Inside Biden and Warren's Yearslong Feud [View all]
He sided with the banks in Congress. She was a crusading law professor on the make. In 2020, are we about to get a rematch?
By THEODORIC MEYER March 12, 2019
February morning in 2005 in a hearing room in the Dirksen Senate Office Building, Joe Biden confronted Elizabeth Warren over a subject theyd been feuding over for years: the countrys bankruptcy laws. Biden, then a senator from Delaware, was one of the strongest backers of a bill meant to address the skyrocketing rate at which Americans were filing for bankruptcy. Warren, at the time a Harvard law professor, had been fighting to kill the same legislation for seven years. She had castigated Biden, accusing him of trying to sell out women by pushing for earlier versions of the bill. Now, with the legislation nearing a vote, Biden publicly grappled with Warren face to face.
Warren, Biden allowed, had made a very compelling and mildly demagogic argument about why the bill would hurt people who needed to file for bankruptcy because of medical debt or credit card bills they couldnt pay. But Biden had what he called a philosophic question, according to the Congressional Records transcript of the hearing that day: Who was responsible? Were the rising number of people who filed for bankruptcy each year taking advantage of their creditors by trying to escape their debts? Or were credit card companies and other lenders taking advantage of an increasingly squeezed middle class?
Warren blamed the lenders. Many credit card companies charged so much in fees and interest that they werent losing money when some of their customers went bankrupt, she said. That is, they have squeezed enough out of these families in interest and fees and payments that never paid down principal, Warren said.
Biden parried. Maybe we should talk about usury rates, then, he replied. Maybe that is what we should be talking about, not bankruptcy.
Senator, I will be the first. Invite me.
https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2019/03/12/biden-vs-warren-2020-democratic-primaries-bankruptcy-bill-225728