Ralph Nader ~ In the Public Interest
February 24, 2009 by admin
Filed under Ralph Nader
In the Public Interest
Open Letter to President Obama on Consumer Protection
Dear President Obama:
Underneath many of our country’s economic problems is the 30-year collapse of consumer protection—both the regulatory kind and the self-help kind known as proper access to justice. Last month consumer groups sent you a letter proposing action to rein in exploitation of consumers as debtors, buyers of oil, gas and electricity, as patients needing health insurance and eaters wanting safe goods.
Under the Bush regime, the words “consumer protection” were rarely uttered and the Bush administration almost never initiated pro-consumer efforts, even with massive evidence before it, such as predatory lending and credit card abuses. You need to recognize and elevate the GDP significance of fair consumer policies along with their moral and just attributes at a time of worsening recession.
I suggest you focus on the state of the poorest consumers in the urban and rural ghettos. As you know from your days with the New York Public Interest Group (NYPIRG) and as a community organizer in Chicago, consumers in these areas are the most gouged and least protected. That the “poor pay more” has been extensively documented by civic, official and academic studies, and numerous local newspapers and television news reports. Unfortunately, neither Congress nor the Executive branch have paid adequate attention to the tens of millions of people who lose at least 25 percent of their consumer dollars to multiple frauds and shoddy merchandise. You should establish special task forces in the Justice Department and Federal Trade Commission on their plight, and on the many proven but unused remedies to assure a fair marketplace with effective enforcement and grievance procedures.
Working with and galvanizing local and state agencies to enlarge their capacity and staff—with stimulus monies—can produce a triple-header—making the federal effort more effective, providing valuable jobs and freeing up billions of consumer dollars from the financial sink-hole of commercial crimes. It requires the visibility and eloquence of your personal leadership to launch this long-overdue defense of poor people.
A second area of action is to update major areas of regulatory health and safety that have been frozen for 30-years. These include modernizing standards for auto and tire safety, food safety, aviation, railroad safety and occupational health and trauma protection.
New knowledge, new marketing forays, and new technologies have accumulated during this period without application. It’s the obsolescence of many safety standards hailing from the fifties, sixties and seventies that permits the tricky, corporate advertising claims that products “exceed federal safety standards.” Example: the SEC has not come close to regulating the recent explosion of myriad collateralized debt obligations (CDOs). The massive speculation in this area is destabilizing the national and world economies.
Third, articulate and provide a high profile to what western Europeans have long called “social consumerism.” Citizens are consumers of government services for which they pay as taxpayers. They are entitled to prompt, accurate and courteous responses to their inquiries and their perceived needs as embraced by the authorizing statutes. Americans need to be able to get through to government agencies and departments. Being put on hold interminably with automated messages to nowhere, not receiving replies to their letters, and generally getting the brush- off even with the deadlines explicated in the Freedom of Information Act have been a bi-partisan failure.
Under the Bush regime, not answering serious letters from dedicated individuals and groups on time-sensitive matters of policy and action—as with the Iraq war and occupation—became standard operating procedure—starting with President Bush himself. This stone-walling has turned people off so much that they do not even bother to “ask their government” for assistance and that includes an astonishingly unresponsive Congress (other than for ministerial requests such as locating lost VA or social security checks.)
As you shape the Obama White House, bear in mind that the “change you can believe in” is one of kind, not just degree.
Sincerely yours,
Ralph Nader
Stay Informed: www.nader.org
Questions/comments can be sent to: Book Offer, PO Box 19312, Washington DC 20036. Per your request we will send you the book, “If the Gods Meant Us to Vote, They’d Have Given Us Candidates,” by Jim Hightower free of charge, by March 1, 2009, or while supplies last. This offer is from Ralph Nader.




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