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What’s Wrong With Dodd-Frank? The GOP Says It Has the Answer

During the debate, Florida Senator and GOP presidential hopeful Marco Rubio called Dodd-Frank an “outrage” that codified too big to fail instead of ending it as it set out to do, or claims to have done. Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, now competing for the GOP presidential nomination, criticized the “vast overreach” of Dodd-Frank during Tuesday’s debate.

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Democratic Lawmakers Warn of Risks Posed by Repeal of Dodd-Frank Provision

The investigation conducted by the two lawmakers found that repealing Section 716 of Dodd-Frank allows banks to keep nearly $10 trillion in swaps trades on the books that would be “pushed out” to entities that are not insured with taxpayer funds, if not for the Dodd-Frank rollback. Section 716 was intended to prevent taxpayer bailouts of federally-insured banks with risky swap holdings.

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Will Weakening the FSOC Put the Country at Risk of Another Financial Crisis?

One of the major reasons why the financial crisis occurred back in 2008 is that the country was ill-equipped to address risks to the financial system; the regulatory structure could not keep up with the changing U.S. financial marketplace and the country lacked single entity that was accountable for protecting the stability of the entire financial system, Pinschmidt said.

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Did Dodd-Frank Achieve Its Stated Goal of Ending ‘Too Big to Fail’?

The Dodd-Frank Act still allows the Fed some of the same emergency lending programs used in the aftermath of the 2008 crisis despite the legislation's stated purpose of ending such bailouts, according to a study by Norbert J. Michel, Research Fellow in Financial Regulations, the Institute for Economic Freedom and Opportunity at the Heritage Foundation.

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U.S. Rep. Duffy Says Financial Reform Attempts Have Failed America

Duffy said in Wednesday's editorial at the time Dodd-Frank was passed in July 2010, President Obama promised it would "lift the economy," stabilize markets, protect Americans' hard-earned money, and end "too big to fail" to ensure that the failure of any one financial institution would threaten the stability of the global economy.

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Divisiveness of Dodd-Frank is Evident Five Years After Its Passage

The controversial Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act just passed its five-year anniversary on July 21, and lawmakers and other stakeholders have never been more divided as to its effectiveness (or lack thereof) as they have been recently, according to CoreLogic's August 2015 MarketPulse released this week.

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