http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/05/23/banks-lobbyists-help-in-drafting-financial-bills/?hp

Banks’ Lobbyists Help in Drafting Financial Bills By ERIC 
LIPTON<http://dealbook.nytimes.com/author/eric-lipton/> 
and BEN PROTESS <http://dealbook.nytimes.com/author/ben-protess/> 
[image: Kenneth E. Bentsen Jr., left, a Wall Street lobbyist, at a House 
financial services panel meeting.]Christopher Gregory/The New York TimesKenneth 
E. Bentsen Jr., left, a Wall Street lobbyist, at a House financial services 
panel meeting.

WASHINGTON — Bank lobbyists are not leaving it to lawmakers to draft 
legislation that softens financial 
regulations<http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/subjects/c/credit_crisis/financial_regulatory_reform/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>.
 
Instead, the lobbyists are helping to write it themselves.

One bill that sailed through the House Financial Services Committee this 
month — over the objections of the Treasury 
Department<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/t/treasury_department/index.html?inline=nyt-org>—
 was essentially 
Citigroup<http://dealbook.on.nytimes.com/public/overview?symbol=C&inline=nyt-org>’s,
 
according to e-mails reviewed by The New York Times. The bill would exempt 
broad swathes of trades from new regulation.

In a sign of Wall Street’s resurgent influence in Washington, Citigroup’s 
recommendations were reflected in more than 70 lines of the House 
committee’s 85-line bill. Two crucial paragraphs, prepared by Citigroup in 
conjunction with other Wall Street banks, were copied nearly word for word. 
(Lawmakers changed two words to make them plural.)
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   - [image: Graphic] Graphic: Slow Progress of New 
Rules<http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2013/05/23/business/Slow-Progress-of-New-Rules.html>

  The lobbying campaign shows how, three years after Congress passed the 
most comprehensive overhaul of regulation since the Depression, Wall Street 
is finding Washington a friendlier place.

The cordial relations now include a growing number of Democrats in both the 
House and the Senate, whose support the banks need if they want to roll 
back parts of the 2010 financial overhaul, known as Dodd-Frank.

This legislative push is a second front, with Wall Street’s other battle 
being waged against regulators who are drafting detailed rules allowing 
them to enforce the law.

And as its lobbying campaign steps up, the financial industry has doubled 
its already considerable giving to political causes. The lawmakers who this 
month supported the bills championed by Wall Street received twice as much 
in contributions from financial institutions compared with those who 
opposed them, according to an analysis of campaign finance records 
performed by MapLight, a nonprofit group.

In recent weeks, Wall Street groups also held 
fund-raisers<http://politicalpartytime.org/party/34826/>for lawmakers who 
co-sponsored the bills. At one dinner 
Wednesday night, <http://politicalpartytime.org/party/34611/> corporate 
executives and lobbyists paid up to $2,500 to dine in a private room of a 
Greek restaurant just blocks from the Capitol with Representative Sean 
Patrick Maloney, Democrat of New York, a co-sponsor of the bill championed 
by Citigroup.

Industry officials acknowledged that they played a role in drafting the 
legislation, but argued that the practice was common in Washington. Some of 
the changes, they say, have gained wide support, including from Ben S. 
Bernanke<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/ben_s_bernanke/index.html?inline=nyt-per>,
 
the Federal 
Reserve<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/f/federal_reserve_system/index.html?inline=nyt-org>chairman.
 The changes, they added, were in an effort to reach a compromise 
over the bills, not to undermine Dodd-Frank.

“We will provide input if we see a bill and it is something we have 
interest in,” said Kenneth E. Bentsen Jr., a former lawmaker turned Wall 
Street lobbyist, who now serves as president of the Securities Industry and 
Financial Markets Association, or Sifma.

The close ties hardly surprise Wall Street critics, who have long warned 
that the banks — whose small armies of lobbyists include dozens of former 
Capitol Hill aides — possess outsize influence in Washington.

“The huge machinery of Wall Street information and analysis skews the 
thinking of Congress,” said Jeff Connaughton, who has been both a lobbyist 
and Congressional staff member.

Lawmakers who supported the industry-backed bills said they did so because 
the effort was in the public interest. Yet some agreed that the 
relationship with corporate groups was at times uncomfortable.

“I won’t dispute for one second the problems of a system that demands 
immense amount of fund-raisers by its legislators,” said Representative Jim 
Himes, a third-term Democrat of Connecticut, who supported the recent 
industry-backed bills and leads the party’s fund-raising effort in the 
House. A member of the Financial Services Committee and a former banker at 
Goldman 
Sachs<http://dealbook.on.nytimes.com/public/overview?symbol=GS&inline=nyt-org>, 
he is one of the top recipients of Wall Street donations. “It’s appalling, 
it’s disgusting, it’s wasteful and it opens the possibility of conflicts of 
interest and corruption. It’s unfortunately the world we live in.”

The passage of the Dodd-Frank Act, which took aim at culprits of the 
financial crisis like lax mortgage lending and the $700 trillion 
derivatives market, ushered in a new phase of Wall Street lobbying. Over 
the last three years, bank lobbyists have blitzed the regulatory agencies 
writing rules under Dodd-Frank, chipping away at some regulations.

But the industry lobbyists also realized that Congress can play a critical 
role in the campaign to mute Dodd-Frank.

The House Financial Services Committee has been a natural target. Not only 
is it controlled by Republicans, who had opposed Dodd-Frank, but freshmen 
lawmakers are often appointed to the unusually large committee because it 
is seen as a helpful base from which they can raise campaign funds.

For Wall Street, the committee is a place to push back against Dodd-Frank. 
When banks and other corporations, for example, feared that regulators 
would demand new scrutiny of derivatives trades, they appealed to the 
committee. At the time, regulators were completing Dodd-Frank’s overhaul of 
derivatives, contracts that allow companies to either speculate in the 
markets or protect against risk. Derivatives had pushed the insurance giant 
American 
International 
Group<http://dealbook.on.nytimes.com/public/overview?symbol=AIG&inline=nyt-org>to
 the brink of collapse in 2008. The question was whether regulators would 
exempt certain in-house derivatives trades between affiliates of big banks.

As the House committee was drafting a bill that would force regulators to 
exempt many such trades, corporate lawyers like Michael Bopp weighed in 
with their suggested changes, according to e-mails reviewed by The Times. 
At one point, when a House aide sent a potential compromise to Mr. Bopp, he 
replied with additional tweaks.

In an interview, Mr. Bopp explained that he drafted the proposal at the 
request of Congressional aides, who expressed broad support for the change. 
The proposal, he explained, was a “compromise” that was actually designed 
to “limit the scope” of the exemption.

“Everyone on the Hill wanted this bill, but they wanted to make sure it 
wasn’t subject to abuse,” said Mr. Bopp, a partner at the law firm Gibson, 
Dunn who was representing a coalition of nonfinancial corporations that use 
derivatives to hedge their risk.

Ultimately, the committee inserted every word of Mr. Bopp’s suggestion into 
a 2012 version of the bill that passed the House, save for a slight change 
in phrasing. A later iteration of the bill, passed by the House committee 
earlier this month, also included some of the same wording.

And when federal regulators in 
April<http://www.cftc.gov/PressRoom/PressReleases/pr6553-13>released a rule 
governing such trades, it was significantly less demanding 
than the industry had feared, a decision that the industry partly 
attributed to pressure stemming from Capitol Hill.

Citigroup and other major banks used a similar approach on another 
derivatives bill. Under Dodd-Frank, banks must push some derivatives 
trading into separate units that are not backed by the government’s 
insurance fund. The goal was to isolate this risky trading.

The provision exempted many derivatives from the requirement, but some 
Republicans proposed striking the so-called push out provision altogether. 
After objections were raised about the Republican plan, Citigroup lobbyists 
sent around the bank’s own compromise proposal that simply exempted a wider 
array of derivatives. That recommendation, put forth in late 2011, was 
largely part of the bill approved by the House committee on May 7 and is 
now pending before both the Senate and the House.

Citigroup executives said the change they advocated was good for the 
financial system, not just the bank.

“This view is shared not just by the industry but from leaders such as 
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke,” said Molly Millerwise Meiners, a 
Citigroup spokeswoman.

Industry executives said that the changes — which were drafted in 
consultation with other major industry banks — will make the financial 
system more secure, as the derivatives trading that takes place inside the 
bank is subject to much greater scrutiny.

Representative Maxine 
Waters<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/w/maxine_waters/index.html?inline=nyt-per>,
 
the ranking Democrat on the Financial Services Committee, was among the few 
Democrats opposing the change, echoing the concerns of consumer groups.

“The bill restores the public subsidy to exotic Wall Street activities,” 
said Marcus Stanley, the policy director of Americans for Financial Reform, 
a nonprofit group.

But most of the Democrats on the committee, along with 31 Republicans, came 
to the industry’s defense, including the seven freshmen Democrats — most of 
whom have started to receive donations this year from political action 
committees of Goldman Sachs, Wells 
Fargo<http://dealbook.on.nytimes.com/public/overview?symbol=WFC&inline=nyt-org>and
 other financial institutions, records show.

Six days after the vote, several freshmen Democrats were in New York to 
meet with bank executives, a tour organized by Representative Joe Crowley, 
who helps lead the House Democrats’ fund-raising committee. The trip was 
planned before the votes, and was not a fund-raiser, but it gave the 
lawmakers a chance to meet with Wall Street’s elite.

In addition to a tour of Goldman’s Lower Manhattan headquarters, and a 
meeting with Lloyd C. 
Blankfein<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/lloyd_c_blankfein/index.html?inline=nyt-per>,
 
the bank’s chief executive, the lawmakers went to 
JPMorgan<http://dealbook.on.nytimes.com/public/overview?symbol=JPM&inline=nyt-org>’s
 
Park Avenue office. There, they chatted with Jamie 
Dimon<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/d/james_dimon/index.html?inline=nyt-per>,
 
the bank’s chief, about Dodd-Frank and immigration reform.

The bank chief also delivered something of a pep talk.

“America has the widest, deepest and most transparent capital markets in 
the world,” he said. “Washington has been dealt a good hand.”

*Eric Lipton reported from Washington, and Ben Protess from New York.*
A version of this article appeared in print on 05/24/2013, on page A1 of 
the NewYork edition with the headline: Banks’ 

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