Seems weβve got yet another sell-out (literally) in the effort to rid the world of predatory lenders who swarm working-class and low-income neighborhoods. Earlier this year we learned that Magic Johnson is shilling for scammers who rip off low-income working people with tax-return anticipation loans. Now, Mike Illis reports for the WASHINGTON INDEPENDENT that the industry has bought out a key congressional Democrat.
Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.), who heads the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, is pushing a loophole-riddled bill that would allow payday lenders to charge annual interest rates of nearly 400 percent β a proposal widely condemned by consumer advocates and some liberal Democrats, who want to put payday lenders out of business altogether.
Suggested Reading
Gutierrez has previously been a leader in the fight to ban these plainly predatory loans, on which interest and fees run as high as 1,000 percent. In 2006, he supported the Defense Departmentβs effort to rid itself of payday lenders that target military bases, preying upon underpaid servicemembers. Congress banned lenders from charging servicemembers any more than 36 percentβjunk fees and random service charges included. In 2007, Gutierrez was lead sponsor of the Payday Loan Reform Act, which Illis says would have banned the loans altogether.
Then came the 2008 campaign, in which Illis reports that Gutierrezβs largest contributor was payday lender QC Holdings, which gave him $10,100. Another company gave him $4,600. Suddenly, the congressman thinks weβve got to compromise with these predators.
βWhile they may not be JP Morgan Chase or Bank of America, theyβre very powerful,β Gutierrez said. βTheir influence should not be underestimated.β
Indeed.
βKAI WRIGHT
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.