The governing party faced an awkward dilemma. People were hurting and furious at the government's generous bailouts for banks. But how could the Democrats do something for the folks without upsetting their friends and patrons in the banking industry? Democrats think they found a way. They are enacting a series of measures described as "breakthrough" reform and "unprecedented" defeat for the bankers. Only these achievements are more accurately understood as "reform lite." The house is on fire and Democrats brought a garden hose.
The Democratic Party is changing in some promising ways, but what's impressive is how much it has not changed. Does that sound harsh?
I am relying on private judgments from Washington players regarded as
the "white hats" on this subject — consumer lobbyists and other
public-interest reformers, who for years have labored in frustration to
enact laws that would restore equity and honest relationships to the
out-of-control financial system. These organizations mostly endorse the
Democrats' efforts and celebrate their "victories." But a few minutes
of private conversation reveals their doubt and disappointment. "It's a
good bill," they will say, then after enumerating the shortcomings add,
"It's better than nothing."
"This has to be on background, OK?" one of the reformers said. "This
crisis brought down the world economy and yet Congress still hasn't
passed a bill making sure it doesn't happen again."
Julia Gordon, a lawyer with the Center for Responsible Lending, did not
seek anonymity. "We have reached the moment to ask ourselves Rabbi
Hillel's question: if not now, when?" Gordon said. "I fear we are
letting this crucial moment pass without putting forward-looking rules
in place to fundamentally change how mortgages are made and prevent
predatory lending. Plus, when we look back at the foreclosure tsunami
that devastated so many families, we're going to be ashamed that we did
not fix the bankruptcy code to permit mortgage modification. That move
alone could have prevented more than a million foreclosures, and while
I predict we will revisit the issue in the future, it will be like
closing the barn door after the horse has died."
If not now, when? That question ought to haunt the Democratic Party and
President Obama, who has been missing in action himself on key issues.
Congressional Democrats are responding to this epic conflagration with
the same risk-avoidance tactics they learned during many years in
minority status. In those days, they could always blame right-wing
Republicans for blocking their good intentions. But whom do the Dems
blame now that they have the White House and fifty-nine votes in the
Senate and a seventy-eight-seat majority in the House? Their standard
explanation for not doing more is, "We didn't have the votes." So when
might we expect Democrats to achieve more? When they have eighty votes
in the Senate?
The party's ideological intentions are being defined with greater
clarity in these new circumstances, and so are the President's. It's
still early, but the implications are ominous for other issues. If
Democrats are reluctant to disturb the power of other major interests,
it seems improbable that fundamental change will occur on healthcare,
energy conversion or the restoration of work and wages. The problem now
is the Democrats, not the Republicans. The party aids and protects its
free-roaming entrepreneurial politicians and does not punish those who
undermine the party's larger promises. When Republicans were in charge,
they enforced party loyalty with Stalinist discipline.
Democrats are the party of safe incumbents, weak convictions. The
much-celebrated "Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights" is a fresh example
of how the Democratic Party tries to have it both ways — avoiding the
tough votes while mollifying the folks. The credit card reform measure
imposes new rules on the industry and does away with many of the most
outrageous gimmicks that bankers use to extract more money from debtors.
Banks cannot raise interest rates retroactively on old credit card
balances or pile on hidden fees or fail to give advance notice for rate
increases. These and other changes are worthy.
The achievement seems less courageous if you know that Congress was
largely ratifying the regulatory rules already adopted by the Federal
Reserve last year. Or that the legislation gives the industry another
nine months to gouge their customers before the new rules go into
effect. Or that Visa and MasterCard, Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase are
free to raise future interest rates to the sky — without limit. That is
the industry's intention, as bank lobbyists reported after the bill was
passed.
American Usury
One of the fundamental issues that party managers wished
to avoid was the scandal of American usury. Usury is the ancient sin of
charging inflated interest rates sure to ruin the borrowers. It is
considered immoral by Judaism, Christianity and Islam because usury
involves the powerful using their wealth to ensnare weak and
defenseless borrowers. The classic usurer offers an impossible choice
that debtors cannot easily refuse. If they reject the terms of the
loan, they will not be able to pay the rent or buy necessities. If they
accept the usurious interest rates, their debts will accumulate
untilthey are bankrupted (at which point the creditors claim their
property). No civilized society can endure in such conditions.
Usury used to be illegal in the United States but it was
"decriminalized" in 1980 — the dawn of financial deregulation. A
Democratic president and Congress repealed all interest-rate controls
and the federal law prohibiting usury. Thirty years later, American
society is permeated with usurious practices — credit cards charging 30
percent and higher, subprime mortgages and other forms of predatory
lending, the notorious "payday" loans that charge desperate working
people an effective interest rate of 500 percent or more. Businesses,
especially smaller firms, are also prey to usury in less direct ways.
Needing credit to survive, they submit to the creditor's demands and
are often weakened as a result, shedding workers the interest rates
creditors can charge borrowers. In the House, several legislators
introduced interest-rate caps, but party leaders would not let the
issue get a roll call vote. Rep. Maurice Hinchey of New York and
co-sponsors proposed an interest-rate cap of 18 percent, the same
ceiling enacted years ago for credit unions. "Offering the amendment
raised a lot of anxiety on the part of a lot of people," Hinchey said.
"It was withdrawn because it had no possibility of success and it would
have put a number of people in a tough situation. We had to back off."
A roll call on usury would have compelled legislators to choose between
their constituents and their bankers. Rep. Donna Edwards of Maryland
proposed a tougher ceiling on interest rates, but the House rules
committee rejected her amendment. "Our constituents are so angry with
the banks," she observed, "siding with credit-card companies would not
be helpful to me, and I expect that's true in other districts." Bankers
are contributors, so this is what members call "a money vote." A
consumer lobbyist explained. "Let's face it," he said. "The main reason
lots of members get on the House Financial Services Committee is
because they want to raise money from the financial industry."
In the Senate, Dick Durbin of Illinois, the majority whip who rounds up
votes for the party, introduced his own usury bill—a cap of 36 percent
including the non-interest fees and charges. Durbin's bill also
empowered state governments to set lower limits. The Consumer
Federation of America endorsed it, but the consumer lobbyists asked
Durbin not to have a roll call on his measure because it might reveal
their weakness.
Nevertheless, the redoubtable Bernie Sanders of Vermont demanded a vote
on his bill — an interest-rate cap of 15 percent." When banks are charging
30 percent interest rates, they are not making credit available,"
Sanders said. "They are engaged in loan sharking." Sanders lost, 33 to
60. Twenty-one Democrats voted with the sharks. Senators Carper,
Cantwell, Byrd, Bingaman, Bayh, Baucus, Akaka, Warner, Tester,
Stabenow, Specter, Shaheen, Pryor, Ben Nelson, Bill Nelson, Murray,
Lincoln, Landrieu, Kaufman, Johnson, Hagan.
The scandal of "payday" lending is being confronted by numerous state
legislatures, but the issue stalled out in Congress. The industry
pursued a race-based lobbying strategy that targeted black and Hispanic
representatives with this pitch — poor people need these loans; don't
mess with them. Rep. Luis Gutierrez of Illinois proposed a bill that
usurers found acceptable — an interest rate cap of 390 percent.
Standing With the Sharks
Perhaps the most revealing moment for
Democratic timidity was the Senate roll call to authorize bankruptcy
judges to intervene on home foreclosures and reduce the burden for
failing homeowners. If the bankers refused to make a deal, the debtors
could take them into bankruptcy court and hope for better terms.
This single reform would shift the balance of power modestly from
creditors to debtors and save at least 1.5 million families from
foreclosure, reformers estimated. The measure passed easily in the
House, but was defeated by the Senate. Bankruptcy reform lost because
twelve Democrats joined the Republicans to vote for bankers and against
embattled families. Senators Baucus, Bennet, Byrd, Carper, Dorgan,
Johnson, Landrieu, Lincoln, Ben Nelson, Pryor, Specter, Tester. Dick
Durbin could not conceal the bitter aftertaste. He told a hometown
radio interviewer: "Hard to believe in a time when we're facing a
banking crisis that many of the banks created — they are still the most
powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. And frankly, they own the place."
Durbin's disappointment may have included the former Illinois senator
whom he had championed for president. Barack Obama took a walk on
reform. Last year as a candidate, Obama declined to support the
bankruptcy provision for the financial-bailout legislation, but he
promised reform groups he would support it if elected. The White House
wouldn't let reformers include it in the stimulus package or in Obama's
first budget. The White House suggested the issue could proceed as a
stand-alone measure (guaranteed to fail). On this important reform, the
president stands with the sharks.
The Democratic Party ignores its left-liberal-progressive base with
some regularity because it knows it can. Politicians understand they
will suffer no consequences afterward. The galaxy of mediating
organizations, including organized labor, that surrounds and supports
the party may stomp and holler, but they do not attempt any retribution
that might alter their relationship with power.
Reform organizations will not withdraw their support, either money or
rank-and-file voters. Nor will they seek to punish any of the wayward
Democrats who regularly vote against them with opposition at the next
election. The "white hat" reformers are Washington insiders themselves,
with a seat at the table and influence on the substance of the party's
agenda. They do not want to put their status at risk. Politicians know
this from long experience. So do the reformers.
The warped dynamics of the Democratic Party may have sufficed when the
GOP was ascendant and the goal was restoring a Democratic majority. But
now the majority party resembles a dysfunctional family, badly in need
of outside intervention. I say this with sympathy, having known and
admired many of the reform activists for many years. Some of them are
suffering from a political version of the Stockholm syndrome. Their
good intentions are brutally compromised by identifying with the
limited imagination and nerve of the Democratic Party.
In some ways, the politicians are prisoners too — captives of the money
politics and the expensive mass-marketing that requires them to raise
so much money and thus rely on the moneyed interests. Representatives
and senators know how the system works and what they need to do to
survive. Now and then, they may try to win one for the folks, but
mostly they are resigned to the confinements of the status quo. So long
as activist groups will make no attempt to break out of this pattern or
penalize incumbents for disloyalty, the party will continue to stiff
the faithful.
Moral Awakening
Given all the adversities facing the country, I
conclude that meaningful "intervention" is plausible only if it
originates with people at large who are more distant from power. I
envision the intrusion coming from many "independent formations" free
to ignore Washington's insider routines and mobilized by citizens on
behalf of their own convictions, their common-sense ideas of what needs
to be accomplished. This alternative path is a central theme of my new
book, Come Home, America. I describe (somewhat wishfully) how
self-directed organizations might develop the power to break through
regular politics and overcome the usual barriers.
These groups could function, not as a third party nor as standard
"issue" advocates, but as a mixture of these capabilities. They could
act like free-roaming guerillas who educate and agitate; like a
political party that selectively destabilizes safe-seat incumbents by
entering party primaries or running independent challengers; like a
representative organization that can demand political relations through
direct confrontations or even civil disobedience. This development
sounds implausible, I know, especially in Washington. But our crisis
demands a more aggressive response from citizens—something that
threatens the power of both parties and makes them insecure.
As it happens, a rough facsimile of what I envisioned is arising now in
the politics of financial reform. A network of fourteen community
organizations, based in cities from Boston to Washington, DC, and
across North America, has come together in alliance and intends to
force a moral awakening on the narrow thinking of the status quo. These
citizens are developing a political-action agenda around one
theme — usury — as the efficient expression of the abuses and injustices
associated with banking and finance. These are interfaith organizations
affiliated with the Industrial Areas Foundation and composed of
citizens who are white and black, affluent and working poor, whose
local organizations are based in churches and synagogues, Catholic,
Protestant, Jewish, Muslim and others.
Usually, their political action is local and succeeds regularly in
building relations with public officials that produce real change in
communities. This time, given the crisis, these IAF groups are
attempting something they have not done before — building the voice and
influence to join the national debate and change its terms. I sat in on
one of their organizing meetings near Baltimore and was asked to
contribute my views on the shape of the problem.
"Are you ready to be born again? And again? And again? Do you have the
imagination? Do you believe it?" The call was from the Rev. Hurmon
Hamilton of the Roxbury Presbyterian Church in Boston, and he inspired
the 100 or so community leaders. "Faith is the substance of things
hoped for," Hamilton declared, "the evidence of things unseen."
Outlawing Usury
The Rev. David Brawley of East Brooklyn Baptist
described a preliminary statement of basic principles. "Reasonable
interest rates," he said. "In this financial culture, the nation will
return to a time-honored, indeed ancient, practice: the law against
usury. Financial institutions and mechanisms that participate in this
culture will agree to a maximum of 9 percent interest or so. This was
the usual state-mandated rate before the repeal."
Brawley described other principles with radical implications. "The
lender holds the loan," he explained. "The financial institution that
makes a loan holds the loan for its duration. The borrower and lender
enter into a long-term relationship that ends when the loan is fully
repaid. This is the fundamental starting point for any return to
accountability." That statement of principle challenges the market
securitization of mortgages that falsely claimed to reduce risk by
dispersing it among many investors. The process instead left no one
responsible for sound lending and thus multiplied the costs of failure.
Brawley's final principle was perhaps most threatening to the existing
order. "The federal government insists on these core characteristics as
the criteria for all further bailout funding. Banks that wish to borrow
from the government must accept these simple standards [and] provide
consumers with an alternative to the current monopoly of financial
transactions dominated and still dictated by the same fifty financial
institutions that caused the crisis."
In other words, the social standard of usurious practices should define
which banks and financial firms are eligible to participate in all
forms of government aid and protection. Why should taxpayers finance
the usurers who are injuring the society? The government's
undiscriminating approach to aiding banks implicates everyone in
supporting the usury. So do the banks and brokerages that collect
people's savings and channel the money into usurious practices that
produce greater returns by ruining more borrowers. The moral standard
poses difficult questions for everyone, not just bankers and
politicians. Arnold Graf, national organizer for the IAF, argues that
the moral question can lead people to confront a deeper debate about
the future. "What is the kind of society we want to have?" Graf asked.
"That's really what we want to talk about — transforming the society.
We're not going to get transformation form the president and Congress.
It can only come from the people themselves." These IAF organizations
expect to try different tactics to spread the message and engage the
people with power who make decisions. That means directly confronting
elected representatives but also the banking institutions with famous
names. The alliance hopes the moral principles will mobilize people of
faith but also students and workers and investors. Following theexample
of the civil rights movement, people of conscience have to find ways to
turn up the heat on the established order and discomfort the silent
citizens who are passive and indifferent. This effort, Graf assumes,
will probably take years, not months. Leaders of the community
organizations are aware of the risks. They are attempting a leap into
the unknown and they might fail. No one listens, nothing changes. They
accept the risk because they too have asked Hillel's question. If not
now, when?
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090622/greider
____
National affairs correspondent William Greider has been a political
journalist for more than thirty-five years. A former Rolling Stone and
Washington Post editor, he is the author of the national bestsellers
One World, Ready or Not, Secrets of the Temple, Who Will Tell The
People, The Soul of Capitalism (Simon & Schuster) and, most
recently, Come Home, America
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