The battle by Wal-Mart to secure a Utah Industrial Loan Company charter has generated a firestorm of opposition. No less than the National Association of Realtors has come out against it (although for purely selfish reasons; the NAR wants to use Wal-Mart as another lever in its never-ending effort to pry out of Congress a ban on banks entering the real estate brokerage business). The Salt Lake City Tribune discussed a new anti-Wal-Mart onslaught.
The latest
attack against Wal-Mart is coming from a handful of state lawmakers in
Michigan, Virginia, Maryland and Illinois. They have introduced
legislation to bar the industrial bank from opening branch offices in
their states should Utah regulators and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. give the go-ahead for the bank to organize.
"All I'm trying to do is protect Michigan's small banks from
unfair competition by Wal-Mart," said Democratic Rep. John Gleason, who
last week introduced a bill to bar the giant retailer's bank from
operating in that state. "If Utah is irresponsible enough to let them
operate an ILC [industrial bank] in their state, that is their business
- but we will not allow it here."
[...]
United in
opposition: Labor unions, frustrated at their inability to organize
Wal-Mart workers; federal regulators eager to protect their turf; and
community activists upset about what they maintain are the giant
retailer's substandard wages and poor heath care coverage for workers,
have united to oppose the proposed Utah industrial bank.
Gleason's proposed legislation in Michigan was drafted with
the help of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union in that state.
"One of our goals was to see if we couldn't cause a bit of
consternation with Utah's banking commissioner so that maybe he would
think twice about allowing Wal-Mart to organize an industrial bank,"
said John Schlinker, government relations director at the UFCW Local
951 in Michigan.
And he said UFCW union representatives in at least a dozen other states are working to get similar legislation introduced.
Utah's banking commissioner, G. Edward Leary, said the proposed
legislation in Michigan and other states does cause him concern,
although that uneasiness is only ancillary to the Wal-Mart question.
Leary is worried that the proposed laws in Michigan and other
states, if adopted, could undermine a long-standing cooperative
relationship among dozens of states that in essence says, "If you let
my banks into your state then I'll let your banks into mine."
Such reciprocity agreements have been in place for more than
a decade, Leary said. "This could really undermine the state banking
system. We look upon our industrial banks as being the same as all
others, so if those states eventually bar Utah banks, we'd have to
consider barring theirs."
Labor unions, realtors, regulators and consumer activists, all in prefect agreement. I don't care about Wal-Mart. All I want to know is this: is this the latest sign of The Apocalypse?
If Pat Robertson publicly announces next week that banking and commerce must be reunited and comes out in favor of Wal-Mart, I'm starting to worry.