[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 187 (Wednesday, December 7, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8406-S8407]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NOMINATION OF RICHARD CORDRAY
Mr. HARKIN. Madam President, I have come to the floor on numerous
occasions this year to discuss the distressed state of America's middle
class. In fact, in our committee, we have had a series of hearings
looking at the state of the middle class and what is happening to the
middle class in America. In recent decades, our Nation's once secure
middle class has struggled in the face of stagnant wages, declining job
security, rising indebtedness, and disappearing pensions, not to
mention sharply higher costs for health care, education, food, and
energy.
It wasn't always this way. In the three decades after World War II,
America's middle class grew rapidly. Incomes rose steadily as the
middle class secured its fair share of the expanding national wealth.
The Federal Government invested generously in infrastructure building,
innovation, and education, vastly expanding opportunity for people to
move into the middle class. America became a more equal, fair, and just
society, built on a solid bedrock of a strong middle class.
I am an example of that. My father had an eighth grade education. He
was a coal miner. My mother was an immigrant with very little formal
education. Yet their three children were able to go to good schools,
get good jobs, and get an education. All three of their children
graduated from Iowa State University, a great land grant college,
because it didn't cost very much and we could afford to go there and we
were able to enter the middle class from those humble beginnings.
But beginning in the 1970s, much of that progress started to come to
a halt. Our manufacturing base declined, and the U.S. economy became
increasingly dominated by financial markets and Wall Street--a trend
that was accelerated by ill-advised deregulation. Soaring profits and
sky-high salaries attracted more of our Nation's best and brightest to
pursue careers in finance at the expense of engineering, teaching, and
public service.
Wall Street bankers were emboldened by deregulation. They were
incentivized by huge salaries and bonuses to take ever greater risks,
and they devised ever more exotic and risky investment schemes. As we
all know, in 2008, this frenzy of greed and recklessness culminated in
the catastrophic meltdown of our Nation's financial system. This
economic crisis was a hammer blow to our already struggling middle
class. The value of Americans' homes and retirement accounts plummeted,
millions lost their jobs or were forced into foreclosure, and hopes for
the future dimmed.
In the wake of this financial crash, with its pervasive damage to the
middle class, the American people demanded action to rein in the worst
abuses of Wall Street and to prevent a replay of 2008. This led to the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act--let me
repeat that, the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act--the
most sweeping reform of our financial system since the Great
Depression. For hundreds of millions of American consumers in their
everyday lives, no aspect of this law is more important and
transformative than the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau. Again, read the words of the legislation. It is the Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act. Therefore, a big part of the bill
was to build in consumer protections, and one of those was to create
the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
I have come to the floor in strong support of the nomination of
Richard Cordray to be Director of this Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau. The idea behind this bureau is very simple. We need a cop on
the beat looking out for the best interests of consumers who use
financial products, just as we have regulators looking out for the
financial health of banks.
A strong Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will ensure consumers
are not lured into debt through hidden fees, for example. It will
simplify disclosures and reduce paperwork so consumers aren't faced
with mountains of paperwork they can't understand. It will oversee
providers of consumer credit, such as payday lenders, which for years
have acted like banks without facing any kind of banking regulation.
Additionally, as student debt surpasses credit card debt as the largest
source of consumer debt--which has already happened, by the way, that
student debt right now is larger than credit card debt--this Consumer
Protection Bureau can play a critical role in helping families better
understand the increasing challenges of facing a college education and
financing it as well as bringing some sanity to the private student
loan marketplace.
Finally, a key function of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
will also provide help to our veterans through the Office of Service
Member Affairs. Sadly, too often our servicemembers fall victim to
abusive financial traps upon their return home. The Bureau has made an
outstanding choice for leadership of this office with the selection of
Mrs. Hollister Petraeus. But cynically, my Republican colleagues have
chosen to protect the unscrupulous lenders that prey on military
families. They would rather neuter the entire agency, have no Director,
than to fully empower Mrs. Petraeus to protect military personnel and
their families from all forms of predatory lending activities.
[[Page S8407]]
These steps are essential elements of helping to tilt the scales of
our economy back into balance so that once again we put the interests
of the 99 percent of Americans who use financial products ahead of the
1 percent who profit from them.
I was deeply disappointed when our Republican colleagues voted
against the Wall Street reform bill that should have been
overwhelmingly a bipartisan bill. But now the bill is law, and guess
what. My Republican friends are doing everything in their power to
prevent it from doing its important job.
Earlier this year, 44 Republican Senators served notice that they
would not confirm anyone--let me repeat, they would not confirm
anyone--to the position of Director unless structural changes are made
to the Bureau that would effectively take away its ability to stand up
for consumers. The changes they have demanded are unfair and
unreasonable. No other independent financial regulator has its rules
subject to veto by other regulatory agencies. To suggest that the only
regulator with a primary mission to protect everyday hard-working
Americans should face unprecedented levels of oversight simply does not
make sense. Once again, the Republicans have brazenly put the interests
of Wall Street, payday lenders, and unscrupulous mortgage lenders ahead
of the interests of Main Street consumers.
To restore the American economy to its place, we need a financial
system that works for them. This means a financial system where
consumers choose services based on a full and transparent understanding
of the costs of those services. But absent a Director, the Consumer
Finance Protection Bureau won't be able to supervise payday lenders,
debt collectors, or private student lenders. They won't be able to make
it easier for the good actors in the financial system--our community
banks, for example, or our credit unions--to compete against those who
are making a large profit by unfairly taking advantage of unsuspecting
consumers.
Richard Cordray is a superb choice to serve as the first Director of
this Bureau. As attorney general of Ohio, he was a strong and fair
advocate for consumers. His work has earned him the endorsement of
bankers, CEOs, and civil rights leaders across the State of Ohio. He is
a public servant of the highest caliber who deserves to be given the
opportunity to lead this critically important Bureau.
As a matter of fundamental fairness to hard-working Americans on Main
Street, we need an effective, evenhanded Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau. Mr. Cordray deserves the opportunity to lead this new Bureau.
I call upon my Republican colleagues, at long last, to put the
interests of consumers ahead of the interests of those whose reckless
pursuit of profits and bonuses have caused so much harm to our society
and economy. I call upon my Republican colleagues to ignore the legions
of Wall Street lobbyists who are urging them to disable and, if
possible, kill the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Richard Cordray is a dedicated and impartial public servant who will
put the best interests of American consumers first. We should give him
that opportunity. I hope my colleagues will join me in strongly
supporting his nomination.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
____________________