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Elizabeth Warren
Showing Original Post only (View all)Guess What Happened When JPMorgan's CEO Visited Elizabeth Warren's Office [View all]
WASHINGTON -- A meeting between Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Jamie Dimon deteriorated almost immediately after the JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO visited the recently elected senator and consumer advocate at her Capitol Hill office in 2013.
In a new afterword for the release of the paperback version of her book A Fighting Chance, Warren recalls that the tenor of the conversation between the two policy adversaries soured when Dimon complained about financial regulations that she has supported:
When the conversation turned to financial regulation and Dimon began complaining about all the burdensome rules his bank had to follow, I finally interrupted. I was polite, but definite. No, I didnt think the biggest banks were overregulated. In fact, I couldnt believe he was complaining about regulatory constraints less than a year after his bank had lost billions in the infamous London Whale high-risk trading episode. I said I thought the banks were still taking on too much risk and that they seemed to believe the taxpayers would bail them out -- again -- if something went wrong.
Our exchange heated up quickly. By the time we got to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, we werent quite shouting, but we were definitely raising our voices. At this point -- early in 2013 -- Rich Cordray was still serving as director of the consumer agency under a recess appointment; he hadnt yet been confirmed by the Senate, which meant that the agency was vulnerable to legal challenges over its work. Dimon told me what he thought it would take to get Congress to confirm a director, terms that included gutting the agencys power to regulate banks like his. By this point I was furious. Dodd-Frank had created default provisions that would automatically go into effect if there was no confirmed director, and his bank was almost certainly not in compliance with the those rules. I told him that if that happened, I think you guys are breaking the law.
Suddenly Dimon got quiet. He leaned back and slowly smiled. So hit me with a fine. We can afford it.
Our exchange heated up quickly. By the time we got to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, we werent quite shouting, but we were definitely raising our voices. At this point -- early in 2013 -- Rich Cordray was still serving as director of the consumer agency under a recess appointment; he hadnt yet been confirmed by the Senate, which meant that the agency was vulnerable to legal challenges over its work. Dimon told me what he thought it would take to get Congress to confirm a director, terms that included gutting the agencys power to regulate banks like his. By this point I was furious. Dodd-Frank had created default provisions that would automatically go into effect if there was no confirmed director, and his bank was almost certainly not in compliance with the those rules. I told him that if that happened, I think you guys are breaking the law.
Suddenly Dimon got quiet. He leaned back and slowly smiled. So hit me with a fine. We can afford it.
As Warren noted in a 2014 Senate Banking Committee hearing, Dimon was proved correct: Though his bank was forced to pay $20 billion in fines, he still received a significant raise at the end of 2013.
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/03/31/elizabeth-warren-jamie-dimon_n_6972182.html?ncid=txtlnkusaolp00000592
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Guess What Happened When JPMorgan's CEO Visited Elizabeth Warren's Office [View all]
n2doc
Mar 2015
OP
We need to jail the officers and directors and place more limits on indemnification.
merrily
Mar 2015
#51
Dimon doesn't care about breaking the law, his bank pays the fine. Jail time is what he needs.
peacebird
Mar 2015
#2
Please make an OP in general discussion with this, more people need to see it.
peacebird
Mar 2015
#13
That's what the fines were supposed to do. These sociopaths won't respond to anything that's not pri
Volaris
Mar 2015
#49
I've never seen so many people on a somewhat "liberal" site go after her
SleeplessinSoCal
Apr 2015
#52
Did JPMorgan Try to Bribe Dem Power-Brokers? (Depends What Your Definition of 'Bribe' Is)
Ichingcarpenter
Mar 2015
#32
+1. Break up the Banks, open up the Media & bring back the Fairness Doctrine, for starters.
appalachiablue
Mar 2015
#45
i am A-OK with banishment from wall street + confiscation of 90% of wealth.
pansypoo53219
Mar 2015
#48