Whitehouse just introduced an awesome bill


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Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse at Forward on Climate rally
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse at Forward on Climate rally
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse at Forward on Climate rally. (Photo by Jack McDaid.)

Working with Elizabeth Warren, Sheldon Whitehouse just introduced what I humbly submit is the second-best bill introduced in this Congress.  He introduced the Marquette fix.

This is a bit of a wonkish issue, but it’s also a BFD, so please bear with me for a moment.  Basically, this bill would overrule Marquette v. First of Omaha, the 1978 Supreme Court decision that was the biggest bank deregulation in American history.  What Marquette did was deceptively simple.  It said that when a bank chartered in one state makes a loan in another state, it’s the laws of the state in which the bank is chartered that apply, not the laws of the state in which the loan is made.  That seems innocuous, but here’s what happened after the decision came down:  South Dakota and Delaware completely deregulated their banking industries, and a bunch of banks chartered themselves in those states, effectively wiping out the vast majority of sensible state-based banking safeguards.

Usury laws were the most important banking restriction to fall.  A hard cap on interest rates, usury laws used to prevent banks from charging ridiculously high interest rates.  But South Dakota and Delaware do not have usury laws, which effectively allows all US banks to charge whatever interest rates they want to.  That’s a big deal.  Before Marquette, the business of abusive consumer lending really could not exist, and it was actually somewhat difficult for banks to cheat their customers.  Obviously, things have changed.

Perhaps most importantly, blue states no longer have the power to protect their citizens from banking abuses.  States like California and Massachusetts might like to protect their citizens from the banks, but they are essentially powerless.  Unsurprisingly, Rhode Island has some fairly right-wing lending laws.  Our usury rate is pretty high (21% or 9% above the Wall St. Journal prime rate, whichever is higher), and one of Bill Murphy’s first acts as Speaker was to put in a special carve-out for credit card issuers.

Because of Marquette, this is largely irrelevant, but there are some things we can do to combat banking abuses.  Payday lenders, interestingly, do not really have Marquette protection because of federal regulations, and states can and do regulate them.  (Of course, with former Speaker Murphy lobbying for the payday lenders and Gordon Fox as Speaker, that’s a long way from happening in Rhode Island.)

What Whitehouse’s bill does is grant states the ability to set cap interest rates.  If this bill passed, blue states would actually have the tools they need to really crack down on abusive practices by the big banks.  And immediately, a large body of pre-Marquette law would slam back into place.  We would have usury laws again.

The odds for this bill are slim, but I’m glad to see Senator Whitehouse keeping the conversation alive, and I’m glad to see Senator Reed, long a quiet champion of financial reform, cosponsoring this excellent piece of legislation.  Good work, Senators!

Progress Report: 38 Studios Scoop; Localvore Recipes; Banksters vs. Liz Warren; Thanks, ALEC and Earned Media


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Greenwich Cove (Photo by Bob Plain)

It’s amazing some of the things we’re willing to believe … Jesus was born to a virgin, Thomas Jefferson thought all men were created equal, Reaganomics works and, the perhaps the biggest doozie of them all, that Rhode Island did its due diligence in assessing the 38 Studios deal.

For anyone still hanging onto that most recent bit of malarchy, Tim White and Ted Nesi have some news for you.

One of the most interesting aspects of their scoop is Linc Chafee’s letter to Keith Stokes about the impending deal, and Stokes’ reply – which was essentially that smarter business minds than Chafee’s had already vetted the deal … which goes to show, I think, that being successful in the free market doesn’t always – or even all that often – translate into having a flair for what works with regard to public policy.

Progressive Charlestown has been blogging about localvore recipes this week … a great idea, you guys!!

The banksters don’t want Elizabeth Warren on the Senate committee that oversees their industry. No surprise there … I wonder what the people want? And which constituency will get its way?

Dee DeQuattro lists her 12 biggest turkeys for 2012. Noticeably missing from her list is the guy she’s suing.

How small is Rhode Island? We would fit into Alaska more than 547 times! I once lived in a county in Oregon that was about four times the size of our state. And before that in an unincorporated hamlet in Northern California that only had about 200 full-time residents, but was at least twice the size of the Ocean State.

Bob Kerr reminds us of some of the Rhode Islanders we should be thankful for. And Elizabeth McNamara of EG Patch has a great piece on all the things a community journalist should be thankful for … including fast-talking editors!

Thanks to John Marion, executive director of Common Cause Rhode Island, local public officials will have to disclose more of the travel expenses comped to them because of their public positions. The new rule, Marion said, is a result of some shoe leather reporting by the local media.

Here’s how the ProJo reports it:

Marion said the rule request was prompted by Providence Journal reports concerning two legislators’ controversial trips.    One trip was taken by Senate Majority Leader Dominic J. Ruggerio, to a Buenos Aires, Argentina, luxury hotel last year, paid for by a New Jersey organization, the Senate President’s Forum. The other, Marion said, “was by soon-to-be former Senator Jon Brien’s travel to these conferences held by the American Legislative Exchange Council, otherwise known as ALEC.” Marion said, “In both instances, that travel wouldn’t have come to public light except for the reporting that had occurred about them.

One clarification: that was my shoe leather on the ALEC story. In an email to me this morning, Marion confirmed, “It was the Projo reporting on Ruggerio that first led us to this idea,  and RI Future’s reporting on ALEC that pushed us to make a request of the Commission.”