The Journal. - Barney Frank’s Legacy of Financial Reform
Episode Date: May 21, 2026Barney Frank, the former Democratic congressman, died this week at the age of 86. Frank was best known as the architect of the Dodd-Frank law that reshaped the U.S. financial system in the wake of the... 2008 crisis. WSJ’s Damian Paletta talks about Frank’s legacy. Ryan Knutson hosts. Further Listening: - The Man Who Waged War on Inflation - Two Executives on What It's Like to Stop a Bank RunSign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Former Democratic Congressman Barney Frank died on Tuesday.
Frank had a huge impact on America's financial system,
possibly more than any other politician this century.
He was the lead architect of the Dodd-Frank Act,
which passed in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.
Barney Frank, there's no one like him in Congress that I've ever covered.
Damien Pelletta heads the Wall Street Journal's D.C. Bureau.
He was hilarious.
He was mean.
He was brilliant.
He would kind of slump in his chair.
Ma'am, trying to have a conversation with you
would be like trying to argue with a dining room table.
I have no interest in doing it.
I think I love this job.
But the biggest problem is there are thousands of people in Washington
who earn the living by trying to waste my time.
One of the advantages to me of not running for office is
I don't even have to pretend to try to be nice to people I don't like.
Damien first started writing about Barney Frank about 20 years ago.
This was an era when I covered him really from 2006, I'd say, to 2012,
an era where a lot of lawmakers were figuring out how to monetize their term in Congress
and how to raise tons of money.
And he was just the same old Barney, you know, shirt untucked, you know, suit wrinkled,
always hair kind of pushed around.
And he was kind of an old school guy in an era.
when Congress was changing.
So Barney Frank died this week.
And in the pantheon of powerful lawmakers,
where does Frank stand?
I think he's an iconic figure.
Whether you appreciated him or really reviled him,
I mean, he was a force to be reckoned with
for his time in Congress.
And no matter where he was,
what issue he was weighing in on,
he had something really kind of thoughtful and pointing to say
and provocative often.
And so no matter whether,
you were the most conservative member or the most liberal member, you know, Barney Frank
always got everyone's attention.
Welcome to The Journal, our show about money, business, and power.
I'm Ryan Knudsen. It's Thursday, May 21st.
Coming up on the show, how Barney Frank changed the U.S. financial system.
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So before you were Washington,
Bureau Chief of the Wall Street Journal.
You were a reporter on Capitol Hill
chasing people like Barney Frank around.
Who is Barney Frank? And what's he like?
He always was the smartest person in the room,
and no one knew that more than him.
And so he was always kind of interjecting and budding in
and making wise remarks and trying to shut people down,
and no one could deliver fierce or feedback than he could.
Did he ever deliver fierce feedback to you?
Oh, yeah.
I mean, I remember this was, so this was 15 years ago.
I remember it like it was this morning.
Damien had written a story that Frank didn't like
about a Boston bank that wasn't eligible for bailout money,
but that Frank helped steer money toward anyway.
The story made a big splash
because it showed that there was some political influence
in how the money was being doled out.
So the next day, I go up on Capitol Hill,
and he comes right up in my face.
I swear he was like two inches from my face.
I could smell his breast.
I could smell the tobacco on his breath.
That's how close he was to my face.
And he said, Damien, you betrayed me.
And I mean, I didn't know what he was talking about.
Betrayed. I'm a reporter.
But he was so intense.
It was so personal for him, like that story.
And he read every single thing you wrote,
and he had comments and feedback on it.
And I will never forget that moment.
Wow.
So before, I want to talk about obviously his most famous piece
of legislation, Dodd-Frank.
But before we get there,
Can you tell me the story of his early career?
What are the highlights up to that moment
and how did he get to be in this position
where he was so influential in Congress?
It's sort of a classic Massachusetts
Democratic machine story.
He kind of grew up in an era
where there were people looking out for you.
You learned how to do things the old school way,
how to do favors for each other,
how to look out for each other,
and you rose through the ranks.
Frank made an impression on people
based on his smarts
and wasn't someone who cared much about his appearance.
I just didn't pay a lot of attention to how I dressed and how I looked, especially during campaigns.
And I had a tendency to eat a lot when I was stressed.
So people would try to get me to keep my hair cone better or dress better, buy more, you know, buy suits before the old ones wore out.
In 1987, Frank came out as gay, which was a pioneering move for a pot of.
politician at the time. He later recalled telling then House Speaker Tip O'Neill about it before
the announcement. I said, I just wanted to alert you that there may be some stuff coming out
about my being gay. He said, oh, Ban, you don't be listening to that crap. They say all that stuff.
But I said, well, Tip of the point in there was that it's true. Well, I remember him telling me that
Tip O'Neill at the time, who was the House Speaker, was really trying to mentor Barney Frank to be a future
House Speaker. And, you know, when he came out as gay, and there was a scandal to be sure that
was kind of associated with part of his coming out in this way, there was a conversation between
Tip O'Neill and Barney Frank that acknowledged that Barney Frank would never get to that spot,
that he was smart enough to be House Speaker one day, but it was because of this scandal that
he had and the fact that he was gay that he would never get to that position. And so I think
that made him scrappier and, you know, work harder. And so instead, he had to be a lot of, and so instead,
he had to kind of forge a different path.
And for him, that path would lead him to be chairman of the House Financial Services Committee,
which was an incredibly powerful committee.
Where did he get all this finance and banking chops?
Where did you learn all this stuff?
He's a really smart guy.
He would always show up at every committee hearing.
He would ask really good questions.
And I think as time went on and the more and more banks and securities firms would come to brief him on their issues,
he was learn and learn and learn and obviously Boston,
there's some major financial institutions in Boston,
and they always had access to him.
And so Bernie Frank always knew who to reach out to
and who to ask information about some of these issues
so that when really push came to shove,
he knew exactly where to zero in.
So the financial crisis hits, Lehman Brothers collapses,
Barney Frank is in this powerful position
on the Financial Services Committee in Congress.
How did that change the trajectory of his career?
Well, early 2008, we have Bear Stearns.
And then it's sort of a domino effect.
So in the summer we have Fannie and Freddie.
Then we have Lehman Brothers.
Then, you know, Washington Mutual, and then all hell breaks loose.
Traders here work in the phone say a lot of their customers are freaked out waiting to see how low the Dow will go there.
The Dow tumbled more than 500 points.
It was the worst day on Wall Street since the crash of 1987.
And so the financials.
Central crisis kind of picked up momentum.
It's like one of those snowballs in a cartoon going down a hill where soon it's like, oh, my gosh, this is out of control.
And so when you need a big, powerful Democratic voice on the most important issue at that time, unfairness, banks ripping off consumers, you know, people losing their homes.
They had Barney Frank.
And so there's Barney, and he's got the megaphone, which is exactly what he wants.
In the term, we have two options.
One, do nothing.
And let this market deteriorate and let jobs.
be lost and let people not be able to get loans, people not be able to buy cars,
people not be able to shop in stores, because that's what happens when credit dies.
Or we can't put up some federal money.
And so the Democratic Party has someone to line up behind, and they have liberal ideas for them,
progressive ideas about homeownership, about housing, about the government playing a bigger
role, which was big for the Democrats at the time, and Barney Frank was there to lay it all out.
Frank worked with Senator Chris Dodd to write legislation that.
that sought to put tight restrictions on the banking industry
and to try and prevent another financial crisis
from happening again.
And I'll never forget one night,
so Dodd-Frank did not just pass, like, cleanly through Congress.
It was, there was all these twists and turns
and crazy amendments and kind of weird democratic amendments
for their parochial banks and stuff like that.
And so to get the thing through,
they had one night where they went around the clock, right?
And so we were all, the reporters were there too.
It was in this room,
and they just went all the way through
night to reconcile the House and Senate bills. And it was one of those nights where as the night went on,
people are just fading. I mean, it was such a bizarre scene because like lawmakers are walking around
like zombies. They can't leave, but it's like three in the morning. And Barney's there through the
whole thing. He's there through the whole thing. He knew this was like his glory because he knew that
this bill was being designed and it was going to be, you know, something that was going to stand the test
of time. And so there we are. And finally, I think it was like five or six of the morning and they finally
finish the bill up. And one of the final things that was done was a decision to name it Dodd-Frank,
before it had been called some other financial rescue act or something. But there was a decision
made at the end to call it the Dodd-Frank Act. And that was when it kind of cemented that his
name would be on a historic piece of legislation. So what did this legislation actually do?
What were its biggest changes that it made for the financial system? It aimed to take risk out of the
financial system, one of the goals was to make it harder for banks to become too big to fail.
And in the future, to prevent there from being a government bailout and putting taxpayers on the
hook. And it wanted to create a system where if a company got out over at skis, a bank,
that it would be able to fail in a contained way in a way that didn't cause kind of a domino effect.
The common theme in the bill, as I saw it was, to say to a great extent, people who'd make decisions
that are risky, which should be done in the business community,
will not be able to escape the consequences of poor decisions
because that way they'll make better ones.
The Dodd-Frank Act sought to regulate the financial industry
in a number of ways.
It's kind of like an octopus, with tentacles touching every part of the financial system.
It created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
to protect Americans from shady lending practices.
It required banks to regularly undergo something called a stress test
to see whether they could withstand major economic
downturns. It increased capital requirements, meaning banks had to basically hold on to more cash.
And it banned banks from making risky, speculative bets with customer deposits. This is also known as
the Volcker Rule. In 2010, the bill passed the House and Senate, with only a handful of Republicans
supporting it. That summer, President Obama signed it into law.
For the last year, Chairman Barney Frank and Chris Dodd have worked day and night.
How big of a deal was it when this law was passed in 2010?
Huge, huge deal.
I mean, for the Obama administration,
I think this and the Affordable Care Act
were two of the most consequential pieces of legislation
that Obama passed.
This was the answer for the left to the financial crisis.
This was their way of saying never again.
And so it took a Herculane effort by Barney Frank and Chris Dodd
and others to get this through.
There were so many times when this bill almost died.
But almost.
immediately, the law's opponents started trying to dismantle it.
After the break, the Dodd-Frank pushback.
In the years since this law passed, it's just been slowly kind of chiseled away at.
Yeah.
What are some of the big moments when the bill was watered down or changes to it were made?
Sure. So one of the biggest moments is in the first Trump administration, he put Mick Mulvaney, who at the time was his, I think at the time, he was either his chief of
staff or his budget director. Mulvaney had a bunch of jobs.
Yeah. He put Mick Mulvaney in charge of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
And essentially, I think the message to people was, okay, I'm going to put,
Trump hated the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and so did Mick Mulvaney.
Here's Mulvaney at the time.
The place is just, it's a wonderful example of how a bureaucracy will function if it has
no accountability to anybody. It turns up being a joke, and that's what the CFBB really has been,
in a sick, sad kind of way.
He's going to put Mick Mulvaney in charge of it,
which means this thing is no longer going to be
doing a lot of the consumer enforcement
that it had been doing before.
And it has not lived up to the
dreams that Democrats had for it originally.
Dodd-Frank has taken
several blows over the years.
In 2018, Congress passed a law
that, among other things,
made it so that fewer banks
were considered too big to fail
and thus subject to fewer regulations.
It also exempted
smaller banks from the Volker Rule, meaning they were now allowed to make riskier investments
using customer deposits. Another change weakened capital requirements for smaller banks.
Still, the overall framework of the law remains intact. I think the support of this law would
say that one of the reasons there has not been a financial crisis is because this law exists
and because the regulators have the power and that prevents banks and others from getting out of
control and doing crazy things.
certainly the supporters of the law would say that.
The critics of the law would say that it's maybe held back trillions of dollars of economic growth
and that, you know, allowing a little more risk in the economy is not a bad thing.
So, you know, the different people see different realities when it comes to this law,
but the real test is going to be the day when there's some ticking time bomb within a financial institution,
whether it's a bank or some other company, and then we see whether the regulators really can use these tools they have
to prevent this from getting out of control.
How did Barney Frank, toward the end of his life, reflect on this piece of legislation that he was so crucial in getting passed?
He was very proud of it. He was incredibly proud that he was there in this moment, not just for this piece of legislation, but for the government's response to the financial crisis.
I think, you know, all lawmakers know that as time goes on, pieces of legislation are going to be chipped away at.
And I think he tried to protect the bill, the core pillars of the bill.
But, you know, politics is going to be politics.
And I think the legacy that he leaves behind and the people who worked with him on it
leaves behind it is a definitive piece of legislation, the likes of which we may never see again in terms of its scale.
And this for Democrats was, you know, one of the biggest achievements of this era, the Obama era and beyond, a piece of legislation that really
took it to Wall Street in a moment when Wall Street was kind of on its back and put rules in place that many Democrats have been trying to put in place for decades.
Frank retired from Congress in 2013.
What grade do you give yourself one to ten?
Oh, I give myself a ten for being smart enough not to answer that question.
Either you sound humble in a way that is literally incredible, not credible, or you sound arrogant.
I'll say none of the above.
On Tuesday night, Frank died of congestive heart failure.
He was 86.
Do you think we'll ever see another Bernie Frank?
I think about this a lot, actually.
I don't think we will, in part because for a lot of lawmakers,
there's no interest in passing legislation anymore.
A lot of lawmakers come here, you know, and do a podcast as a side hustle,
or they want to be influencers, or they want to be, you know, bomb throwers.
There's not a lot of time spent in committee rooms late at night talking about the ins and outs of legislation.
I mean, the hours that he put in, just in that committee room, kind of grinding away at hearings.
And that just doesn't happen anymore.
And so I think that era of lawmaker is something that this country is not going to see again.
The challenge there, whether it's a conservative version of Barney Frank or a liberal version of Barney Frank,
is that there's going to be a moment when Congress is going to have to pass a law in a crisis, right?
We had the CARES Act during COVID.
We obviously had the Biden administration passed the rescue plan at the beginning.
There's going to be moments when you need people who are smart to do things that are hard.
And Barney Frank was a smart person who could do things that were hard.
Now, not everyone agreed with them and he ticked a lot of people off and he took things personally and he could be super mean.
But when it was really important to get something done or, you know, the economy could hang on the brink.
Barney Frank was there.
Is someone willing to be that person now?
I don't know if that person exists right now,
and it's only a matter of time
before we find out if they do.
Before we go, we have a question for you.
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That's all for today. Thursday, May 21st.
The journal is a co-production of Spotify and the Wall Street Journal.
Additional reporting in this episode by Richard Rubin.
Thanks for listening. See you tomorrow.
