You can help gather more names by cutting and pasting the following message into an email and sending it to friends and co-workers.
SUBJECT LINE: Dear 114th Congress, Stand Up to Wall Street
Dear —-,
One of the best things to come out of the Wall Street reform law known as Dodd Frank was a new financial watchdog agency – the first-ever with a focused mandate to make the marketplace fairer for consumers and borrowers and put their interests ahead of the power and profits of banks.
Since it got up and running in 2011, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has ably embarked on that task – despite a barrage of attacks from the financial industry and its allies. Now those attacks are about to get tougher, and much more dangerous – and the CFPB is a prime target. Wall Street and its friends in the 114th Congress are out to “de-fang” the agency, according to former Representative Barney Frank.
In its short life, the CFPB has racked up a record of real accomplishment: among other things, it has forced financial services companies to pay some $4.7 billion in monetary relief to wronged consumers; cracked down on “last dollar” scams that pocket up-front fees from financially desperate people for help that is never actually delivered; told mortgage lenders to stop making unaffordable loans; started work on rules to end payday lending abuses and reign in out-of-control debt collection practices; and developed a searchable consumer complaint system, helping tens of thousands of people to get answers or monetary relief from their lenders in addition to giving the Bureau and the public a valuable window onto problems in the market.
For the CFPB to continue to defend the American people, though, we will need to rise to the defense of the CFPB.
The great majority of Americans, regardless of party, want regulation of the financial industry to be tougher rather than looser, not just in order to protect consumers against abusive and deceptive practices but to guard the economy and the country against another financial and economic disaster.
But Washington needs to hear from us. Members of the new Congress need to know that we are watching and will hold them accountable for actions plainly designed to weaken the rules and open the door to another round of predatory lending and Wall Street gambling – with the prospect of another taxpayer bailout down the road.
Sincerely,