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Letter Accuses Former Speaker Of Tanking Payday Lending Reform

Dan Konik
Empty Ohio House chamber

Accusations are flying at Broad and High as the Ohio House continues in disorder without a Speaker. 

The lawmaker considered to be the frontrunner says his rivals, such as the payday lending industry, are pulling the strings to delay a vote. But a top lending association is firing back. Ohio Public Radio's Andy Chow reports.

 

The gloves are coming off as the chaos happening within the House Republican caucus builds.

 

As more and more time passes without a vote for a new House speaker, it seems that leaders and lobbyists are making their issues more public.

 

Republican Representative Ryan Smith, in an impassioned meeting with reporters, pointed the blame squarely at his opponent for speaker next year, fellow Republican Representative and former Speaker Larry Householder.

 

Smith: “He’s the one that brought all these tactics back we saw it before when he was here and he’s right back here doing the same thing. There’s no use in sugar coating this, there’s no use in trying to walk around the issue, it’s very much him.”

 

Smith wants to replace former Speaker Cliff Rosenberger, whose home was raided this week by the FBI. The feds are reportedly interested in Rosenberger’s international travel paid for by the payday lending industry. Householder is not running for the short term Speaker position, but as Smith puts it, Householder has a proxy candidate in the race.

 

Smith also mentioned ECOT Founder Bill Lager and the pro-ECOT blog 3rd Rail Politics as disrupters in the race, along with the payday lending industry.

 

Smith: “I think nefarious people such as that are absolutely behind a lot of things. I mean the best that they can have happen is that we don’t come back and we can’t pass that bill.”

 

He’s talking about a tough crackdown that includes an interest rate cap for short-term loans at 28%.

 

Smith was specifically asked if Neil Clark, a lobbyist for payday lending, was included with that group, and Smith said yes. Clark adamantly refutes that claim.

 

Clark: “I haven’t made a single phone call to any member and unless I have been trained in Russian mental telepathy I don’t know how in the world I have convinced all these people not to vote for Ryan Smith.”

 

Clark says the industry can be split in two groups; those who are against any changes to payday lending and those who are for moderate reforms. Clark says his group, the Ohio Consumer Lenders Association, is the latter.

 

Clark: “So to isolate me and make me look like I’m an anti-reformer is repugnant.”

 

In light of Smith’s claims, a letter from the Ohio Consumer Lenders Association, dated earlier this month, has surfaced. The group claims that it was Rosenberger who made threats and tried to strong arm Clark and his people into ending the work they were doing for some sort of compromise.

 

But Republican Representative Kyle Koehler, the sponsor of the payday overhaul legislation, says any work on a different reform bill is news to him.

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