? Strangling it with lawsuits and comment letters and blue-ribbon committees? Not so tough, it turns out.
You can't buy votes in a democracy, at least not directly, but our democracy is run through a bureaucracy. Human beings can cast a vote, or rally together during protests and elections, but real people – even committed professionals – get tired of running through mazes of motions and countermotions, or reading thousands of pages about swaps-execution facilities and NRSROs. They will fight through it for five days, or maybe even six, but on the seventh they will watch a baseball game, or Tanked, instead of diving into that morass of hellish acronyms one more time.
But money never gets tired. It never gets frustrated. And it thinks that drilling holes in Dodd-Frank is every bit as interesting as The Book of Mormon or Kate Upton naked. The system has become too complex for flesh-and-blood people, who make the mistake of thinking that passing a new law means the end of the discussion, when it's really just the beginning of a war.
This story is from the May 24th, 2012 issue of Rolling Stone.
Editor's Note: This article has been changed to reflect the fact the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is not dependent for its budget on the Federal Reserve.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Matt Taibbi is a contributing editor for Rolling Stone. He’s the author of five books, most recently The Great Derangement and Griftopia, and a winner of the National Magazine Award for commentary.
"The fate of Dodd-Frank over the past two years is an object lesson in the government's inability to institute even the simplest and most obvious reforms, especially if those reforms happen to clash with powerful financial interests. From the moment it was signed into law, lobbyists and lawyers have fought regulators over every line in the rulemaking process. Congressmen and presidents may be able to get a law passed once in a while – but they can no longer make sure it stays passed. You win the modern financial-regulation game by filing the most motions, attending the most hearings, giving the most money to the most politicians and, above all, by keeping at it, day after day, year after fiscal year, until stealing is legal again. "It's like a scorched-earth policy," says Michael Greenberger, a former regulator who was heavily involved with the drafting of Dodd-Frank. "It requires constant combat. And it never, ever ends." That the banks have just about succeeded in strangling Dodd-Frank is probably not news to most Americans – it's how they succeeded that's the scary part. The banks followed a five-point strategy that offers a dependable blueprint for defeating any regulation – and for guaranteeing that when it comes to the economy, might will always equal right."
--Matt Taibbi, "How Wall Street Killed Financial Reform", Rolling Stone, May 10, 2012
How Wall Street Killed Financial Reform
It's bad enough that the banks strangled the Dodd-Frank law. Even worse is the way they did it - with a big assist from Congress and the White House.
by Matt Taibbi
May 10, 2012
Rolling Stone
Two years ago, when he signed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, President Barack Obama bragged that he'd dealt a crushing blow to the extravagant financial corruption that had caused the global economic crash in 2008. "These reforms represent the strongest consumer financial protections in history," the president told an adoring crowd in downtown D.C. on July 21st, 2010. "In history."
This was supposed to be the big one. At 2,300 pages, the new law ostensibly rewrote the rules for Wall Street. It was going to put an end to predatory lending in the mortgage markets, crack down on hidden fees and penalties in credit contracts, and create a powerful new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to safeguard ordinary consumers. Big banks would be banned from gambling with taxpayer money, and a new set of rules would limit speculators from making the kind of crazy-ass bets that cause wild spikes in the price of food and energy. There would be no more AIGs, and the world would never again face a financial apocalypse when a bank like Lehman Brothers went bankrupt.
Most importantly, even if any of that fiendish crap ever did happen again, Dodd-Frank guaranteed we wouldn't be expected to pay for it. "The American people will never again be asked to foot the bill for Wall Street's mistakes," Obama promised. "There will be no more taxpayer-funded bailouts. Period."
Two years later, Dodd-Frank is groaning on its deathbed. The giant reform bill turned out to be like the fish reeled in by Hemingway's Old Man – no sooner caught than set upon by sharks that strip it to nothing long before it ever reaches the shore. In a furious below-the-radar effort at gutting the law – roundly despised by Washington's Wall Street paymasters – a troop of water-carrying Eric Cantor Republicans are speeding nine separate bills through the House, all designed to roll back the few genuinely toothy portions left in Dodd-Frank. With the Quislingian covert assistance of Democrats, both in Congress and in the White House, those bills could pass through the House and the Senate with little or no debate, with simple floor votes – by a process usually reserved for things like the renaming of post offices or a nonbinding resolution celebrating Amelia Earhart's birthday.
The fate of Dodd-Frank over the past two years is an object lesson in the government's inability to institute even the simplest and most obvious reforms, especially if those reforms happen to clash with powerful financial interests. From the moment it was signed into law, lobbyists and lawyers have fought regulators over every line in the rulemaking process. Congressmen and presidents may be able to get a law passed once in a while – but they can no longer make sure it stays passed. You win the modern financial-regulation game by filing the most motions, attending the most hearings, giving the most money to the most politicians and, above all, by keeping at it, day after day, year after fiscal year, until stealing is legal again. "It's like a scorched-earth policy," says Michael Greenberger, a former regulator who was heavily involved with the drafting of Dodd-Frank. "It requires constant combat. And it never, ever ends."
That the banks have just about succeeded in strangling Dodd-Frank is probably not news to most Americans – it's how they succeeded that's the scary part. The banks followed a five-point strategy that offers a dependable blueprint for defeating any regulation – and for guaranteeing that when it comes to the economy, might will always equal right.
STEP 1: STRANGLE IT IN THE WOMB
The first advantage the banks had lay in the fact that for all Obama's bluster, Dodd-Frank was never such a badass law to begin with. In fact, Obama's initial response to the devastating financial events of 2008 represented a major departure from the historical precedent his own party had set during the 1930s, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt launched an audacious rewrite of the rules governing the American economy following the Great Crash of 1929.
Upon entering office, FDR was in exactly the same position Obama found himself in after his inauguration in 2009. Then, as now, the American economy was in tatters after the bursting of a massive financial bubble, brought on when speculators borrowed huge sums and gambled on unregistered securities in largely unregulated exchanges. This mania for instant riches led to an explosion of Wall Street fraud and manipulation, creating a mountain of illusory growth divorced from the real-world economy: Of the $50 billion in securities sold in America in the 1920s, half turned out to be worthless.
Roosevelt's response to all of this was to pass a number of sweeping new laws that focused on a single theme: protecting consumers by forcing the business of Wall Street into the light. The Securities Act of 1933 required all publicly traded companies to register themselves and offer prospectuses to investors; the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 forced publicly traded companies to make regular financial disclosures; and the Commodity Exchange Act of 1936 required all commodities and futures to be traded on organized exchanges. FDR also created the FDIC to protect bank depositors (through an insurance fund paid for by the banks themselves) and passed the Glass-Steagall Act to separate insurance companies, investment banks and commercial banks. Post-New Deal, if you put money in a bank, you knew it was safe, and if you bought stock, you knew what you were buying.
This reform strategy worked for more than half a century – and it offered Obama a clear outline of how to respond to the crash he faced. What made 2008 possible was that Wall Street had moved its speculative frenzy away from the regulated exchange system created by FDR, and into darker, less-regulated markets that had coalesced around brand-new financial innovations like credit default swaps and collateralized-debt obligations. It wasn't that the old system had broken down; Wall Street had just moved the playground.
All Obama needed to do to rescue the economy and protect consumers was to make sure that the new playground had some rules. That meant moving swaps and other derivatives onto open exchanges, making sure that federally insured banks that dabbled in those dangerous markets retained more capital, and coming up with some kind of plan to prevent the next AIG or Lehman Brothers disaster – i.e., a plan for unwinding failing companies that wouldn't require federal bailouts.
The initial proposal for Dodd-Frank addressed most of those concerns. As drafted, it would have created a system for shutting down failing megafirms, required swaps to be traded and cleared on regulated exchanges, and restored the spirit of Glass-Steagall through the so-called Volcker Rule, which would have prevented federally insured banks from engaging in dangerous speculation. It envisioned a powerful new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to represent the interests of consumers against Wall Street, a bureau headed not by some banker stooge but by an actual consumer advocate and financial expert like Elizabeth Warren, the Harvard professor who came up with the idea. And it would have cleaned up the mortgage markets by ending predatory home-lending and forcing everyone in the market, from homeowners to banks to investors buying mortgage securities, to post real cash and keep "skin in the game" when buying or selling a mortgage.
Then, behind the closed doors of Congress, Wall Street lobbyists and their allies got to work. Though many of the new regulatory concepts survived in the final bill, most of them wound up whittled down to such an extreme degree that they were barely recognizable in the end. Over the course of a ferocious year of negotiations in the House and the Senate, the rules on swaps were riddled with loopholes: One initially promising rule preventing federally insured banks from trading in risky derivatives ultimately ended up exempting a huge chunk of the swaps market from the new law. The Volcker Rule banning proprietary gambling survived, but not before getting its brains beaten out in last-minute conference negotiations; Wall Street first won broad exemptions for mutual funds, insurers and trusts, and then, with the aid of both Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, managed to secure a lunatic and arbitrary numerical exemption that allows banks to gamble up to three percent of their "Tier 1" capital, a number that for big banks stretches to the billions.
Then there was the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which went from being a powerful, independent agency run by Elizabeth Warren to a smaller bureau within the Federal Reserve System run by - well, anyone but Elizabeth Warren. With Geithner and Republicans in Congress blocking her once-inevitable appointment, we no longer had Warren playing watchdog to Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke - instead we had new CFPB head Richard Cordray, a former Ohio attorney general who enjoys far less of a popular mandate than Warren, forced to operate within the bureaucracy of Bernanke's Fed.
But the best example of how the watering-down process helped make Dodd-Frank ripe for a later killing was the question of Too Big to Fail. Obama, Geithner and the Democratic leadership in Congress never seriously entertained enacting the most obvious and necessary reform at all – breaking up the so-called "systemically important financial institutions" (the congressional term for "banks so huge we'll have to bail them out if they collapse"). Rather than simply stopping these firms from getting so big that they'd blow up the universe in a collapse, the Democrats opted for a half-clever semantic trick, claiming they had solved the future bailout question with Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act, known as the "Orderly Liquidation Authority" or "OLA" section of the bill.
In a nod to FDR, Title II would have forced major financial companies to pay $19 billion into an FDIC-style fund that would cover the cost of any future bailouts. But then the balance of power in the Senate was upset by the election of Republican Scott Brown to Ted Kennedy's seat in Massachusetts. As the clock wound down toward the bill's passage, Brown insisted on a change: Instead of making ginormous companies pay $19 billion in advance, the FDIC would first use taxpayer money to pay for any bailouts, and then spend years trying to recover that money from Wall Street by means of an assessment process so convoluted that you could grow a four-foot beard in the time it would take to understand it. Republicans managed to wrangle support, in conference, for the "bailout now, pay later" idea, and it made its way into the final bill.
Fast-forward to 2012. Rep. Paul Ryan, the self-styled Edward Scissorhands of Republican budget slashing, gathers the GOP leadership together and tells the chairman of each committee that he wants them, collectively, to come up with $261 billion in cuts. Ryan demands $35 billion of the cuts come from the Financial Services Committee, which oversees much of the regulatory apparatus that would enforce Dodd-Frank. The committee is now chaired not by the reform bill's namesake, Rep. Barney Frank, but by median-intellected Spencer Bachus of Alabama, who last year voted to delay Dodd-Frank reforms designed to prevent swaps disasters like the one that drove his home turf of Jefferson County into bankruptcy.
Bachus' solution to coming up with massive budget cuts? Eliminate the entire Title II section of Dodd-Frank. If another bank failed, Bachus argued, it would take way too long to recoup the bailout money from Wall Street through that crazy assessment process that Republicans themselves had insisted on only two years earlier. In the end, the logic went, taxpayers would wind up footing the bill anyway, so better just to scrap the entire plan to have the FDIC pay for the bailouts upfront – thus "saving" taxpayers some $22 billion.
The logic, of course, is complete nonsense. Without Title II, we'd be right back where we started – rushing to implement an expensive bailout in the midst of a crisis, without any way to make Wall Street repay the money. But because Democrats had preemptively surrendered on the original idea of forcing Wall Street to pay into an FDIC-style kitty ahead of time, Republicans were now in a position to push the whole bailout plan off the pier via a simple budget resolution.
To make up the rest of the $35 billion in budget cuts ordered by Paul Ryan, Bachus also proposed slashing Obama's mortgage-aid program and making the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau subordinate to a congressional appropriations process – meaning that its budget could be subjected to never-ending attacks by the GOP. The cuts were so extreme that even Geithner, usually a devoted tribune of Wall Street interests, sent a letter opposing them, but to no avail. The budget-slashing resolution passed the House this April.
The problem with attacking laws in Congress, of course, is that you need to control both chambers to make it stick. The Bachus-budget gambit may not have much of a chance of passing in the Senate, which is still controlled by the Democrats, but that won't faze opponents of Dodd-Frank, who have found an even more dependable arena for gutting the new law:
STEP 2: SUE, SUE, SUE
While death and taxes may be only relative certainties in today's economy – failing megabanks neither die nor pay taxes anymore – one thing that was always absolutely certain from the start was that Wall Street was going to sue the living hell out of Washington before the ink was even dry on Dodd-Frank. It took a little while, but the banks very quickly found a tried-and-true method of tying up the reforms in court.
Wall Street's first big win involved a small-but-important change known as the "proxy access" rule, which made it easier for people who own stakes in a company to remove directors from the board – giving shareholders more power to rein in corrupt or overpaid company executives. More democracy in business sounded like a good idea to almost everyone. But Wall Street has a dependable playbook for getting rid of any reform, no matter how small, that leads to greater accountability. "First, they hire a shit-ton of lobbyists to go to the regulators," says Jim Collura, spokesman for the Commodity Markets Oversight Coalition. "Then, they beat the crap out of them during the rulemaking process. And then, when that's over, they litigate the hell out of them."
Sue their asses! For all the right's supposed hatred of "activist judges," conservatives immediately flocked to the courts in search of magistrates willing to casually overturn the work of elected officials. In the case of the proxy access rule, Wall Street convinced its two favorite lobbying arms, the Business Roundtable and the Chamber of Commerce, to sue the Securities Exchange Commission over a technicality, claiming that the agency had not done a proper cost-benefit analysis before it instituted the new rule. In an appropriately loathsome touch, the Chamber's legal team was led by one Eugene Scalia, son of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. The younger Scalia, who looks like the product of a twisted test-tube experiment that crossed his father with Ari Fleischer, pitched a federal appeals court on the idea that the proxy access rule was "arbitrary and capricious," and that the SEC hadn't spent enough time studying the rule's effects on "efficiency, competition and capital formation."
In fact, the agency had produced 60 pages of cost-benefit analysis and had spent, according to SEC chief Mary Schapiro, some 21,000 man-hours working on the bill and studying its effects. Still, the court wasn't impressed. In his opinion, presiding judge and Reagan appointee Douglas Ginsburg peed all over Dodd-Frank, vacating the rule, which he dismissed as "unutterably mindless." With striking chutzpah, considering that he was ruling in a case brought by the mother of all special interest lobbies, Ginsburg also denounced the shareholder rule as a gift to special interests, particularly "unions and government pension funds."
Almost immediately after the win, the gloating Scalia issued a thinly veiled threat to regulators, letting them know that any attempt to implement more limits on Wall Street would likely result in the same kind of lawsuit. "I would hope the agencies are taking to heart the potential consequences for Dodd-Frank rules," he chirped.
The success of the lawsuit cemented Wall Street's strategy for doing away with Dodd-Frank. Rather than challenge the constitutionality of the bill in one broad suit, the finance industry would take the bill apart by pulling out one fingernail at a time. "Dodd-Frank is not one thing but many," Margaret Tahyar, a partner at the white-shoe corporate defense firm Davis Polk, told reporters last year. "There is no reasonable constitutional or statutory challenge on the whole – only on the bits and pieces."
Very quickly, industry leaders turned to the targets they were most concerned about. This time, two bank-friendly industry groups sued the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) to stop it from implementing "position limits" in the derivatives market. Unlike the proxy access rule, which was essentially a procedural issue, position limits got right to the heart of a monstrous international problem – the perversion of fuel and food prices by financial speculators. The oil bubble of 2008, in which a barrel of oil rose to a preposterous $146 before falling to an equally preposterous $35, was one result of such wanton speculation; the surge in global food prices that led to the Middle East revolutions last year was another.
The position limits set by Dodd-Frank were designed to prevent any one speculator from controlling more than 25 percent of a commodities market at any given moment. To say that this is an issue that shouldn't be litigated over a technicality is an understatement; it's not a stretch to say that the viability of capitalism itself is at least partially at stake here. The rule, after all, would help ensure that prices are pegged to the real supply and demand of real producers and consumers, not to fantasy bets placed by market-monopolizing speculators. But the industry sued the CFTC over the exact same issue – the supposed lack of sufficient cost-benefit analysis – that the Chamber of Commerce used to derail the proxy access rule. And once again, the industry hired the ass-kicking Scalia, who argued that the CFTC had failed to provide "sufficient evidence" for its decision to establish position limits.
In an even more awesome demonstration of sheer balls, Scalia & Co. also argued that the CFTC's vote to establish position limits was invalid because one of the agency's commissioners, Michael Dunn, did not really believe in the law. Dunn had quit the CFTC to take a cushy job at a Wall Street-friendly law firm, and on the way out the door, he whined that he had only voted for position limits because Dodd-Frank forced him to, calling the rule a "cure for a disease that does not exist." So under the novel test offered by Scalia, rules like position limits – approved by Congress after months of debate – could be invalidated simply because a federal commissioner who signed off on the details wasn't emotionally on board at the moment of the rule's conception.
The lawsuit by Scalia & Co. succeeded in gumming up the works. The industry has tried to get the court to issue an immediate stay on the implementation of position limits, and the case is likely to drag on for months. Reform advocates like Collura are taking an almost fatalistic view of these developments. "Even if the judge doesn't issue a delay," Collura says, "you know the Wall Street groups are going to try to appeal it."
STEP 3: IF YOU CAN'T WIN, STALL
You might think otherwise, but it doesn't naturally follow that because a law has been passed by Congress and signed by the president, said law actually has to be implemented. With Dodd-Frank, the SEC took a brilliant approach to submarining one of its own regulations. The agency was supposed to begin enforcing the new proxy access rule by late 2010. Instead, in October 2010, it granted speculators a last-minute stay – essentially giving the Chamber of Commerce time to prepare its lawsuit to permanently kill the rule.
Position limits are another example. Dodd-Frank ordered the CFTC to begin enforcing the new rule no later than January 17th, 2011. But January 17th came and went, and – no position limits! Gary Gensler, the head of the CFTC and a former executive of Goldman Sachs, then announced that he hoped to implement the rule by September 2011. But September came and went, and soon it was 2012, and before you knew it, the CFTC, like the SEC, was in court, facing a lawsuit that would permanently kill the rule.
Even the president got into the stalling game. During the year of nonaction on position limits, the "disease that did not exist" – energy speculation – returned to ravage the American gasoline market. In the winter of 2011, oil soared above $100 a barrel, despite fundamentals of supply and demand that would have suggested a price drop. Obama blasted fuel speculators for the price hike and announced that he was creating the Oil and Gas Price Fraud Working Group to "root out any cases of fraud or manipulation in the oil markets." He added, in stern and stirring tones, "We're going to make sure that nobody is taking advantage of American consumers for their own short-term gain."
This was a curious decision. If Obama really wanted to stop speculation in the oil markets, he didn't need to create a brand-new task force that would have to start from scratch to deal with a hellishly complex problem that Congress and the CFTC had already spent years studying. "An easier way to deal with excessive oil speculation," one senior Senate aide explains, "is for the president to just pick up the phone, call Gary Gensler and say, 'The Dodd-Frank Act required you to put in strong position limits by January 17th, 2011. Get off your butt and act.'"
The Oil and Gas Working Group turned out to be a complete sham. In its year of ostensible existence, the panel met only a few times, then never bothered to convene again. One source on the Hill tells me that some of the members were not even aware that they'd been named to the task force for months. It was such a Potemkin committee that when oil prices once again shot up past $100 a barrel this year, Obama was hilariously forced to announce that he was "reconstituting" the task force, even though it had never officially disbanded. "It's a joke," says Greenberger, the former regulator. "They've done absolutely nothing."
Many key sections of Dodd-Frank, in fact, are now experiencing such "unforeseen" delays. The Volcker Rule, which severely restricts the ability of banks to gamble with taxpayer-insured money, is in the midst of an impressive double delay. Regulators have been so slow to wade through the flood of 17,000 comment letters submitted on the rule, most of them from Wall Street interests, that they may not be finished writing the regulation by the Dodd-Frank-mandated deadline of July 21st, 2012 – two years after the bill passed.
But instead of kicking regulators in the pants, six senators, led by Republican Mike Crapo of Idaho, introduced legislation to give regulators more time to (not) finish writing the law. On April 19th, the Federal Reserve announced that it won't implement the Volcker Rule until 2014 – an extra two years that will give Wall Street plenty of time to find a way to kill the thing for good.
STEP 4: BULLY THE REGULATORS
A seldom-considered factor in Dodd-Frank is that Congress controls the funding for the federal regulators who are charged with carrying out the new law. Last year, after Republicans attempted to slash the CFTC's funding by more than 33 percent, Congress settled for freezing the agency's budget, despite the fact that under Dodd-Frank, the market that the CFTC is responsible for overseeing soared from $40 trillion to $340 trillion. That same year, Republicans tried to cut the SEC's budget by more than $25 million.
This results in a curious dynamic: When Wall Street is frustrated by regulators in the rule-making process, it can simply lobby Congress to rein them in. The regulators are then forced to strategically surrender on the rules in order to stave off budget cuts, Eugene Scalia or whatever other horror-show phenomena Congress and the financial industry might throw their way.
Take those huge Paul Ryan-led budget cuts that the House passed in April, scrapping the entire bailout portion of Dodd-Frank. The cuts may not survive in the Senate, which is still controlled by Democrats. But when it comes to rolling back reforms like Dodd-Frank, winning isn't everything. These continual whippings of the new law in the House serve a larger purpose, which is to frighten and intimidate regulators like the SEC and the CFTC, who aren't even finished writing the law's actual rules. The message is clear: If you don't write the rules in the weakest way possible, we have the juice to overturn you in Congress.
"What this is, above all else, is a play to put the House on record," says one congressional staffer familiar with the budget-cutting battle. "It's a leverage tactic. If they have 75 percent of the Financial Services Committee that says, 'You've made mistakes,' or 'This is too gray,' that is a huge hole card."
Even the CFTC admits this pressure exists: Commissioner Bart Chilton warned in March that his regulators risk being "scared into making rules and regulations that are weak or ineffective because we are overly concerned about what we call 'litigation risk.'" According to Marcus Stanley, policy director for Americans for Financial Reform, one regulator admitted that he worries in advance about Wall Street going over his head. "If we make this rule too tough," the regulator told Stanley, "industry is just going to go to Congress and punch it full of holes."
A prime example of the crack suicide-squad preemptive-surrender strategy practiced by regulators involves the provisions of Dodd-Frank designed to curtail complex derivatives, like swaps, which caused disasters like the crash of AIG and the bankruptcy of Jefferson County, Alabama. Under the law, the SEC and the CFTC must decide which swaps dealers will be governed by new rules, requiring them to maintain more capital and collateral. Originally, the agencies were thinking of regulating any dealer who manages more than $100 million in swaps. But then Rep. Randy Hultgren, a Republican from Illinois, proposed H.R. 3727 – one of the nine GOP-sponsored bills to kill Dodd-Frank – that would raise the threshold to $3 billion in swaps. Overreacting to industry pressure, both the SEC and the CFTC then volunteered to raise the threshold to $8 billion. That means at least two-thirds of all swaps dealers in America will now be exempt from Dodd-Frank. Given the new threshold, consumer advocates calculate, you could make 1,600 swaps transactions a year, each worth $5 million, and still not have to so much as register as a swaps dealer.
The thought provokes something verging on despair in those who have devoted themselves to fighting for real financial reform. "If I didn't have to spend my whole life in this," Stanley says sadly, "it would be funny."
STEP 5: PASS A GAZILLION LOOPHOLES
By the beginning of this year, as a result of all of these threats, delays and lawsuits, Americans could barely see Dodd-Frank's footprint in their everyday economic life. Yet Wall Street was still insufficiently convinced that key portions of Dodd-Frank were really dead. So it went over the heads of regulators and impelled Republicans in the House to create an avalanche of new laws designed to undercut the rules the CFTC and SEC were already heroically failing to write.
You might wonder how a bunch of lunkhead Republican congressmen would even know how to write a coordinated series of "technical fixes" to derivatives regulation, a universe so complicated that it has become hard to find anyone on the Hill who truly understands the subject. (One congressman who sits on the Financial Services Committee laughingly admitted that when the crash of 2008 happened, he had to look up "credit default swaps" on Wikipedia.) It turns out, they had help from the inside. Scott O'Malia, a Republican commissioner on the CFTC who formerly served as an aide to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, apparently sent a member of his staff over to the House to help the Republicans write bills to undercut the CFTC's authority. Originally a Bush appointee, O'Malia ignited a controversy when he was renominated to the CFTC by Obama because he had once been a lobbyist for Mirant, an energy company that was caught withholding power from California during blackouts. One of Mirant's subsidiaries was even fined $12.5 million for attempting to manipulate natural gas prices.
Now, Obama's own appointee is reportedly leading the charge against finance reform. "O'Malia has assigned a staffer to quarterback all of these bills," says Greenberger. "He's orchestrating a sort of under-cover-of-darkness approach to driving holes in Dodd-Frank."
The nine bills being contemplated by Congress take a variety of approaches to gutting Dodd-Frank. Two bills, H.R. 1840 and H.R. 2308, are essentially stalling tactics, requiring regulators to undertake more of those sweeping cost-benefit analy ses that result in lengthy delays. Another bill, H.R. 3283, is more substantive: Sponsored by Connecticut Democrat and hedge-fund industry BFF Jim Himes, it exempts foreign affiliates of U.S. swaps dealers from all Dodd-Frank oversight. The rule, if implemented, would make the next AIG possible, given that AIG was undone by half a trillion dollars in derivative bets produced by such a foreign affiliate – its London-based financial products outfit, AIGFP. If passed, says Rep. Brad Miller, a Democrat from North Carolina, H.R. 3283 would leave a "massive, gaping hole" in Dodd-Frank. "It would be very easy to move those trades to whatever the most indulgent country would be," Miller explains.
The bill also exempts from oversight any swaps deals between company affiliates – meaning that Goldman Hong Kong can sell swaps to Goldman New York without having to deal with Dodd-Frank. That sounds harmless, but when you combine it with the AIG-style exemption, a bank would basically be able to get around Dodd-Frank entirely by creating its swaps products at an overseas branch, or moving them back and forth between affiliates.
An even more distressing bill, which recently raced through the committee process with a simple voice vote, is H.R. 3336, granting broad exemptions from swaps regulations to any company that offers "extensions of credit" to customers. There are some who are convinced that once the financial industry's lawyers get hold of this "extensions of credit" line, they will use it to win exemptions for banks engaged in almost any kind of lending activity – including those involved with municipal-bond offerings, one of the most dependably corrupt businesses in the American economy.
"If all of these bills pass," says Stanley, "I don't know why we wouldn't just invite the industry lobbyists in to rewrite the rules."
All of these derivatives issues are oppressively dull and technical, and it's extremely difficult for most people to imagine how something like Jim Himes' exemption for foreign affiliates can actually affect their daily lives. But having an unregulated market instead of a regulated one might mean you'll pay an extra 50 cents for every gallon of gas (or possibly more, even according to Goldman Sachs). Or you might have to pay hundreds or thousands more in taxes every year because your town or county or country, if you happen to live in Greece, grossly overpaid an investment bank when it borrowed money. An unregulated derivatives market essentially gives Wall Street a way to place hidden taxes on everything in the world.
The best way to explain where those hidden taxes come from is to compare a regulated market to an unregulated one. It's the difference between buying soap and buying drugs. You go into a corner store and there's a price tag on the soap, but you can always go across the street, or on the Internet, to see what soap costs someplace else. But when you go to buy an eight ball of coke, you have to ask your dealer what the price is, and it's not like you can compare prices online. If you're tough and streetwise and you know what coke costs, you might get it for a couple hundred bucks. But if you're some quivering Ivy Leaguer idling in a Lexus, the price might be $400.
That's how the swaps market works. It operates completely in the dark. If you're some Podunk town in Texas or Alabama and you need swaps financing, you've got to ask Goldman Sachs or Morgan Stanley what it costs. There's no exchange where you can compare prices. And modern investment bankers are ethically a notch below your average drug dealer. They will extract from their customer – a town, an airline, a chain of retail stores – whatever they think he'll pay. And that extra cost will be passed on to you by the overcharged customer, in the form of higher taxes, bigger home-heating bills, higher sewer rates or pricier airline tickets. Wall Street will be taking a bite out of you every time you write a check.
Under normal circumstances, seeing the Republicans send a bunch of evil bills like the derivatives exemption to the Democrat-controlled Senate wouldn't scare reform advocates too much. But in March and April, something happened that sent progressives into a veritable panic – the passage of the so-called JOBS Act, a sweeping, bank-fellating deregulatory law that rolled back a smorgasbord of regulations designed to protect investors from fraud in the IPO markets. The White House, eager to greenlight "crowdfunding" investments and a handful of other sensible reforms contained in the bill, leaned on the Senate leadership to send the measure straight to the floor for a vote. That meant this monster deregulatory bill went directly into the books with minimal testimony, no committee hearings and no real debate of any kind.
Now, in the wake of the JOBS Act fiasco, many reform advocates expect the same scenario to repeat itself with the nine bills to roll back Dodd-Frank. In the House, a number of the most dangerous derivatives bills have been passed by "suspension," a simplified voice-voting process usually reserved for uncontroversial items. The truly sinister thing is that, in order for a bill to be put on the suspension calendar, the two parties must agree – meaning that Democrats signed off on this Trojan-horse method of treating complex, economy-altering bills as minor technical "fixes."
The truth is that Dodd-Frank is so huge, and contains so many complicated new rules, that there are, in fact, many areas where small technical fixes are needed. H.R. 4235, one of the nine bills brought before Congress, resolves a real problem with the way swaps data is collected, an issue that was preventing foreign swaps dealers from getting onboard with the reform. But when needed fixes like this are thrown in side by side with a mind-boggling exemption for swaps dealers like H.R. 3336, which hits the floor as the innocuously named "Small Business Credit Availability Act," all those members of Congress who don't sit on the Financial Services Committee will have no way of telling which bill is the minor technical fix and which is the sweeping repeal. Moreover, when those members see that some bills are co-sponsored by Democrats, and that the Democratic leadership agreed to put the bills on the suspension calendar for a simple voice vote, many will take it as a cue that it's OK to vote for the rollbacks.
That's particularly true because most members of Congress know that the public seldom pays any attention to the fiendish complexities of things like derivatives reform. "I've never had someone back in the district say to me, 'I think derivatives need to be traded on an exchange,'" says Miller. "These are the kinds of issues that aren't going to have any pop in a 30-second ad."
The nine bills to gut Dodd-Frank could also receive a JOBS Act-style welcome when they reach the Senate. There are only two Senate committees with the jurisdiction to tackle these bills, and neither appears to be planning to take a whack at any of the new measures. The Agriculture Committee, which oversees the CFTC, has been busy dealing with a huge farm bill. The Banking Committee, which oversees the SEC, is dominated by Democrats who wouldn't mind at all if Dodd-Frank had both its legs broken, including Chuck Schumer of New York and Mark Warner of Virginia. What's more, the committee's understated chairman, Sen. Tim Johnson of South Dakota, seems weirdly willing to let pretty much anything touching the financial world roll straight to a vote without his changing a comma – a sharp contrast to the days when fist-shaking politcal Godhead Chris Dodd ran the committee.
"Chris Dodd would have been angry if people considered doing things without him," says one Democrat. "He'd be like, 'You, out of my sandbox.'"
That means all those thousands of hours of debate and fierce negotiation spent hammering out Dodd-Frank two years ago might now go up in smoke in a matter of a few quiet minutes. Of the big-ticket items that were actually passed two years ago, the derivatives reforms have been completely gutted by loopholes, the Volcker Rule has been delayed for two years, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau may be thrust under the budgetary control of Congress, which is determined to destroy it. And much of this is taking place with the assent of Democrats, for a very simple reason: because the name of the game isn't cleaning up Wall Street, it's cleaning out Wall Street – throwing a "yes" vote at a bank-approved bill to get them to pony up in an election year. "All this is aimed at the financial services industry," admits one senior Democratic congressional aide. "It's to let them know, 'Hey, you're OK, we're not going to destroy your business – and give us your money, because we're trying to raise it for an election.'"
That's the underlying problem with cracking down on Wall Street: Our political-economic system has grown too knotted and unmanageable for democratic rule. While it's incredibly difficult to get a regulatory reform passed, it's far easier – and more profitable to politicians – to kill it. Creating legislation is a tough process. But watering down legislation? Strangling it with lawsuits and comment letters and blue-ribbon committees? Not so tough, it turns out.
You can't buy votes in a democracy, at least not directly, but our democracy is run through a bureaucracy. Human beings can cast a vote, or rally together during protests and elections, but real people – even committed professionals – get tired of running through mazes of motions and countermotions, or reading thousands of pages about swaps-execution facilities and NRSROs. They will fight through it for five days, or maybe even six, but on the seventh they will watch a baseball game, or Tanked, instead of diving into that morass of hellish acronyms one more time.
But money never gets tired. It never gets frustrated. And it thinks that drilling holes in Dodd-Frank is every bit as interesting as The Book of Mormon or Kate Upton naked. The system has become too complex for flesh-and-blood people, who make the mistake of thinking that passing a new law means the end of the discussion, when it's really just the beginning of a war.
This story is from the May 24th, 2012 issue of Rolling Stone.
Editor's Note: This article has been changed to reflect the fact the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is not dependent for its budget on the Federal Reserve.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Matt Taibbi is a contributing editor for Rolling Stone. He’s the author of five books, most recently The Great Derangement and Griftopia, and a winner of the National Magazine Award for commentary.