At a press conference announcing the bill, Senator Sanders said:
No single financial institution should be so
large that its failure would cause catastrophic risk to millions of
Americans or to our nation’s economic well-being. No single financial
institution should have holdings so extensive that its failure would
send the world economy into crisis. If an institution is too big to
fail, it is too big to exist and that is the bottom line.
…..
If the American people are wondering why tens of
millions of Americans are being charged interest rates of more than 20
percent on their credit cards, while big banks can receive virtually
zero interest loans from the Federal Reserve, the lack of competition in
the banking industry is a major reason for that.
If Teddy Roosevelt were alive today, do you know what he would say? He would say break ’em up. And he would be right.
And that’s exactly why we are here today.
The bill that I am introducing today with
Congressman Brad Sherman would require regulators at the Financial
Stability Oversight Council to establish “Too Big To Fail” list of
financial institutions and other huge entities whose failure would pose a
catastrophic risk on the United States economy without a taxpayer
bailout.
This list must include, but is not limited to
JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo,
and Morgan Stanley.
….
Importantly, under this bill, none of the
institutions on the “Too Big to Fail list” would be able to receive a
taxpayer bailout from the Federal Reserve; nor could they gamble with
the federally insured bank deposits of the American people while they
are on this list.
….
The function of banking should be to
provide affordable loans to small businesses to create jobs in the
productive economy. The function of banking should be to provide
affordable loans to Americans to purchase homes and cars. Wall Street
cannot be an island onto itself.
It is an exciting time on the left. Hillary Clinton
has taken a bold and very liberal position on immigration reform while
her opponent for the Democratic nomination, Senator Bernie Sanders, has
filed legislation that will break up the Big Banks. While Republicans
are trying to avoid any of the discussions that matter to a vast
majority of Americans, the candidates for the Democratic nomination are
making it clear what they think the future of the country should look
like.
Senator Sanders has already taken on the Koch brothers; now he is going after Congress’s other sacred big fish, Wall Street.
The left is on the march, and the billionaires and corporations are in for a fight.
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