Clinton expected to hit Wells Fargo in
speech on 'bad corporate actors'
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[October 03, 2016]
By Amanda Becker
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (Reuters) - U.S.
presidential candidate Hillary Clinton on Monday will unveil a plan to
make it easier for consumers to take legal action against “bad corporate
actors,” citing Wells Fargo & Co and Mylan Pharmaceuticals, according to
a campaign official.
While campaigning in Ohio, the Democratic nominee will explain how she
would, if elected on Nov. 8, curb the prevalence of contractual clauses
that require consumers, employees and other individuals to resolve legal
disputes in private arbitration proceedings instead of in courts, her
campaign said. Mandatory arbitration clauses sometimes require that
claims be pursued on an individual basis instead of on behalf of a class
of similarly situated individuals. Consumer advocates say this makes it
prohibitively expensive to take legal action.
Clinton will call on the U.S. Congress to give agencies such as the
Federal Trade Commission, the Federal Communications Commission and the
Department of Labor the authority to restrict the use of arbitration
clauses in consumer, employment and antitrust agreements, according to a
preliminary plan reviewed by Reuters.
Clinton will also discuss how she believes that the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau and other agencies already have the authority to curb
the use of such clauses under the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act. The planning
document said she would urge the Securities and Exchange Commission to
exercise its authority to make related rules authorized by the financial
reform law. Wells Fargo <WFC.N> is expected to be in the crosshairs when
Clinton discusses how she would curb mandatory arbitration clauses.
For years, the bank’s employees opened as many as 2 million checking,
savings and credit card accounts without the customers' permission in
order to meet sales quotas. Wells Fargo reached a $190 million
settlement with federal regulators earlier this month.
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Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton boards her campaign
plane in Charlotte, North Carolina, United States October 2, 2016.
REUTERS/Brian Snyder
When Wells Fargo chief John Stumpf testified before Congress
recently about the unauthorized accounts, he said he did not expect
the bank to waive a clause signed by its customers in order to open
their authorized accounts. The clause said they would arbitrate
disputes instead of suing Wells Fargo in court.
Democratic lawmakers in Congress, including Senator Elizabeth Warren
of Massachusetts, have called on Wells Fargo to toss out the
mandatory arbitration clause and allow customers to sue.
Clinton is also expected to criticize Mylan <MYL.O> for sharply
raising without justification the price of EpiPens, which deliver
life-saving drugs to those with allergies. The criticism will be
part of a larger push to curb excessive market concentration and
encourage competition that benefits consumers, her campaign said.
(Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
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