Reining in Wall Street

STANDING AGAINST THE BIG BANKS AND WALL STREET—For more than 20 years, Consumer Program Director Ed Mierzwinski has helped us stand up against big banks and credit card companies.

OUR FISCAL FUTURE

For years federal bank regulators ignored numerous warnings of increasingly predatory mortgage practices, credit card tricks and unfair overdraft policies used by the big Wall Street banks. They also ignored warnings of risky securities being packaged and sold to investors.

Since winning federal Wall Street reform, we’ve been working to defend those reforms from the industry’s attempts to defang, defund or delay them, in particular the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which is the centerpiece of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.

We’re working to:

Put consumers and taxpayers before big banks. Check irresponsible financial practices with new rules and stronger, independent enforcement by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Cover all players and transactions. Rein in hedge funds and reckless investments that escaped regulations, and traded without oversight on “shadow markets.” 

Control corporations that are “too big to fail.” Banks shouldn’t be able to freely gamble with taxpayer money covering the bets. We must rein in institutions whose risky investments threaten the larger economy.

In short, we’re fighting for a financial regulatory system that guarantees consumers and taxpayers are protected from the predatory practices at the heart of this problem. And we need to provide consumers a seat at the table when it comes to oversight of the nation’s financial system.

Issue updates

Blog Post | Financial Reform

It happened 4 years ago this weekend, and Congress has already forgotten | Ed Mierzwinski

Four years ago, on September 14-15, 2008, the Lehman Brothers investment bank declared bankruptcy while Bank of America acquired another foundering investment bank, Merrill Lynch -- major events that froze the financial markets and led in a few days to a $700 billion bailout of the financial system. Just four years later, some in the Congress have forgotten that real people and the economy are still suffering from the financial collapse, as it steps up Wall Street-backed efforts to prevent regulators from protecting the public.

> Keep Reading

One Year Anniversary of CFPB

 

 

 

For the first time, a federal financial agency has placed consumers at the center of its work. That agency, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), turns one year old on July 21, 2012. The CFPB, established as a centerpiece of the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010, is the first federal financial agency with only one job: protecting consumers. It has special responsibilities to protect seniors, military servicemembers and students. The CFPB is also tasked with ensuring fair lending and promoting financial education and literacy. The CFPB protects you no matter where you buy financial products—at a bank, at a credit union, at a mortgage company or a payday lender.

 

> Keep Reading
Media Hit | Financial Reform

Capital Times: Obama Takes Bold Action to Protect Consumers

President Obama announced a bold and important step to protect consumers from financial tricks and traps by announcing a recess appointment of his well-qualified nominee, Richard Cordray, to head the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

> Keep Reading
Media Hit | Financial Reform

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Senate Can Stand up for Consumers

Deceptive and abusive mortgage lending was a fundamental cause of the financial crisis and of the worst recession since the Great Depression. Year in and year out, tricks and traps on credit cards, student loans, overdraft fees and more cost working families tens of billions of dollars.

> Keep Reading
Media Hit | Financial Reform

Property Trax: 10 reasons advocates say Wisconsin residents need new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Even as Congress and the Obama Administration continue to argue over its powers and leadership, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau began its work as top cop for all consumer finance matters, including mortgages, on July 21.

> Keep Reading

Pages

Media Hit | Financial Reform

Capital Times: Obama Takes Bold Action to Protect Consumers

President Obama announced a bold and important step to protect consumers from financial tricks and traps by announcing a recess appointment of his well-qualified nominee, Richard Cordray, to head the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

> Keep Reading
Media Hit | Financial Reform

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Senate Can Stand up for Consumers

Deceptive and abusive mortgage lending was a fundamental cause of the financial crisis and of the worst recession since the Great Depression. Year in and year out, tricks and traps on credit cards, student loans, overdraft fees and more cost working families tens of billions of dollars.

> Keep Reading
Media Hit | Financial Reform

Property Trax: 10 reasons advocates say Wisconsin residents need new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Even as Congress and the Obama Administration continue to argue over its powers and leadership, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau began its work as top cop for all consumer finance matters, including mortgages, on July 21.

> Keep Reading
Media Hit | Financial Reform

Capital Times: Congress must stand up for consumers

The failure of the current bank regulators to stop predatory lending and other reckless Wall Street practices is widely recognized as a primary cause of the 2008 mortgage meltdown that triggered the current recession. For years leading up to the 2008 financial collapse, federal bank regulators ignored numerous warnings of increasingly predatory mortgage practices, credit card tricks and unfair overdraft policies used by banks. The banks were earning billions from “gotcha” practices. Incredibly, bank regulators actively encouraged this behavior, arguing it was profitable and kept banks safe.

> Keep Reading
News Release | WISPIRG | Financial Reform

New Consumer Agency Takes Over Thursday as Nation’s Consumer Bank Cop; Industry Mounts Opposition to Bureau and Any Nominated Director

Leading consumer groups today announced the results of a poll showing that an overwhelming majority of likely voters both support a new consumer agency (74%) and want Wall Street held “accountable” (77%), along with a report documenting “10 reasons” consumers need the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. 

> Keep Reading

Pages

One Year Anniversary of CFPB

 

 

 

For the first time, a federal financial agency has placed consumers at the center of its work. That agency, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), turns one year old on July 21, 2012. The CFPB, established as a centerpiece of the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010, is the first federal financial agency with only one job: protecting consumers. It has special responsibilities to protect seniors, military servicemembers and students. The CFPB is also tasked with ensuring fair lending and promoting financial education and literacy. The CFPB protects you no matter where you buy financial products—at a bank, at a credit union, at a mortgage company or a payday lender.

 

> Keep Reading

A VICTORY FOR CONSUMERS OVER WALL STREET

Even after the financial crisis, lobbyists for the big banks and credit card companies furiously opposed proconsumer provisions in the Wall Street reform law. Over their objections, WISPIRG helped convince Congress to create a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

> Keep Reading
Report | WISPIRG Foundation | Financial Reform

10 Reasons We Need the CFPB Now

The report documents that while the failure of federal regulators to prevent predatory mortgage lending is well known, it is less well-known that federal regulators also failed to stop unfair credit card tricks, overdraft fee schemes and the growth of triple-digit APR and payday loans, which are now imposing a crushing financial burden on many families.

> Keep Reading
Report | WISPIRG Foundation | Financial Reform

Big Banks Bigger Fees

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Blog Post | Financial Reform

It happened 4 years ago this weekend, and Congress has already forgotten | Ed Mierzwinski

Four years ago, on September 14-15, 2008, the Lehman Brothers investment bank declared bankruptcy while Bank of America acquired another foundering investment bank, Merrill Lynch -- major events that froze the financial markets and led in a few days to a $700 billion bailout of the financial system. Just four years later, some in the Congress have forgotten that real people and the economy are still suffering from the financial collapse, as it steps up Wall Street-backed efforts to prevent regulators from protecting the public.

> Keep Reading
Blog Post | Financial Reform

President’s Recess Appointment Gives Watchdog Teeth It Needs To Protect Consumers From Wall Street or Payday Lender Financial ShenanigansBruce SpeightEd Mierzwinski

Kudos to President Obama for standing up for consumers this week by making a recess appointment of former Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray to head the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The President’s action means that the CFPB now has all its powers to protect the public from unfair financial practices, whether by banks or other financial firms, such as payday lenders and credit bureaus.

> Keep Reading
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