This week’s main event for bank lobbyists is a Capitol Hill clash among conservatives over how to protect gun sellers, oil and gas producers and cryptocurrency startups. The dispute is threatening to doom cannabis banking legislation on the eve of an historic vote Wednesday at the Senate Banking Committee. The ideological fight among Republicans isn’t really about cannabis, even though the bill at the center of the feud is ostensibly about giving banks legal cover to serve the marijuana industry. It’s about a largely unrelated provision tucked into the bill that would stop bank regulators from forcing lenders to shut down the accounts of customers that pose “reputational risk.” Lawmakers have included the measure in various iterations of the cannabis banking legislation for years. The political motivation has been that it attracts Republicans who may not support marijuana legalization but are eager to show that they’re fighting to protect certain businesses from any heightened scrutiny during Democratic administrations. That’s where the guns, oil and crypto come into play. Republicans are scrambling to tamp down internal dissent over what was supposed to be a conservative sop after senators watered down the account closure restrictions. The compromise was an attempt to allay concerns from Democrats, regulators and public interest groups that it would tie the hands of the banking agencies to police financial crime. Our Natalie Fertig and Eleanor Mueller have scooped in recent days how the change is threatening to weigh on Senate GOP support for the bill and may shatter any chance it has of being blessed by senior House Republicans. “As it's currently written, it is dead on arrival in the House,” says Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-Mo.), an early architect of the account closure restrictions. He argues that the latest version “throws out carefully crafted bipartisan work and crams in gross overreach to potentially crush industries not in line with the president's agenda.” What’s next? Tune in to Natalie’s live interview with Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), a co-sponsor of the bill, at 3:45 p.m. ET today. Happy Tuesday — Would the cannabis banking bill really make a difference for lenders or the weed industry? We’d love to hear your take on why this matters — or not. Let us know: Zach Warmbrodt, Sam Sutton.
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