Here Are the Democrats Who Just Voted to Sell You Out to Wall Street
It’s been 10 years since the financial crisis devastated pretty much everyone besides America’s biggest banks, which were mostly bailed out and left unpunished. Now, thanks to a crucial assist from some Democrats in the Senate, we may be due for a repeat.
On Tuesday, 16 Democratic senators and one independent voted with Republicans to move forward on a bill which will roll back parts of the Dodd-Frank regulations put in place after the financial crisis. The Congressional Budget Office has predicted that the probability of “systematically important” banks failing “is small under current law and would be slightly greater under the legislation.”
Aside from loosening Wall Street regulations, the bill—which is titled the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act—will also defang current rules that require lenders to report who they are (and aren’t) lending to.
In February, a report from the Center for Investigative Reporting found that, in 2015 and 2016, banks in 61 metropolitan areas systematically denied mortgages to people of color. The report’s authors found that in Philadelphia, black applicants “were almost three times as likely to be denied a conventional home purchase loan as white applicants.”
By weakening the government’s ability to collect data on lending practices, the bill essentially gives banks a pass to pursue discriminatory practices with little oversight.
Supporters of the bill have been adamant that the legislation is meant to provide relief to mom-and-pop community banks. But as The Intercept’s David Dayen has reported, members of Congress and bankers alike are using the “community banks” line as a a fig leaf for the actual purpose of the bill: giving yet another handout to Wall Street behemoths like Citigroup.
As Indivisible’s Angel Padilla noted on Twitter, Republicans needed Democratic support to get the 60 votes needed to take the bill forward. And though Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer technically voted against the bill, he also did nothing to stop its progress:
Listed below are all the Democratic senators (including independent Angus King, who caucuses with the Democrats) who supported the bill, along with how much money the financial sector has donated to each of their campaigns in the past five years. (These numbers don’t include donations to so-called “independent expenditure” organizations like super PACs.)
Sen. Michael Bennet (D-CO): $1,909,757