Banks back Democrats in bid to rebuild
bipartisan support
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[October 06, 2018]
By Michelle Price
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Banks are going to
bat for Democrats in the U.S. November midterm congressional elections
as part of an ambitious strategy to rebuild the bipartisan support they
enjoyed before the 2007-2009 financial crisis.
Commercial banks have so far donated a total of $2.5 million to U.S.
Senate Democrats in the 2018 election cycle, the largest sum since 2008,
according to data from the Center for Responsive Politics.
The backing of Democrats marks a shift for banks, which have kept a low
profile in Washington since the crisis. Democrats had all but abandoned
the financial industry in the aftermath, wary of appearing to do favors
for Wall Street.
But some moderate Senate Democrats in May backed the first easing of
financial rules since the crisis and now are seeing a boost to their
campaign coffers as the sector seeks to broaden its support on Capitol
Hill.
Of the 20 Senate candidates receiving the most money from banks during
the 2018 cycle, 15 are Democrats, according to the Center for Responsive
Politics data which tracks donations made by political action committees
and individuals. When those seats were last up for election in 2012,
only seven Democrats were in the top 20.
Senators Heidi Heitkamp, Jon Tester and Joe Donnelly, moderates who
helped pushed through the May legislation easing rules on community
banks introduced by the 2010 Dodd Frank law, are the top three
recipients, the data shows.
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Representatives for Senators Tester, Heitkamp and Donnelly did not
respond to requests for comment.
All three senators are locked in tight contests on Nov. 6. Analysts
predict Democrats are likely to gain control of the House of
Representatives but have a more narrow path to taking back the Senate.
The other 12 Senate Democrats, some of whom also voted for the bank
rule-easing bill, are also moderates. The exception is Ohio Senator
Sherrod Brown, whose position as ranking member on the Senate Banking
Committee makes him an important stakeholder for the industry.
The sector hopes boosting moderates will constrain the big bank-bashing
wing of the Democratic Party, including Senator Elizabeth Warren, a
likely presidential candidate in 2020, and Representative Maxine Waters,
who is poised to chair the committee overseeing banks if Democrats win
the House.
Rebuilding broad bipartisan support will be challenging, consumer
advocates say. Big banks continue to be a sensitive issue within the
Democratic Party, which was bitterly divided over the May legislation,
and among voters.
STRATEGIC MOVE
The midterm elections mark the first time since 2012 that the banking
industry has given more money to Senate Democrats than Republicans,
according to center's data, which is based on federal records released
on Sept. 24.
The sector has dished out $2.5 million to Senate Democrats and $1.8
million to Republicans this election cycle. By contrast, the industry
gave $1.6 million to Senate Democrats and $5.2 million to Senate
Republicans during the 2016 elections.
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Senator Jon Tester (D-MT) questions U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven
Mnuchin as he testifies to the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban
Affairs Committee on "The Financial Stability Oversight Council
Annual Report to Congress" on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S.,
January 30, 2018. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
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The American Bankers Association, the top Washington bank lobby
group, has contributed $83,000 to Senate Democratic candidates this
cycle and is leading the industry's push to regain bipartisan
support, said its CEO Rob Nichols.
Nichols, whose association has for the first time bought
advertisements for 12 midterm candidates, including four Democrats,
called enhancing the industry's political capability "strategically
important."
"This is rigorously bipartisan: if you support us, we want to
support you," he said. "This is not about playing party favorites.
For decades, banking policy was bipartisan up until Dodd Frank, and
we’re excited to see a return to this bipartisanship."
Industry officials hope the senators they support will back further
legislation easing capital markets rules drawn up in a package that
passed the House in July but has yet to pass the Senate.
“Democrats being supported by the banks are generally viewed as
moderate elements in a Senate that is being steadily stretched to
its extreme ideologically," said Isaac Boltansky, director of policy
research at Washington-based Compass Point Research & Trading.
He added that the industry is also anxious to ensure these senators
are around to oversee a swift implementation of May's new laws by
the banking regulators.
Two-thirds of registered voters are more likely to vote for a
candidate who supports regulating Wall Street and big banks when
they talk about the economy, according to a September survey by The
Harris Poll on behalf of Better Markets, which lobbies for tighter
industry regulation.
Ken Bentsen, the chief executive of bank lobby group the Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA) and a former
Texas congressman, said it was unfortunate that the industry
continued, in his view, to be seen "as a political piñata."
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But he said Democratic views on the banking industry were not
monolithic, and he saw opportunities to work with members of the
party.
"We'll address it, however it turns out," he said of next month's
election.
(Reporting by Michelle Price; additional reporting by Pete
Schroeder; Editing by Colleen Jenkins)
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