[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 104 (Wednesday, July 14, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5811-S5812]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WALL STREET REFORM
Mr. TESTER. Mr. President, I rise today in strong support of the Wall
Street reform conference report. The Senate will make history when we
pass this legislation that finally holds Wall Street accountable and
finally cleans up the schemes and abuses that nearly brought our entire
economy to its knees. Most importantly, this bill ends once and for all
taxpayer-funded bailouts of Wall Street banks and investment firms. It
finally gets rid of any notion that any private company can somehow be
``too big to fail.''
I never bought that argument. In fact, I was the only Democrat in the
Senate to vote against both the bailout of Wall Street and the auto
industry. I do not believe in bailouts. But I do believe in making sure
folks are playing by the same rules.
Our economy went belly up a year and a half ago because there were no
referees on the field. With this bill, that is about to change. Big
banks will be required to pay for their own liquidation should they
fail, and taxpayers will never again be a part of that equation.
The bill also streamlines the regulation of Wall Street, providing
the referees the tools they need to get the job done fairly and
effectively.
It also ensures that everyone will now be playing by the same rules,
and that unregulated entities offering financial products have to live
up to the same standards as the community banks and credit unions that
serve States such as Montana.
The bill has tough new rules to prevent the spread of risky and
dangerous products such as subprime mortgages that torpedoed our
Nation's entire financial industry.
My focus over the last several months has been to make sure this bill
is right for Montana and right for rural America. After some hard work,
I think we did just that. This Wall Street reform bill is good for
Montana's community banks, and it benefits small businesses.
Even in this era of bitter partisanship, the Senate unanimously
passed an amendment I offered to make sure banks only pay their fair
share for Federal deposit insurance. Right now, smaller community banks
are paying for 30 percent of this insurance, even though they account
for only 20 percent of all bank assets. That does not make sense, and
this bill fixes that problem.
This conference report also includes a provision I drafted requiring
the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to consider the impact of all
rules on community banks and credit unions and the rural customers they
serve before any of those rules are made.
The legislation ensures that community banks will not be punished for
the bad behavior of the mortgage brokers who offer risky mortgages.
Those banks will be able to maintain the community-based regulators
they currently have, and in the case of State chartered banks, the same
lending limits they currently have.
Additionally, this bill ensures that community banks will be able to
continue to provide the same mortgage products--including those
specific to farmers and rural Americans--to their customers.
For small businesses, this legislation makes it easier for investors
to help get new small businesses up and running while protecting
investors from schemers. It exempts small public companies from costly
additional compliance and regulation under Sarbanes-Oxley.
This bill is a win for Main Street. It holds Wall Street accountable
and preserves the critical role community banks have in strengthening
communities, creating jobs, and building small businesses. That is
important because Montana families rely on their community banks to
finance and grow their businesses and farms, help pay their bills, and
put their kids through school.
This is a strong bill. It ends taxpayer-funded bailouts. It begins a
new era of strong commonsense regulation to put the sideboards on our
fast-moving financial industry, without taking away the fundamental
tools it needs for healthy competition and growth, which strengthens
this economy.
Let me be clear. Our work on this legislation does not end today. I
will continue to remain vigilant to ensure this legislation is
implemented and enforced in the way it was intended. We simply cannot
afford to do nothing and let our financial industry go by the wayside
ever again.
With that, I thank you, Mr. President.
[[Page S5812]]
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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