2016 -- H 8028

========

LC005617

========

     STATE OF RHODE ISLAND

IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY

JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2016

____________

H O U S E   R E S O L U T I O N

RESPECTFULLY REQUESTING CONGRESS TO RE-ENACT PROVISIONS OF THE

GLASS-STEAGALL BANKING ACT

     

     Introduced By: Representatives Palangio, Amore, Maldonado, Carson, and Ajello

     Date Introduced: April 01, 2016

     Referred To: House Corporations

1

     WHEREAS, From 1933 to 1999 the Federal Building Banking Act of 1933, known as

2

the Glass-Steagall Act, worked effectively to protect the public interest by separating the

3

functions of commercial banking from investment banking, insurance, and securities trading; and

4

     WHEREAS, The Glass-Steagall Act was repealed in 1999, expanding the ability of

5

financial entities to exploit the financial system for their own gain in disregard of the public

6

interest, and contributing to the greatest speculative bubble and subsequent worldwide economic

7

distress since the Great Depression; and

8

     WHEREAS, Many of the financial services entities were saved by the United States

9

Treasury at a cost of billions of dollars to American taxpayers; and

10

     WHEREAS, The Federal Reserve has issued several trillion dollars through 2014 to the

11

"too big to fail" Wall Street banks, to buy their devalued derivatives securities; and these banks

12

have used the money to increase their speculation in financial derivatives, which has resulted in a

13

net decrease in real lending to businesses, state, and city projects, and only now is approaching

14

levels of seven years ago; and

15

     WHEREAS, Within the thousands of pages of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act,

16

there are no prohibitions preventing "too big to fail" financial services organizations from

17

investing in or undertaking substantial risks in hundreds of trillions of dollars of derivative

18

contracts; and

19

     WHEREAS, A new set of financial bubbles are in full swing, and the American taxpayers

 

1

are at renewed risk of being forced to cover for losses incurred by derivatives gambling of the

2

financial services conglomerates; and

3

     WHEREAS, Re-enactment of the Glass-Steagall provisions would protect the public

4

from these bail-out costs, and free credit resources to be directed into large-scale infrastructure

5

and other physical economic investments, with attendant restoration of skilled employment and

6

the tax base; and

7

     WHEREAS, Bi-partisan resolutions urging the United States Congress to re-enact the

8

Glass-Steagall banking provisions have been introduced into 27 state legislatures as of December

9

2014, and these resolutions have passed by large majorities in four states thus far; and

10

     WHEREAS, A bill to restore the Glass-Steagall framework, H.R. 129, was introduced

11

into the U.S. House of Representatives by Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur and had 81 bipartisan

12

co-sponsors; and a similar bipartisan bill, the 21st Century Glass-Steagall Act, was introduced into

13

the Senate, S. 1282, by Senators Warren, McCain, King, and Cantwell with 6 other co-sponsors;

14

and a companion bipartisan bill in the House, H.R. 3711, introduced by Representatives Tierney

15

and Jones, had 11 other co-sponsors; now, therefore be it

16

     RESOLVED, That this Senate of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations

17

hereby urges the United States Congress and the President of the United States to enact Glass-

18

Steagall inspired legislation, and prohibit commercial banks and bank holding companies from

19

investing in stocks, underwriting securities, or investing in or acting as guarantors to derivatives

20

transactions; and be it further

21

     RESOLVED, That the Secretary of State be and hereby is directed and authorized to

22

transmit duly certified copies of this resolution to the President of the United States, the presiding

23

officers of each house of Congress, and each member of the State of Rhode Island Congressional

24

Delegation.

========

LC005617

========

 

LC005617 - Page 2 of 2