Following last night’s speedy passage of sweeping finance reforms in the Senate Banking Committee, much of the focus has been on the Republicans’ strategy to
“„I am pleased that we are moving forward legislation that will create better regulation and protect consumers and Main Street small businesses. This has been a long process, and I commend the Chairman for working hard to find common ground to target the causes of the financial crisis, and reform and modernize our nation’s financial regulatory system.
“„The bill incorporates good ideas from both sides of the aisle. It creates a systemic risk council to act as an early warning system, monitoring our economy and financial institutions for trouble. It ends government bailouts by addressing the gaps that existed when large nonbank financial companies, like AIG and Lehman, failed and there were no tools to unwind them. By ending “too big to fail,” the American taxpayer will never again be forced to shoulder the costs of risk taken on Wall Street. It will also finally regulate exotic products like credit default swaps, and hold Wall Street companies accountable for the risks they take that put consumers at risk.
“„Our efforts at bipartisanship have led us to find good solutions to protect small community banks and credit unions. We have also found common ground to protect consumers, provide uniform rules regarding consumer protection, and level the playing field for banks and nonbanks.
“„This bill is not perfect, and there are certainly items each of us on this Committee would like to see improved as we go to the floor. I am hopeful that bipartisan conversations will continue on these issues in coming weeks as the bill moves through the full Senate.