Sixty-five House Democrats expressed strong support for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)βs proposed rule to prohibit the use of forced arbitration in consumer contracts in the form of a letter to CFPB Director Richard Cordray on Wednesday, according to an announcement from the House Financial Services Committee Democrats.
Rep. Maxine Waters (D-California), Ranking Member of the Committee of Financial Services; John Conyers, Jr. (D-Michigan), Ranking Member of the Committee on the Judiciary; and Hank Johnson (D-Georgia), Ranking Member on the Subcommittee on Regulatory Reform, Commercial and Antitrust Law, led the petition.
In May, the CFPB proposed a rule that would ban class action waivers in forced arbitration agreements for financial products and services, thus paving the way for consumers to file class action lawsuits against businesses they believe have harmed them financially. The House Democrats wrote in their letter that the proposal βis a critical step to protect the public interest by ensuring that consumers receive redress for systemic unlawful conduct.β
βBy restricting class actions and class-wide arbitration in consumer contracts, these clauses enable corporations to avoid public scrutiny by precluding access to the courts.β
Letter written by 65 House Democrats
βBy restricting class actions and class-wide arbitration in consumer contracts, these clauses enable corporations to avoid public scrutiny by precluding access to the courts,β the letter stated. βThis is particularly problematic for small, diffuse misconduct that harms innumerous consumers.β The lawmakers encouraged Cordray to proceed quickly on the rule βto ensure that consumers have equal protection under the law.β
The CFPBβs proposal to ban arbitration clauses has not been without controversy. The House Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit determined in aΒ hearing in MayΒ that the CFPBβs proposed rule, if it passes, will result in higher costs to consumers and less access to financial products.
The Subcommittee determined that a May 2015 study by the CFPB which showed more favorable outcomes for consumers who use arbitration as opposed to class action lawsuits is incomplete and ignores important information. The Subcommittee also pointed out that class action suits give little benefit to consumers while providing a windfall to trial lawyers. In the CFPBβs own study, the Subcommittee noted that 13 percent of class action lawsuits that actually benefited consumers had an average payout of just $32 while trial lawyers earn an average of $1 million per settled caseβabout 31,000 times the average payout.
βThe Bureau has failed to articulate a rational connection between the facts found in its May 2015 study and the agency action before us today.β
Rep. Randy Neugebauer (R-Texas)
βFor example, arbitration produces a significantly higher recovery for individual consumers and has a shorter resolution timeline for recovery. In testimony before this Committee, the agency has stated that banning the use of class action waivers in arbitration agreements, the main provision in the Bureauβs rule, would achieve a primary Bureau objectiveββto give consumers their day in court.βΒ Nothing could be further from the truth,β said Rep. Randy Neugebauer (R-Texas), Chairman of the Subcommittee.Β βI fear a single, unelected bureaucrat has directed agency action that is arbitrary and capricious.Β The Bureau has failed to articulate a rational connection between the facts found in its May 2015 study and the agency action before us today.β
Click here to read the House Democratsβ letter.