Bush Signs Debt-Slavery Bankruptcy Bill
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Last Week the House of Representatives sided with the powerful credit card industry
and passed new legislation which will make it harder for Americans to
climb out of debt. It's a devastating blow to Americans struggling
financially due to job loss, medical expenses, divorce or military
duty. The legislation, however, did nothing to curb the aggressive
tactics employed by the credit card companies in targeting vulnerable
individuals, making it a virtual windfall to the industry. And evidence
shows credit card companies aren't shy about trying to make a buck off
of easy targets. Quick to smell the blood in the water,
the companies specifically target the newly bankrupt, swamping them
with new credit card offers so they rack up even more debt. The right
wing of the House manipulated the process in order to squelch any
amendments which would soften the blow, including measures which "would
have given extra bankruptcy protections to victims of identity theft
and to military personnel returning from Iraq and Afghanistan." (The
Washington Post shames the right-wing conservatives who shoved this
bill through, saying even the bill's staunchest proponents "should be embarrassed that it was muscled
through the House in this kind of Potemkin-democracy way.") How could
legislation like this pass, you ask? Just follow the money. According
to the Center for Responsive Politics, the banking, credit card and
retail industries flooded Congress with cash in the last election
cycle, donating more than $56 million to political parties and
candidates. [more]
The credit card industry, which took in $30 billion in profits last year and doled out more than $7.8 million to candidates in the 2004 election cycle,
has lobbied relentlessly for the bill, pushing the fiction that
bankruptcies occur because of "irresponsible consumerism" (in bill
sponsor Charles Grassley's (R-IA) words). In fact, "ninety percent of
all bankruptcies are triggered by the loss of a job, high medical bills or divorce." In recent years, personal bankruptcy rates have shot to record highs amid a weak labor market and declining health insurance coverage. The bill is set to create several "new hurdles" that will make it harder and more expensive for Americans to recover from such episodes, while failing to stop the actual abuses that plague the system.
CREDIT CARD COMPANIES WIN BIG:
While the bill creates major new hurdles for Americans in debt, it
places no restrictions whatsoever on the credit card industry.
According to the National Consumer Law Center, "the bill doesn't address the primary ways in which credit card companies take advantage of consumers:
high fees; deceptive promotions and disclosures; and unfair practices
such as universal default." For instance, the bill allows creditors to
"post inaccurate and hard-to-find rate information in Internet credit
card solicitations," often targeted at college students or low-income
Americans. The bill also shields credit card companies from liability
and weakens legal protections from predatory interest rates – "as high as 36 percent in some cases" – as well as exorbitant late fees and over-limit penalties.
What's It All About, Progressives?
This latest in a long series of legislative defeats has caused
the American progressive coalition to ask itself why Republicans are so
united, and Democrats so disunited. Bob Fertik, president of Democrats.com said: "We must ask: Where was
[House Minority Leader] Nancy Pelosi before today? Why did [House]
Minority Whip Steny Hoyer support this outrageous bill? Why did Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid even try to take credit for this Republican
bill? And why did 'New Democrats' Ellen Tauscher, Ron Kind, Artur
Davis, and Joe Crowley push this bill on their colleagues? What party
do they imagine they belong to? Who do they think elected them to
Congress?"[3] [more]