Analysis: Congressional Democrats face challenges in repealing Wall
Street-friendly rules
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[January 25, 2021]
By Pete Schroeder and Michelle Price
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With Democrats
controlling the Senate, progressives want to repeal the Trump
administration's Wall Street-friendly rules, but they may struggle to
win enough votes in a thinly divided Congress and risk obstructing
President Joe Biden's agencies from writing stricter new rules, said
lobbyists and legal experts.
Sherrod Brown, expected chair of the Senate Banking Committee, said this
month he was drawing up a list of rules passed by Trump regulators that
he hopes to kill using the Congressional Review Act (CRA), a 1996 law
that allows Congress to reverse recently finalized federal regulations.
Since 2017, regulators have eased dozens of rules created following the
2009 financial crisis and in the decades before, arguing they were
outdated and stymied economic growth. Liberals say the changes saved
Wall Street tens of billions of dollars while increasing systemic risks
and hurting consumers.
Reversing rules through an agency's internal process can take years
whereas the CRA allows Congress to swiftly kill rules with a simple
majority and the president's approval.
Democrats, who already led the House of Representatives, on Wednesday
took working control of the Senate, with Vice President Kamala Harris
holding a tie-breaking vote.
But with such a wafer-thin margin, Brown may struggle to win vital
support from moderate Democrats, especially from those whom have
publicly supported similar rule-changes in the past.
Several centrists, for example, voted for a 2018 law easing post-crisis
banking rules and have backed bills containing rules similar to those
implemented in 2020 by the securities regulator which critics say muzzle
shareholders.
"It's a lot harder than people think to get something changed via the
Congressional Review Act, particularly with thin majorities," said Paul
Merski, an executive at the Independent Community Bankers of Americas
who lobbied in 2017 to reverse a rule banning forced arbitration via the
CRA.
Issues related to bank capital requirements and liquidity may be too
arcane to compete for limited Senate floor time with healthcare, labor
and immigration measures, said Gregg Gelzinis, a senior policy analyst
at liberal Washington think tank the Center for American Progress, which
is discussing CRA issues with lawmakers.
"That education process is underway now to feel out which of these rules
can get unanimous support in the caucus," he said.
Potential candidates could include a December rule relaxation that
allows banks to hold more risky deposits, and a rule which could force
banks to lend to contentious sectors, such as fossil fuel companies,
said Gelzinis.
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A Wall Street sign is pictured outside the New York Stock Exchange
in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., October
2, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo
Brown's office said it will consult with Biden's new regulators on
which rules the agencies can fix and which would require
congressional action. His office did not identify specific rules,
but flagged those which "gutted fair housing protections, undermined
state consumer protection laws, and threatened" financial stability.
Cam Fine, a seasoned lobbyist and CEO of Washington consultancy
Calvert Advisors, said recent consumer finance rules which
progressives say do more harm than good would be savvy political
targets, as Democrats generally agree on the need to boost consumer
protections.
"Brown would be more successful if he employed the CRA on
consumer-focused issues - I think that's where he could unite his
caucus," he added.
NOVEL TERRITORY
The CRA allows a new Congress to reverse rules passed during the
final 60 working days of the previous Congress.
Before Trump took office pledging to slash red tape, the CRA had
been used successfully once. Republicans subsequently used it to
reverse 16 rules created by Barack Obama administration regulators,
according to Daniel Perez, senior policy analyst at George
Washington University's Regulatory Studies Center.
Democrats, however, have never successfully used the CRA, according
to Perez, and may veer into novel legal territory where their
ultimate goal is to make rules tougher rather than scrap them.
That's because once a rule is reversed using the CRA, agencies
cannot write a "substantially" similar rule.
While that is a vague provision that has never been tested, agencies
have generally avoided revisiting rules Congress has overturned,
said Perez.
"Where perhaps Democrats might want to do something more stringent,
I think that might give them pause," he said.
Navigating this provision is part of the discussions, said Gelzinis.
Progressives may want to rewrite some rules but could risk legal
challenges arguing the rule is substantially similar.
"The overall guiding principle here is what is the most efficient
way to undo this universe of Trump harms," he said.
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder and Michelle Price; Additional
reporting by Katanga Johnson; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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