http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-02-11/banks-swaps-win-gives-elizabeth-warren-upper-hand-on-dodd-frank

Banks May Have Overplayed Their Hand Fighting Wall Street Regulation
by Cheyenne Hopkins Carter Dougherty Silla Brush
4:00 AM CST
February 11, 2015

(Bloomberg) -- The financial industry is finding that winning in Washington
comes at a cost.

Wall Street lobbied aggressively and succeeded late last year in persuading
lawmakers to roll back rules for the $700 trillion derivatives market. *Instead
of generating momentum for further changes to the Dodd-Frank Act, the
victory sparked a populist uprising among Democrats that’s had wide-ranging
consequences, including stymieing less controversial requests from regional
banks like Capital One Financial Corp.*

“A short while ago there was bipartisan agreement on a number of common
sense improvements,” said Rob Nichols, president of the Financial Services
Forum that represents the chief executives of Wall Street’s biggest banks.
“Unfortunately, that bipartisan agreement is gone.”

Financial companies and their employees spent $169 million on the November
elections and had expectations that their bid to loosen regulations would
get easier with Republicans in control of both the House and Senate. Now,
there is second-guessing that banks overplayed their hand, according to
lobbyists. *The December win on swaps rules has become a rallying cry for
Senator Elizabeth Warren, a frequent critic of Wall Street, and spurred
repeated White House vows to defend Dodd-Frank.*

Attacking Dodd-Frank

The fallout has frustrated banks, which hope it’s temporary. *Democrats who
previously said they wanted to revise the law now won’t even discuss it.*
Republicans are altering their strategy for attacking Dodd-Frank. *And
lobbyists have been hindered in their efforts to persuade Senate Democrats
to champion changes to financial rules.*

*A sign of the political headwinds has been regional banks’ difficulty
winning bipartisan support for a bill that would free them from stringent
oversight imposed on lenders with at least $50 billion of assets.*

Capital One considers getting the threshold increased a top legislative
goal this year, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The company’s inability to persuade Democrats to lead the charge in the
Senate, particularly home state Senator Mark Warner of Virginia, has
reverberated through the ranks of financial lobbyists, according to two
people involved in the talks. *The message is clear that Warren’s attacks
on the industry have made even moderate Democrats skittish to stand up for
banks, the people said.*

Capital One’s discussions with Warner aren’t unique, said company
spokeswoman Tatiana Stead. “We have had identical and multiple discussions
with his Senate colleagues and other elected officials,” she said.

Still Lobbying

If legislation is proposed that helps banks lend “responsibly” to small
businesses and homeowners, Warner will consider it, said his spokesman
Kevin Hall.

Banks are responding to the blowback by taking a pause from public
campaigning. Lenders have also urged Capitol Hill allies to refrain from
proposing minor bills that bring attention to Dodd-Frank and stand little
chance of getting through the politically-divided Senate.

The industry’s lobbying hasn’t stopped in more private settings, according
to interviews with congressional aides, trade associations and
representatives of large and small banks. For now, it’s more focused on
urging regulators to scale back rules, said the people, who asked not to be
named because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly.
Banks were never going to have an easy time rolling back Dodd-Frank.
Because bills require 60 yes votes in the Senate to overcome political
hurdles, Republicans need at least six other votes to pass legislation.
President Barack Obama also can veto measures he doesn’t like.

Changes to Dodd-Frank that Congress has approved so far were wrapped into
unrelated bills that had broad political support, like funding the federal
government.

Treasury Call

*The banking industry’s predicament became even harder in January when
House Republicans tried to tweak financial rules during the first week of
the new Congress, a move that Warren and Representative Maxine Waters
jumped on to push the theme that Dodd-Frank was under attack.*

*Democrats lined up against the bill and Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew
called House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi the day of the vote to emphasize
Obama would veto the legislation if it ever passed Congress, according to a
Treasury official with knowledge of the discussion.*

The bill failed to get the two-thirds support of House members that it
needed to pass, necessitating a second vote.

Soon after, Wall Street lobbyists called the office of House Majority
Leader Kevin McCarthy urging the Republican lawmaker to drop it, according
to three people with knowledge of the talks. The lobbyists told his staff
the legislation wasn’t a high priority to big banks and *not worth the
public backlash being stirred up by Warren, Pelosi and Waters, a California
Democrat, the people said.*

Republicans proceeded anyway. *The bill passed a week later with the
support of only 29 of the House’s 188 Democrats.* It hasn’t been taken up
by the Senate.

Taxpayers at Risk

*Even though they lost the House vote, Warren, Pelosi and Waters cemented
Democratic opposition to further changes to Dodd-Frank in the process. They
built on support gained in the December debate on derivatives, when during
a week of TV interviews and press conferences they portrayed Wall Street as
putting taxpayers at risk so soon after the financial crisis.*

*The vocal opposition has affected some Democrats, including Representative
Jim Himes, a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. executive whose Connecticut
district is home to major hedge funds.*

Himes was an early advocate of repealing the derivatives measure, a change
that lets JPMorgan Chase & Co., Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp. and
other banks keep trading swaps in divisions with government backstops.

*Now, Himes is staying away from Dodd-Frank. He told a group of banking
lobbyists earlier this month that he won’t be backing any revisions to the
law, given the current political climate, according to three people who
attended the meeting.*

“I’m going to hold off on commenting on Dodd-Frank,” Himes said last week
during a brief interview. “I’d rather not weigh into something as
controversial as this.”

*‘Dodd-Frank a Lightning Rod’*

Himes’s office later issued a statement in which the lawmaker said “this is
an environment in which proposed changes to Dodd-Frank, meritorious or
otherwise, are a lot less likely to get a dispassionate hearing.”

*Representative K. Michael Conaway, the Texas Republican who leads a
committee that overseas the main U.S. derivatives regulator, said
Dodd-Frank has become a “lightning rod.”*

At a January conference in Miami, he told a group of commodity traders that
he plans to propose legislation this year that would change some derivative
rules. *Conaway said he will couch the effort not as altering Dodd-Frank*,
but as part of a routine review of legislation that governs the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission’s regulatory powers.

*“You just mention it, and they just close up, shut up,” Conaway said of
lawmakers and Dodd-Frank.*

===

Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
(202) 448-2898 x1
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