I stood up to big banks. I took on their army of lobbyists and helped win the fight for a consumer protection agency. But there's still more to do. Wall Street isn't going to change its ways until Washington gets serious about strong oversight and real accountability. No special deals. We need a tough cop on the beat to make sure that nobody steals your purse on Main Street or your pension on Wall Street. Problem is, in Washington money talks'and Wall Street has plenty of money to spread around. So Wall Street gets all the special breaks while working families get hammered. That's what I want to change.Meanwhile, Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA), is avoiding the subject all together, still trying to talk about whether or not Warren is Native American. Of course Brown doesn't want to talk about Wall Street, and particularly about JPMorgan Chase, probably because of this.
Brown is refusing to return the more than $50,000 he's raked in from Chase. And he's also refusing to talk about financial reform at all. Probably because he doesn't want to remind voters that he was responsible for watering down the Dodd-Frank reform bill, holding out his vote until certain provisions were included, including one "that curbed restrictions on certain investment activities by banks and insurance companies."
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