Senate votes to let Fed trim debit card swipe fees
Summary
The Senate voted Wednesday to let the Federal Reserve slice the fees that stores must pay banks each time a customer swipes a debit card, handing merchants a victory over banks in a lobbying battle over billions in revenue.
Story Published: Jun 8, 2011 at 8:00 AM PDT
Story Updated: Jun 8, 2011 at 5:04 PM PDT
Senators supporting the financial institutions' efforts to head off the proposal fell six voters short of the 60 needed to prevail. The vote was 54-45.
The tally also was a triumph Sen. Richard Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democratic leader who had muscled a provision into last year's financial overhaul law requiring the Fed to offer a plan for limiting the fees.
Those charges now average 44 cents per transaction and mean $16 billion annually for banks and credit card companies, according to Federal Reserve data.
The Fed has proposed holding those fees to a maximum of 12 cents per swipe. By law a final rule must take effect on July 21. While it might still be changed, few expect it to differ dramatically from the current proposal.
Thirty-five Democrats and 19 Republicans voted to delay the Fed's plan. Voting to let the rules take effect were 32 Democrats, a Democratic-leaning independent and 12 Republicans. Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., did not vote.
