Democrats Are Trying to Help the Banks Racially Discriminate in Housing Mortgages
During the 2016 presidential election, Virginia Senator Tim Kaine touted his experience as a former civil rights attorney and, in particular, his experience representing people of color who faced housing discrimination. Now, Kaine—along with 11 of his Democratic colleagues in the Senate—is supporting a financial deregulation package that would curtail the government’s ability to police banks’ discriminatory lending practices.
As HuffPost’s Zach Carter reports:
The legislation would block the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau from collecting key data showing when and where families of color are being overcharged for home loans or steered into predatory products. It’s just one small provision in a broad financial deregulation package, which, thanks to backing from 12 Democratic senators, is almost certain to clear both chambers of Congress and receive President Donald Trump’s signature.
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Detailed numbers from the CFPB show the data loss would be heavily concentrated on poor neighborhoods—precisely the communities most at risk for predatory lending. More than 1,700 census tracts officially designated as “low and moderate income” would lose at least 20% of the data they’d collect without the new law, while 185 cities and towns would lose at least 10%.
This bill would almost certainly serve to exacerbate racial discrimination against prospective black homeowners. Banks are notorious for refusing home loans to black families, a practice called redlining. Kaine should be more than familiar with this practice: he once won a $26 million lawsuit against Nationwide Insurance after the lender refused to offer insurance to black homeowners in majority-black neighborhoods.