Political Hostage

Politics is the gentle art of getting votes from the poor and campaign funds from the rich, by promising to protect each from the other.  Oscar Ameringer

Bankruptcy is a political creature in its origin.  The right to create bankruptcy laws is written in the United States Constitution.   Congress over time has made use of this right, and enacted bankruptcy laws known as statutes that govern bankruptcy rules and procedures.  The last big overhaul was in 2005, known as the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act (BAPCPA).  The banking and creditor industry lobbied for years to pass this legislation.  And several years after its passage, most people are still looking for the Consumer Protection part of the statute.

Since bankruptcy laws are borne in our political sausage making machine, the laws creation and changes are dependent on the mood of the country, the strength of the lobbyists, whos in Congress and whos the president, among a myriad of other factors. For as long as I can recall, every year it seems it is declared that politics is getting worse.  I dont know if this actually true, or if it just feels like it.

But I do sense a lot of desperation and rage. The Tea Party coalesced around a message against a big government that helped create a massive debt problem.  Occupy Wall Street seems to be gaining traction with a message about the majority feeling disenfranchised by an increasing wealth gap created and sustained in part by a corrupt corporate/capitalist relationship.  Someone sent me this Venn diagram about the two movements:

The point is that whatever the underlying belief is about the current cause of our problems as a nation, a lot of people are tired and angry.  This feels like a recipe for change.  Whether its a good recipe, that remains to be seen.

A lot of people need help.  And bankruptcy is one way to help people in financial distress.  My hope is that this turmoil creates the political will and landscape to rectify some of the mistakes in the bankruptcy code.  Two examples:

Student loans are also nondischargeable, but were not given an explicit high priority status. They are treated like a last in line creditor.  This means that at the end of a Chapter 13, depending on the arrangement of your debts, you may actually owe more to your student than when you started because they never received any of the money as a low priority creditor, so interest and penalties continued to accrue.  This is one of the worst rules I keep running into.  It only gets worse as student loan debts have swelled to record highs.

Is the current national mood willing and able to foster changes to the bankruptcy code?  I hope so.  I dont believe in writing a bankruptcy code that is so loose that people get away with misdeeds through bankruptcy.  But I also believe in fairness and correcting poorly or unfairly drafted legislation.  The current code is riddled with errors that need legislative attention, particularly now as more and more of our clients hang on the downward sliding precipice of middle class status.

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November 1, 2011 • Tags: Political, Political Hostage • Posted in: DebtConsolidation Review

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