General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsI want working poor maga to stand in front of me and explain why they voted for this
...what the actual fuck is this doing for them?
Democrats @TheDemocrats
Last year, Democrats passed a rule to cap bank overdraft fees at $5.
Senate Republicans just voted to raise them to $35.
They’ll do anything to make the rich even richer. Even if it means raising costs for Americans.
Melanie D'Arrigo @DarrigoMelanie 4h
Commercial banks donated $23,992,279 to elect Republicans last year.
Today, Republicans voted to end the cap on overdraft fees.
This is what corruption looks like.
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/republicans-vote-repeal-cap-bank-overdraft-fees-1235304880/
...what is it with republican voters expecting a taxpayer-enriched class of billionaires to look after their working class interests?
February 18, 2025, Trump Administration Wants to Let Banks Jack Up Overdraft Fees
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/trump-admininstration-banks-raise-overdraft-fees-1235271368/

creon
(1,442 posts)They do not know and do not care.
The chief reason is
spite
How many of them even have bank accounts?
How many of them even have bank accounts?
creon
(1,442 posts)Celerity
(48,925 posts)snip
The Senate voted 52-48 on Thursday in favor of a resolution from Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott (R-S.C.) to repeal the rule. Scott had the gall to say that removing the CFPB’s cap on overdraft fees would be “good for consumers” while arguing for the resolution on the Senate floor.
https://archive.ph/k3k7w
Skittles
(162,955 posts)the entire GOP routinely supports corruption "at the expense of the working people"
Celerity
(48,925 posts)WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 – As millions of working class families struggle to afford the high prices of groceries, gas, rent and other basic necessities, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) introduced bipartisan legislation to cap credit card interest rates at ten percent. “During the campaign, President Trump pledged to cap credit card interest rates at ten percent,” Sanders said. “Today, I am proud to be introducing bipartisan legislation with Senator Hawley to do just that. When large financial institutions charge over 25 percent interest on credit cards, they are not engaged in the business of making credit available. They are engaged in extortion and loan sharking. We cannot continue to allow big banks to make huge profits ripping off the American people. This legislation will provide working families struggling to pay their bills with desperately needed financial relief.”
“Working Americans are drowning in record credit card debt while the biggest credit card issuers get richer and richer by hiking their interest rates to the moon. It’s not just wrong, it’s exploitative. And it needs to end,” said Hawley. “Capping credit card interest rates at 10%, just like President Trump campaigned on, is a simple way to provide meaningful relief to working people. Let’s do it.” In September, the Trump campaign said, “President Trump has promised to cap interest rates at 10% to provide temporary and immediate relief for hardworking Americans who are struggling to make ends meet and cannot afford hefty interest payments on top of the skyrocketing costs of mortgages, rent, groceries and gas.”
The Sanders-Hawley bill would immediately cap credit card interest rates at 10 percent. The legislation would be in effect for five years. This bipartisan bill comes after a recent Forbes report found that the average credit card interest rate is 28.6%, even though banks are able to borrow money from the Federal Reserve at less than 4.5%. In 2022, credit card companies generated an incredible $130 billion in interest and fees. Today, the American people hold a record-breaking $1.17 trillion in credit card debt. As of 2023, the average household with credit card debt has over $21,000 in credit card debt. The delinquency rate of credit cards issued by commercial banks is around 3.23%, the highest rate since 2011 in the wake of the Global Financial Crisis.
If a consumer has a $5,000 credit card balance with a 28% interest rate and can only afford to make the minimum payment of $166 a month it would take that person over 24 years to pay off and would cost nearly $11,000 in interest. If credit card interest rates were capped to 10%, that same consumer would save over $7,000 in interest. Usurious credit card interest rates and sky-high fees have allowed credit card companies to make enormous profits and pay their executives exorbitant compensation packages. Over the past five years: Visa made $67.5 billion in profits and paid its Executive Chair and former CEO, Alfred F. Kelly, Jr., nearly $140 million in total compensation. Mastercard made $44.3 billion in profits and paid its CEO Michael Miebach $77.7 million in total compensation. American Express made $33.8 billion in profits, and paid its CEO Stephen Squeri $157.2 million in total compensation.
Sen. Bernie Sanders and Sen. Josh Hawley DEMAND $1,200 stimulus checks in new COVID-19 bill
Sen. Josh Hawley to Visa & Mastercard: "This is classic monopolistic behavior."
is atrange.
a broken clock giving the right time twice a day fits.
bigtree
(91,709 posts)