[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 187 (Wednesday, December 7, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8409-S8410]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CORDRAY NOMINATION
Mr. MERKLEY. Mr. President, tomorrow we will be voting on whether to
close debate on the nomination of Richard Cordray as Director of the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. This vote can be framed in terms
of his qualifications, but that would be a mistake because folks on
both sides of the aisle have noted he is exceptionally qualified for
this position. He is a graduate of Michigan State University, of Oxford
University, and the University of Chicago Law School, where he was
editor in chief of the University of Chicago Law Review.
In addition, he has held a number of public positions with honor and
distinction as State representative, as Ohio's treasurer, as Ohio
attorney general. Indeed, as Ohio's attorney general, he was an
aggressive advocate for consumers. He recovered more than $2 billion
for Ohio's retirees, investors and business owners and took major steps
to help protect its consumers from fraudulent foreclosures and
financial predators. What a terrific resume. He is an individual who
has stood up for retirees, business owners, and investors. He has said
fraud will not be tolerated. We will seek it out and we will penalize
it and we will end it. In other words, it is exactly the resume of
someone we would want to head a consumer financial protection
department or division or bureau.
Why are we voting tomorrow to end debate? Why don't we just have a
unanimous consent agreement that we go to a final vote? The answer is,
my colleagues across the aisle are objecting. They are objecting to a
vote on his nomination not because he isn't qualified but because they
want to prevent this agency from doing its job: protecting America's
families against predators. I cannot think of many issues that are so
important to the success of our families as making sure they are not
subject to financial predators. Yet my colleagues across the aisle are
opposing this nomination in order to protect the predators preying on
America's families. That is just plain wrong. I hope they will change
their position before tomorrow.
Let's turn the clock back to 2003. In 2003, a new type of mortgage
was invented in the United States. This was a mortgage that had a 2-
year teaser rate--a very favorable, low rate--so as to serve as the
bait for mortgage originators to say to their clients: This is the best
mortgage for you because it has the lowest rate. But what the
originators didn't tell their clients was that after 2 years, that rate
exploded to a very high interest rate--a predatory rate--and they
couldn't get out of the mortgage because the mortgage had a little
sentence in it that said they have to pay a huge penalty if they try to
refinance this mortgage. That penalty was 5 or 10 percent of the value
of the loan. Show me a working family in America who buys a house, puts
down their downpayment, makes their repairs, gets moved in, and still
has 10 percent of the value of the house sitting in the bank, able to
pay a penalty so they can get to a fair interest rate after the
interest rate explodes.
So this new mortgage turned the humble, amortizing, family mortgage
that had been the pathway for the middle class, for millions of
American families, into a predatory trap that destroyed families and
that created a lot of wealth for the 1 percent who run the system in
our society. Have no doubt, that 1 percent got in, in every possible
way. They said: Let's package these predatory mortgages and sell them
and then let's take pieces of those packages and combine them with
pieces of other security packages and resell them and then let's
develop a brandnew insurance industry that insures securities. This
insurance is what is often called credit default swaps or derivatives,
which are fancy names for insurance on
[[Page S8410]]
these packages and mortgages. So then they said let's thereby make them
very attractive to pension funds and investors across the world. This
was so successful that those who were buying the mortgages were willing
to pay a huge bonus to the mortgage originators to steer families away
from the very successful, humble, amortizing, fixed-rate mortgage into
this predatory, exploding interest rate mortgage, all the time posing
as the family's counselor, saying it is my job to do what is best for
you.
Why did this predatory practice in 2003, that grew enormously over
the next 4 years, continue to go on? What happened to oversight of
fairness, and what happened to the agency that was supposed to shut
down predatory practices? That agency was the Federal Reserve and the
Federal Reserve is a very powerful organization. The Federal Reserve
has two responsibilities: employment and monetary policy. Those are the
traditional responsibilities, but they were given a third, which is
consumer protection. Somewhere in that vast, powerful agency on the
upper floor, the head of the Federal Reserve and his key advisers were
hard at work on monetary policy, deciding what interest rates they
would lend to our major banks, and they were hard at work, we would
hope, on the employment side as well. But they seemed to have forgotten
they were also responsible for consumer protection. That mission was
set aside. It was put down in the basement of the building and the
lights were turned off and the doors locked and they did absolutely
nothing about these predatory practices that were destroying the
finances of millions of Americans, that were betraying the fundamental
relationship between a family and its trusted mortgage originator who
was getting bonus payments for steering them into these loans. They did
absolutely nothing about a number of other predatory practices.
That is why the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was created. It
doesn't have other responsibilities to distract it. It isn't going to
take the fate and success of our families and lock that mission down in
the basement and turn out the lights because this is the heart of why
this bureau exists.
This vote tomorrow is about whether we believe in the family value of
fair deals that build the success of our families or whether we believe
in the 1 percent exercising full predatory practices to destroy the
financial lives of Americans, destroy the financial lives of our
veterans for standing up for us in war and who are often a highly
targeted group when it comes to these types of mortgage practices and
these types of payday practices.
This is an important vote tomorrow. It is not a vote about the
qualifications of the nominee because the nominee has the right set of
skills to be highly qualified in a number of directions. It is a vote
about whether, in America, one believes it should be OK to be a
predator or not OK. I believe it is not OK. I believe States and the
Federal Government should do all they can to make sure deals are fair,
to make sure there are not conflicts of interest, to make sure there
are not payments that are undisclosed to a customer, to make sure there
are not hidden clauses to convince customers by their trusted advisers
to sign documents which cause the destruction of families' financial
lives over the next 10 to 20 years as a result of that trust. Fairness
matters to the success of our families.
We should have a unanimous vote tomorrow to end this debate and get
on to the final vote of whether to confirm a very distinguished and
capable and honorable man who is prepared to fight for the success of
American families.
I thank the Chair.
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