Republicans warn bank CEOs to steer clear of social, cultural issues
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[September 23, 2022]
By Pete Schroeder, Lananh Nguyen and Saeed Azhar
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The heads of the
nation's largest banks faced pointed criticism on Thursday from
Republicans complaining the firms are inappropriately taking liberal
stances on social and cultural issues.
Senator Pat Toomey, the senior Republican on the Senate Banking
Committee, urged banks to stop "embracing a liberal ESG agenda that
harms America," as chief executives appeared before Congress for an
oversight hearing. Toomey, frequently a bank ally who has opposed
stricter industry rules, argued firms are out of bounds when they weigh
in on non-banking issues like guns and abortion.
"I can't help but observe that when banks do weigh-in on highly charged
social and political issues, they seem to always come down on the
liberal side," he said in his opening statement.
The increased scrutiny underscores the challenges the country's largest
lenders increasingly face as they try to balance commercial interests
with pressure from policymakers, activists and investors to take stances
on environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues.
Multiple Republicans argued banks are caving to liberal pressure to
weigh in on such issues, and suggested conservatives will be quick to
counterbalance with their own pushback. Sen. Kevin Cramer said banks
were feeling pressure to be "one of the cool crowd."
Cramer, a North Dakota Republican, got the CEOs gathered to promise that
a recently approved merchant code to record gun store transactions would
not be used to limit firearms purchases.
"We do not intend to use the code to limit or restrict the purchase of
firearms," said Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser, who added, "We respect the
second amendment."
The line-up included CEOs of the four largest U.S. banks: JPMorgan Chase
& Co's Jamie Dimon, Wells Fargo's Charles Scharf, Bank of America's
Brian Moynihan and Citi's Fraser. They were joined by the CEOs of the
country's largest regional lenders, US Bancorp, PNC Financial and Truist.
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Senator Pat Toomey speaks in the Dirksen
Senate Office Building in Washington, D.C.,U.S., May 10, 2022. Tom
Williams/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo/File Photo
ZELLE CRITICISM
For their part, Democrats continued their critical stance towards
big banks, arguing they are enjoying large profits while mistreating
consumers and workers. None of the CEOs in attendance affirmatively
agreed with Chairman Sherrod Brown's request that they remain
neutral in any employee unionization efforts.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren blasted banks for what she said were
unacceptable levels of fraud on Zelle, the digital payments tool
owned by several of the largest banks. She criticized firms for not
providing complete data on the level of Zelle fraud seen at each
bank, with several CEOs promising to provide the information by the
end of the day. Warren sent a letter seeking such information in
July.
"You tell people that it is safe, but when someone is defrauded, you
claim that's the customer's problem," she said.
Brown said told reporters after the hearing Democrats "will stay on
them" until full fraud figures are provided.
PNC CEO William Demchek said banks are committed to solving any
problems with Zelle, but urged policymakers to scrutinize other
peer-to-peer payment programs, which he said had far higher levels
of fraud.
"We'll fix Zelle," he said.
The CEOs said their banks cover any unauthorized transactions, but
would not commit to repaying all fraud claims from customers.
CEOs were in Washington for a second day of oversight hearings. On
Wednesday, executives were pressed by lawmakers to take a tougher
stance on doing business with China amid growing tensions between
Washington and Beijing over Taiwan's sovereignty and China's human
rights record.
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder, Lananh Nguyen and Saeed Azhar;
additional reporting by Hannah Lang; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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