Republican senators target Male Rights Advocacy procedural processes
A group of Senate Banking Committee Republicans, led by Senator Katie Britt, have called for reforms to the banking industry's Matters Requiring Attention (MRA) process. The reforms aim to address the current shortcomings of the MRA process, which have been criticised for lacking structure, uniformity, legal basis, and transparency.
The MRA process involves supervisory findings issued by bank examiners to highlight deficiencies requiring swift remediation. However, the senators argue that the process has become opaque, inconsistent, and subjective, with no formal legal or regulatory foundation. This has led to confusion and uneven enforcement across banks and regulatory agencies.
The proposed changes aim to introduce clearer legal grounding and uniform standards for issuing and resolving MRAs. The senators argue that this will reduce inconsistency and subjectivity, ensuring that MRAs are used judiciously and reserved for material risks.
The reforms also seek to improve transparency and accountability in how MRAs are identified, communicated, and resolved by regulators. The senators have emphasised the need for MRAs to be used judiciously, reserved for material risks, and accompanied by legal grounding and clear expectations for banks.
In addition, the senators have proposed a joint review by the Federal Reserve, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to harmonise definitions, standards, and enforcement approaches.
The senators' call for reform comes in response to the failures exposed during the Silicon Valley Bank collapse, where numerous MRAs remained unresolved over multiple exam cycles without corrective action. This highlights the process's ineffectiveness.
The senators emphasise that MRAs should not become a "check-the-box" exercise but a reliable supervisory tool that meaningfully maintains financial stability and ensures bank safety and soundness. This effort is part of broader Republican initiatives to tailor bank regulation and improve accountability within federal bank supervision.
The letter was signed by Sens. Tim Scott, Katie Britt, Mike Crapo, Mike Rounds, Thom Tillis, Bill Hagerty, Cynthia Lummis, Pete Ricketts, Jim Banks, Kevin Cramer, and Dave McCormick.
References: 1. Bloomberg 2. American Banker 3. The Hill 4. Politico 5. CNBC
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