Legal
Trump Sticks To His Guns On Shaving Dodd-Frank Act

President Trump is showing no signs of turning back on his promise to give the Dodd-Frank Act a haircut.
President Donald Trump earlier this week reiterated his vows to
roll back elements of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, which was enacted
in response to the financial crisis to act as a safety net in the
event of economic meltdown.
Trump said on Tuesday that his administration was working on
reforms to the regulations designed to make it easier for banks
to loan money.
“We're going to be coming out with some very strong – far beyond
recommendations – we're going to be doing things that are going
to be very good for the banking industry so that the banks can
loan money to people who need it,” Trump reportedly said during a
meeting with business leaders.
“We're going to do a very major haircut on Dodd-Frank. We want
strong restrictions, we want regulation. But not regulation that
makes it impossible for the banks to loan to people that are
going to create jobs,” he reportedly said.
But the road to regulatory relief remains obstructed by other
issues that US lawmakers are grappling with, such as healthcare
policies and tax, and overhauls
of the act are unlikely to occur before summer, according to
senior Republican Patrick McHenry.
President Trump's remarks were echoed by JP Morgan chief
executive Jamie Dimon, who in his annual letter to shareholders
said
the current regulatory environment is “unnecessarily complex,
costly and sometimes confusing”.
Dimon said the US regulatory regime, and certain aspects of
Dodd-Frank, hindered economic growth and “hurt the average
American”.
He said he was not looking to throw out the entirety of the 2010
Dodd-Frank Act, but argued it was “appropriate to open up the
rulebook in the light of day and rework the rules and regulations
that don't work well or are necessary”.