[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 98 (Thursday, June 8, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H4706-H4707]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BAD ACTORS ON WALL STREET
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Rhode Island (Mr. Cicilline) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CICILLINE. Mr. Speaker, less than 10 years ago in 2008, bad
actors on Wall Street brought the economy of our country to the brink
of collapse. Because of their greed, recklessness, and deceit, millions
of Americans lost their jobs, families were thrown out of their homes,
and seniors saw their life savings evaporate before their very eyes.
Washington bailed out the big banks and they said they were too big
to fail, but the American people never got a bailout. The American
people were told: You are on your own. And in seven States, including
my home State of Rhode Island, we are still working to recover jobs
that were lost in this Great Recession. That is why it was so important
2 years later when Congress passed and President Obama signed into law
the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010.
This law was a landmark victory for the American people, especially
the American consumer. That is why it is so disturbing that Republicans
now want to take us back to the days of too big to fail, a time when
powerful Wall Street special interests exploited consumers and small
investors, and our entire economy was put at risk.
The bill before us today, which I call the ``Wrong'' CHOICE Act, will
turn Wall Street into the Wild West again and it will empower the big
banks to do what they want at the expense of honest, hardworking
families. This bill takes us back to an era when financial institutions
could wipe out someone's retirement and foreclose on innocent
homeowners completely unchecked. This bill repeals commonsense
requirements that require financial advisers to act in the best
interests of their clients. It will allow bad actors to push bad
products on working people and seniors in exchange for paybacks.
This bill protects forced arbitration clauses and allows companies to
require their customers to waive their right to a jury trial, and deny
them their day in court when their rights are violated.
By the way, that includes servicemembers, brave men and women who
have worn the uniform of the American Armed Forces. Unfortunately,
servicemembers and veterans are often targeted for financial fraud and
unscrupulous creditors because they are held to a higher standard of
debt repayment. In addition, their frequent time away from home makes
it harder for our servicemembers to identify scams.
The CFPB has already taken at least 12 major enforcement actions
directly protecting servicemembers and their families. In 2016, the
CFPB fined Navy Federal Credit Union $28 million for illegal debt
collection tactics. The CFPB took action against two for-profit
colleges, ITT Technical Institute and Corinthian Colleges, both of
which have been linked to predatory treatment of servicemembers and
veterans. The now-defunct Corinthian was ordered to provide $480
million in debt relief to defrauded students, including servicemembers.
In 2013, the CFPB ordered high-cost, small-dollar lender Cash America
to pay up to $14 million in restitution and a $5 million penalty for
violations of the Military Lending Act.
Just 2 months ago, CFPB sanctioned an auto lender that harassed and
[[Page H4707]]
preyed on servicemembers. Security National Automotive Acceptance
Company threatened that they would contact commanding officers about
debts that our veterans incurred, and lied to our brave men and women
in uniform about their obligations, and they have been held accountable
because of the CFPB.
The CFPB was created to protect families and small businesses, and
since 2010, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has returned
nearly $12 billion to 29 million consumers in all 50 States. More than
1 million consumers have used the CFPB's complaint database, and nearly
all of them have received a timely resolution to their issues.
{time} 1015
The CFPB held Wells Fargo accountable to the tune of $100 million
after they opened millions of fraudulent accounts for customers without
telling them. Wells Fargo surreptitiously collected fees from these
victims, and every dime was returned to consumers because the CFPB was
on the job.
The sole purpose of CFPB's existence is to ensure that bank loans,
mortgages, and credit cards are fair, affordable, understandable, and
transparent. That is exactly what it is doing. Republicans want nothing
more than to kill it.
No honest, hardworking American should be exploited when they are
taking out a mortgage, trying to pay off their college debt, buying a
car, or opening a bank account, but that is what is going to happen if
Republicans get their way today. Passage of this bill will confirm what
so many Americans believe: that Washington works for big business, the
very rich, and powerful special interests, but not for them.
Let's remind ourselves that the American people sent us to Washington
to work for them. They didn't send us here to fight for the big banks
and credit card companies that already have too much power here in
Washington.
Reject this bad bill. Vote for the American people. Protect
consumers, and very strongly vote ``no.''
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