A leading progressive group blasted out an email to its members flagging a Wall-Street-backed measure in Congress’ spending bill that would badly weaken the financial reform law passed after the 2008 crisis.
But with a vote scheduled for Thursday afternoon on the spending bill and Republicans mostly on board, the message could be too little, too late.
RELATED: Democrats revolt against spending bill
The email, sent Thursday morning by the Progressive Change Campaign Committee (PCCC), raises the alarm about a late addition to the spending bill, reportedly written by a Citigroup lobbyist, that repeals a key provision of the 2009 Dodd-Frank financial reform law. That provision put restrictions on Wall Street banks’ trading of derivatives — the complex financial instruments that helped cause the near meltdown of the world financial system six years ago. Financial industry lobbyists have been working quietly but doggedly in recent years to get the law scrapped.
“Will you call [your representative] and tell him to vote NO on the spending bill?” the email asks PCCC’s nearly 1 million members.
PCCC spokeswoman Laura Friedenbach also told msnbc that President Obama should veto the spending bill if it comes to his desk with the Dodd-Frank repeal in it.
In an impassioned speech on the Senate floor Wednesday, Sen. Elizabeth Warren also denounced the effort to weaken Dodd-Frank.
“We put these rules in place after the collapse of the financial system because we wanted to reduce the risk that reckless gambling on Wall Street could ever again threaten jobs on Main Street,” Warren said. “I urge my colleagues in the House, particularly my Democratic colleagues whose votes are essential to moving this package forward, to withhold support for it.”









