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Durbin to reintroduce credit card competition bill – Payments Dive

Senate minority Dick Durbin is planning to reintroduce the Credit Card Competition Act “quickly” according to a spokesman for his office.

It's not clear whether Democrats will attack the alliance again in law with Republican Sen. Roger Marshall, but that's probably what you'd think, given their strong support for the previous bill. . A Kansas Republican spokesman did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

This year, the bill landed on a change in the political environment, with President Donald Trump currently in the White House, and the Senate, also by a Republican majority, giving party control over Congress. Durbin first introduced the law in 2022.

One of the few Senate Republicans who previously supported the bill was JD Vance, who could throw weight behind the bill as vice president. Trump also proposed reforms to the industry by suggesting that credit card rates temporarily reach 10% during the presidential election.

Nevertheless, Vance was reported I've retreated from the bill Politico reports that at one point last year he campaigned in the preliminary stages of the presidential election.

If the invoice is passed, the bank that issues the credit card must ensure that there is a network available to merchants to route payments that are not visas or Mastercard for all consumer swipes. There is. By requesting at least one alternative, it will likely inject competition into a market dominated by two networks.

Some Republicans took the network giant on duty at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing last November, grilling Visa and MasterCard executives about corporate practices. Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, who mentioned “classic joint, exclusive action” during the hearing, joined Senate Independence Bernie Sanders this month Introduction to the invoice The interest rate on credit cards will be kept at a maximum of 10% for five years.

The bill is part of a bid to ease interchanges and other charges where the bank and its network partners charge merchants large and small as well, each time a consumer swipes a credit card to purchase.

Retailers claim that fees have skyrocketed to exorbitant levels over the years, with additional costs being incurred for merchants and consumers.

Card companies claim that fees have not increased significantly. Consumers will not benefit, even if they do, as retailers, restaurants and other merchants choose to maintain their savings.

“The hearing last year in the Senate Judiciary Committee gave a lot of momentum to the Credit Card Competition Act,” Doug Cantor, advisor to the Convenience Store Association, said in an interview Tuesday. The hearing showed that there was very broad and bipartisan support for the bill.” “Even skeptics believe it will pass, and it's only a matter of time,” added Cantor, who is also a member of the Executive Committee of the Merchant Payments Union.

The retail industry, including the Merchant Payment Coalition, has been fighting for decades with banks and card network industry associations, such as the Electronic Payment Coalition.

“These obligations do not save consumers or small businesses money. Business megastores will not lower prices. Consumers and small businesses will lose valuable reward programs and your data security will be dangerous “We will be exposed to,” EPC spokesman Nick Simpson said in an email.

He argued that the bill would not benefit smaller merchants as much as the largest megastore in the United States. EPC is committed to protecting existing “safe, secure and efficient payment systems.”

The fight is reminiscent of both sides' wars over the 2010 Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and the Durbin Amendment, which was ultimately passed as part of the Consumer Protection Act. The law has given more competition to debit card networks by limiting interchange fees and imposing other curbs on such transactions.

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