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Last month, Dodd and Shelby issued a joint statement saying bipartisan negotiations have resulted in "meaningful progress." It was a big step from November, when Shelby and other Republicans on the committee reacted dismissively to a draft of Dodd's bill. With even Democrats expressing misgivings, Dodd started anew, assigning bipartisan teams to address various components of the complex legislation. Still, an independent consumer finance protection agency is Shelby's main sticking point and could end up a casualty in any compromise. Under the House bill and in Dodd's original proposal, banking regulators would lose their consumer protection powers and would be consolidated in a single entity that would write and enforce rules governing lending and credit cards. One idea making the rounds in the committee would create an agency or a council that would only have rule-writing authority, with enforcement remaining in the hands of bank regulators. "That's sort of a middle ground that makes sense," Breaux said. Consumer advocates are vigorously opposing that idea. "We don't think that the financial regulators who failed so dramatically to spot the financial problems that brought our economy to its knees should be in charge of consumer protections," said Travis Plunkett, legislative director for the Consumer Federation of America. But for Dodd, and even Obama, it might be the price for victory.
[Associated
Press;
Jim Kuhnhenn covers economics and politics for The Associated Press.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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