(Deirdre Fulton) Sketchy payday loan
sharks, whose short-term, high-interest loans trap millions of
Americans in a cycle of debt, have a new ally on Capitol Hill—Democratic
National Committee chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who is reportedly
pushing a bill that would “gut” forthcoming industry regulations.
According to a memo seen by the Huffington Post, Rep. Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.) is co-sponsoring legislation
(pdf) to delay new rules from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
(CFPB), meant to crack down on abusive payday lending that profits off
deceptive terms, automatic “rollovers,” staggering fees, and interest
rates averaging over 300 percent annual percentage rate (APR).
The so-called “Consumer Protection and
Choice Act” would delay those rules for two years and “permanently block
them in any state that enacts the sort of ineffectual, industry-crafted
regulatory sham that Florida adopted in 2001,” ThinkProgress reports.
In December, 265 civil rights, labor, and consumer advocacy groups signed onto a letter
opposing the legislation, which they decried as “an attempt to codify
industry-backed practices that do little to protect consumers.”
In backing the bill, the HuffPo
notes, Wasserman Shultz is aligning herself with the Republican Party,
which has “assailed the agency from every conceivable angle—going after
its budget, attempting to tie its hands with new layers of red tape,
fomenting conspiracy theories about rogue regulators illegally shutting
down businesses and launching direct attacks on payday loan rules
themselves.”
She is also going against public opinion.
A poll conducted last year for Americans for Financial Reform and the
Center for Responsible Lending,showed
that nearly two in three voters have a negative view of payday lenders.
The same survey showed that respondents viewed payday lenders as
predators rather than resources by a margin of more than 3:1.
The move also puts Wasserman Schultz—who
has come under fire for the DNC’s perceived pro-Hillary Clinton bias—at
odds with U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who conceived of and
established the CFPB and who hasdenounced payday lending schemes for targeting the poor.
As Eric Levitz of New York Magazine‘s Daily Intelligencer said
Tuesday—his tongue firmly in his cheek: “With such brave legislators
leading the Democratic Party, it’s difficult to understand how Bernie
Sanders can get so mad at the ‘Establishment’.”
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