logo
Standing Up To Powerful Interests

Reining In Wall Street

 

What's New

The House passed the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act on December 11, 2009. Read the press release.

Ed Mierzwinski, MoPIRG's Federal Consumer Program Director, said the bill, which includes a strong Consumer Financial Protection Agency (CFPA), is "a major step" but he noted that that the agency and other aspects of the financial reform legislation are facing "a gauntlet of special-interest lobbyists looking for exceptions and loopholes."

Read more about the House bill in Mierzwinski's recent Huffington Post column.

How You Can Help

Tell Wall Street Banks: Pay Us Back

Sign our letter to your members of Congress, calling for a fee on the banks to recoup our bailout money.



Overview

More than a year after Wall Street's reckless dealings triggered the worst economic crisis since the Depression, we're still waiting for Congress to enact the changes that could keep it from happening all over again.

We need a financial system that works for consumers here in Missouri and across the country, and for small investors and taxpayers, while holding Wall Street bankers accountable for their bad behavior.

That's why MoPIRG is pushing our Congressional delegation to support reform, so that no Wall Street firm gets too-big-to-fail, and so Missourians are protected from unfair predatory mortgages and "gotcha" overdraft fees.

Even though the banks took billions of dollars of taxpayers money, the big banks and Wall Street are lobbying hard to block reform.

But we have a real opportunity to reform the financial system that failed.

Leading the charge is Ed Mierzwinski, our consumer program director and a 20-year Capitol Hill veteran. Whether he's making our case at Congress or on cable news, Mierzwinski is one of the strongest public interest voices on financial reform in Washington. Mierzwinski also helped found of Americans for Financial Reform, a coalition of which MoPIRG is a member.

Working with our allies, and with support of MoPIRG members, we are making progress.

In December, the House of Representatives narrowly approved the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, despite the outcry from lobbyists representing the financial industry.

But the fight's not over. We need your help to pass a strong version of the bill in the Senate.

We're gathering support for a bill that would:

• Put consumers and taxpayers before big banks. Check irresponsible financial practices with new rules and stronger, independent enforcement. We’re supporting a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency.

• Cover all players and transactions. Rein in hedge funds and reckless investments that escaped regulations and traded without oversight on “shadow markets.” 

•  Prevent financial institutions from becoming “too big to fail.” Banks shouldn’t be able to freely gamble with taxpayer money covering the bets.

•  And we support greater oversight, accountability and democratization of the Federal Reserve.

Please take action today, by clicking here.



In Part 1 of U.S. PIRG's Reining In Wall Street Video Series, MoPIRG's Federal Consumer Program Director Ed Mierzwinski gives a history of the current financial crisis and reviews U.S. PIRG's plan of action.

Financial Reform Platform

If money to stabilize the markets was necessary, then the package passed by Congress should have included the following mandatory safeguards for taxpayers and homeowners. Policy-makers, acting quickly, did not include any safeguards and need to be educated about the need to adopt the following:

(1)    Most importantly, protect taxpayers by protecting homeowners. Allow bankruptcy court-supervised loan modifications to prevent foreclosure, maintain neighborhood property values and lower the cost of the bailout.

(2)    Protect taxpayer investments: Strengthen oversight of any money spent and give taxpayers a better chance to make their money back through equity stakes in both firms and their assets.

(3)    Other reforms to the bailout proposal that are necessary include the following: It lacks adequate controls over executive compensation; it fails to include enough mandatory provisions to prevent gaming of the bailout system; it fails to adequately penalize participants for bad behavior.



 

SEARCH THIS SITE