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"Are we going to be shaken down a second time?" he asked. "That's what this debate is all about." Tester, a first-term senator facing re-election next year in a GOP-leaning state, said he was not championing big banks. "No one needs to shed a tear for them," he said on the Senate floor. Instead, he said he was on the side of small banks and credit unions that dot his rural state, which he said could vanish if their revenues collapse. "Fewer banking options in rural America is a death knell for rural America," Tester said. "But that is where we are headed." "To call this a Wall Street bailout is beyond demagoguery," Corker told reporters. Financial institutions and merchants spend millions of dollars a year lobbying on Capitol Hill, and their attempts to sway the vote are far from over. A radio ad in Montana, sponsored by the National Retail Federation and the Montana Retail Association, took direct aim at Tester. "He's helping the big banks delay debit card swipe fee reform," the announcer says. "Sen. Tester says he's for the consumer, but Tester lets the big banks swipe our money."
Ads from the other side make similar claims. In one radio commercial that ran recently in Idaho, an announcer says of the Fed proposal, "This government regulation will hurt our local community banks and credit unions and could force you to pick up the tab for giant retailers," a reference to the big-box retail behemoths that banks and credit unions say would be the biggest beneficiaries if the fees are reduced. Underscoring the unlikely coalitions the battle was spawning, Tester's proposal was being supported by the conservative Americans for Tax Reform on the ground that the Fed proposal would impose price controls. Supporting Durbin was the Armed Forces Marketing Council, whose members operate exchanges on military bases and which argued that the fees hurt military families.
[Associated
Press;
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