President Trump signed two
directives Friday rolling back key financial regulations of the Obama era,
including restrictions on Wall Street banks and on financial advisers who sell
clients expensive financial products with higher commissions, a White House
adviser said.
The two executive actions don't take
effect immediately, but rather ask federal agencies to review options to cancel
existing or proposed regulations.
Trump and aides said Dodd-Frank
rulings aren't working and are making legitimate investing activity more
difficult than it should be.
"Today, we are signing core
principles for regulating the United States financial system," Trump said.
Rep. Ann Wagner, R-Mo., who joined
Trump for an Oval Office signing ceremony, said, "we are returning to the
American people, low- and middle-income investors, and retirees, their control
of their own retirement savings. This is about Main Street."
Democrats said Trump's efforts will
re-create the conditions that led to the 2008 financial meltdown.
"During the campaign President
Trump said he would be tough on Wall Street," said Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa.
"Then he filled his administration with billionaires and bankers and
now he's trying to roll back the rules put in place to prevent another economic
crash like the one that occurred in 2008."
Most Dodd-Frank changes would need
to be made via legislation, and Democrats vowed to fight Trump's plans.
"The president's attempts to
repeal Wall Street reform will be met with a Democratic firewall in
Congress," said Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.
Trump signed the executive orders in
a ceremony Friday afternoon. Previous executive orders have been far more
sweeping than originally advertised. The two executive actions are:
► An executive order targeting
the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act — and
especially the so-called Volcker rule prohibiting banks from making speculative
investments. The order would direct the secretary of the Treasury to review
regulations on financial institutions and report back specific recommendations
to the president.
Among the actions being considered
are "personnel actions," the White House official said. While he did
not identify those actions, the most vulnerable financial regulator is Richard
Cordray, the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. A federal
appeals court ruled last year that the bureau's structure was unconstitutional
he exercises "massive, unchecked power" independent of the president.
As a remedy, the court said, the president ought to be able to fire.
It could also include a dismantling
of "orderly liquidation" authority for too-big-to-fail banks. Last
week, the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel released a 2010 legal
opinion raising constitutional questions about the authority of bankruptcy
courts to seize those banks, suggesting that the Trump administration was
prepared to rely on the previously
undisclosed legal advice.
► A presidential memorandum to the
secretary of Labor ordering a delay in implementing a
rule requiring financial advisers to act in their clients' best interests.
The regulation, known as the fiduciary rule, is scheduled to go into effect
April 10. Opponents argue that it would discourage financial advisers from
working with low-net worth clients.
The secretary of Labor could delay implementation
of the rule, but repealing it would require starting the rulemaking process
over from the beginning. That's because the rule was already finalized
last year, with a one-year grace period for compliance. President Barack Obama already
vetoed an attempt by congressional Republicans to kill the rule outright.
No comments:
Post a Comment