Milestones: A consumer cop hits the financial beat

PIRG worked with a coalition of advocates to establish and defend the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a watchdog that keeps Wall Street in check.

Daniel Avram | Shutterstock.com

In the wake of the crash, reform

It was late 2008. Reckless practices on Wall Street, neglected by the government, had brought the economy to its knees.

PIRG’s Ed Mierzwinski and Gary Kalman seized the moment, uniting consumer advocates, labor groups and others around the goal of protecting consumers from the too-often careless or unscrupulous practices of banks, credit card companies, debt collectors and other financial players. The new coalition, Americans for Financial Reform, was headed by PIRG alumna Heather Booth.

“This is a David and Goliath fight,” said Heather, in The Los Angeles Times. “On the one side, you have the extraordinarily powerful financial industry and the Chamber of Commerce…. And on the other side, you have the people.”

Elizabeth Warren, then a Harvard professor appointed by President Barack Obama to head the Troubled Asset Relief Program Oversight Board, proposed a solution: the creation of an independent watchdog to check Wall Street.

Staff | TPIN
PIRG’s Gary Kalman (center) and John Krieger (back left) presented Sen. Debby Stabenow (left), Sen. Amy Klobuchar (second from right), Sen. Harry Reid (far right) and others with more than 125,000 petitions from PIRG members nationwide in support of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.

Along with AARP and other allies, Ed and Gary met with Prof. Warren (whom later, of course, Massachusetts voters elected to the U.S. Senate), Rep. Barney Frank (Mass.) and Sen. Chris Dodd (Conn.) to help turn Warren’s brainchild into the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

In December 2009, Rep. Frank introduced the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. As Heather Booth predicted, Goliath came out swinging: The financial industry would ultimately spend $500 million in opposition, or roughly 166 times the amount the bill’s supporters would scrape together.

Still, the bill’s prospects looked promising — until Scott Brown, a Wall Street reform skeptic, won a 2010 special election to fill the vacant seat of U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy, who had passed away in August 2009.

To persuade Sen. Brown to become a “yes” vote, MASSPIRG launched a grassroots campaign. Ultimately, he agreed to support an amended version of the bill, opening the door to other Republican hold-outs.

President Obama signed the bill into law on July 21, 2010, and appointed Richard Cordray as the CFPB’s first director in January 2012.

Caley McGuane | TPIN
MASSPIRG's Deirdre Cummings met with CFPB Director Richard Cordray in June 2017.

Defending Wall Street’s consumer cop 

By Jan. 1, 2017, the CFPB had provided nearly $12 billion to 29 million consumers in the form of compensation, reductions, canceled debt and other relief.

Just weeks later, however, the Trump administration launched an effort to weaken the CFPB.

That same year, PIRG canvassers organized tens of thousands of people to urge their senators to oppose the Financial CHOICE Act, which would have undermined the agency. PIRG advocates coordinated press conferences with local groups and elected officials, and Ed defended the bureau in the media and testified before Congress.

In 2018, President Donald Trump signed legislation rolling back some Wall Street Reform protections. But the CFPB was spared. As a New York Times columnist had predicted a year earlier, “The [bureau] seems too popular to simply shut down.”

C-SPAN | Used by permission
PIRG's Ed Mierzwinski testified before a Senate committee about consumer financial data protection in February 2014.

About this series: PIRG and The Public Interest Network have achieved much more than we can cover on this page. You can find more milestones of our work on consumer protection below. You can also explore an interactive timeline featuring more of our network’s consumer protection milestones.

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