ABA Banking Journal
No Result
View All Result
  • Topics
    • Ag Banking
    • Commercial Lending
    • Community Banking
    • Compliance and Risk
    • Cybersecurity
    • Economy
    • Human Resources
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Mortgage
    • Mutual Funds
    • Payments
    • Policy
    • Retail and Marketing
    • Tax and Accounting
    • Technology
    • Wealth Management
  • Newsbytes
  • Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Magazine Archive
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Podcast Archive
    • Sponsored Content Archive
SUBSCRIBE
ABA Banking Journal
  • Topics
    • Ag Banking
    • Commercial Lending
    • Community Banking
    • Compliance and Risk
    • Cybersecurity
    • Economy
    • Human Resources
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Mortgage
    • Mutual Funds
    • Payments
    • Policy
    • Retail and Marketing
    • Tax and Accounting
    • Technology
    • Wealth Management
  • Newsbytes
  • Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Magazine Archive
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Podcast Archive
    • Sponsored Content Archive
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Newsbytes

ABA unveils key policy priorities for 2025

January 14, 2025
Reading Time: 3 mins read
ABA unveils key policy priorities for 2025

With the pending change in administration and the start of the 119th Congress, the American Bankers Association today released its 2025 Blueprint for Growth outlining ABA’s top policy priorities for the year. The Blueprint was developed by ABA’s Government Relations Council, with members representing banks across the industry, and approved by the association’s board of directors. The document will be shared with every member of Congress and with officials in the incoming Trump-Vance administration.

“2025 will be a year of significant change that we hope will offer an opportunity to reset the conversation around banking regulation,” ABA President and CEO Rob Nichols said in a statement. “This year’s Blueprint for Growth reflects the input and real-world perspective of bank leaders from across the nation, and it will guide our work to advance policies that help grow our economy and empower America’s banks to best serve their customers, clients and communities.”

The Blueprint focuses on three overarching policy priorities: Drive a healthy economy for all, pursue rational regulation to preserve Main Street access to credit and capital, and foster a competitive financial services market.

Drive a Healthy Economy for All

Tax policy. Pursue pro-growth tax policy that encourages investment and expands opportunity for all Americans by ensuring a competitive corporate tax rate and continuing the Section 199A pass-through deduction, a provision that enables many community banks to play a vital role in local economic development.

ACRE. Enact the Access to Credit for our Rural Economy Act, which will sustain and grow rural America by lowering the cost of credit for farmers and ranchers financing agricultural real estate as well as the cost of homeownership in 17,000 rural communities.

Mission-driven banks. Support the work of Minority Depository Institutions and Community Development Financial Institutions — banks that are uniquely focused on serving communities of color and low-to-moderate income communities — by creating a CDFI investment tax credit that would incentivize long-term capital investment in these vital institutions.

Housing. Approach housing policy holistically by supporting initiatives that create equitable, affordable and sustainable housing opportunities across all communities while ensuring liquidity to primary and secondary markets, including through government-sponsored enterprises and the Federal Home Loan Banks.

Fraud. Pursue an “all of government” approach to combatting financial fraud to protect consumers and reduce the number of Americans who fall victim to scams.

Pursue Rational Regulation

Small-business lending data collection (Section 1071). Work to repeal Section 1071 while calling on the CFPB to pause implementation and begin a process to formally withdraw the rule as we pursue ongoing litigation.

Interchange (Durbin Amendment). Oppose government mandates on credit card routing and urge the Federal Reserve to put low- and moderate-income consumers before the needs of large retailers by withdrawing its proposal to impose misguided debit card price controls that will raise the cost of basic checking accounts.

Community Reinvestment Act. While continuing our litigation, advocate against agency overreach and for a modernized CRA rule that encourages bank lending to low-and moderate-income individuals and communities.

Bank capital. Provide a “quantitative impact study” and other data analysis that show the true cost to the economy of proposed higher capital standards, which would allow stakeholders to evaluate potential impact on credit availability for specific sectors, including low- and moderate-income borrowers.

SAFER banking. Pass the SAFER Banking Act to get state-sanctioned cannabis cash off the street and into regulated financial institutions, making our communities safer and the cannabis industry more transparent to regulators, tax authorities and law enforcement.

Open banking (Section 1033). Delay implementation and finalize a CFPB rule to supervise data aggregators before significantly overhauling the 1033 rule to address scope, liability and cost.

Credit card programs. Delay implementation and withdraw the CFPB’s rule on credit card late fees to preserve access to credit for low-and moderate-income borrowers as litigation remains active.

Foster a Competitive Financial Services Market

Deposit insurance reform. At a minimum, lawmakers should give the FDIC the authority and flexibility it needs to enable a timely response to crises, ensuring fair treatment across banks of all sizes and reducing reliance on the systemic risk exemption.

Credit unions. Scrutinize whether credit unions are meeting their statutory objective of serving low-to-moderate-income communities in a robust, demonstrable way that justifies their preferential tax treatment over community banks and evenly apply regulatory requirements, including the Community Reinvestment Act, to banks and credit unions.

Digital asset regulation. Bring stablecoins inside the banking regulatory perimeter, and require equivalent capital, liquidity and consumer protection standards across all stablecoin providers, ensuring banks are not disincentivized relative to nonbank providers and have the regulatory clarity they need to custody digital assets.

National bank preemption. Defend the dual banking system, a pillar of economic strength that spurs innovation and empowers banks to serve every market in the United States, from states’ efforts to assert authority over basic operations of national banks, including decisions about deposit taking, lending and risk management.

Tags: ABA newsCongress
ShareTweetPin

Related Posts

Green Dot agrees to pay Federal Reserve $44 Million to resolve UDAP allegations.

Minutes: FOMC takes wait-and-see approach to future rate cuts

Economy
December 30, 2025

FOMC members agreed further cuts of federal funds rate in the near future “would likely be appropriate" if inflation declines as expected, while some members recommended keeping the target range “unchanged for some time” to allow policymakers to...

Agencies propose highly anticipated CRA overhaul

CRA small-bank asset-size thresholds updated for 2026

Newsbytes
December 30, 2025

The Federal Reserve and FDIC today released the updated Community Reinvestment Act “small-bank” and “intermediate small-bank” asset-size thresholds for 2026. The thresholds, which ticked up slightly for the coming year, are adjusted annually.

ABA files amicus brief urging Eighth Circuit to reverse district court’s dismissal of NSF fee lawsuit

ABA offers changes to FDIC, OCC proposed safety and soundness rules

Community Banking
December 29, 2025

ABA suggested changes for the agencies' proposed rule regarding unsafe or unsound practices, as well as revisions to the supervisory framework for issuing matters requiring attention and other supervisory communications.

OCC proposes to cite federal preemption of state interest-on-escrow laws

OCC proposes to cite federal preemption of state interest-on-escrow laws

Compliance and Risk
December 23, 2025

The OCC is proposing two rules to clarify that national banks are exempt from state laws regulating real estate escrow accounts. ABA welcomed the proposals.

CFPB issues decision on TILA preemption of state laws

Democratic state AGs file lawsuit to stop CFPB’s ‘complete defunding’

Legal
December 23, 2025

A coalition of 22 Democratic state attorneys general filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration to stop what they said was the “complete defunding” of the CFPB.

ABA Data Bank: U.S. economic growth slower than initially thought

GDP increased 4.3% in Q3: Initial estimate

Economy
December 23, 2025

Real GDP increased at an annual rate of 4.3% in the third quarter of 2025, according to the initial estimate released by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the second quarter, real GDP increased 3.8%.

NEWSBYTES

Minutes: FOMC takes wait-and-see approach to future rate cuts

December 30, 2025

CRA small-bank asset-size thresholds updated for 2026

December 30, 2025

ABA offers changes to FDIC, OCC proposed safety and soundness rules

December 29, 2025

SPONSORED CONTENT

Seeing More Check Fraud and Scams? These Educational Online Toolkits Can Help

Seeing More Check Fraud and Scams? These Educational Online Toolkits Can Help

November 1, 2025
5 FedNow®  Service Developments You May Have Missed

5 FedNow® Service Developments You May Have Missed

October 31, 2025

Cash, Security, and Resilience in a Digital-First Economy

October 20, 2025
Rethinking Outsourcing: The Value of Tech-Enabled, Strategic Growth Partnerships

Rethinking Outsourcing: The Value of Tech-Enabled, Strategic Growth Partnerships

October 1, 2025

PODCASTS

Podcast: Cybersecurity in a mobile-first banking landscape

December 18, 2025

Podcast: The 2026 outlook for bank M&A

December 11, 2025

Podcast: The outlook for tech-forward community banking

December 4, 2025

American Bankers Association
1333 New Hampshire Ave NW
Washington, DC 20036
1-800-BANKERS (800-226-5377)
www.aba.com
About ABA
Privacy Policy
Contact ABA

ABA Banking Journal
About ABA Banking Journal
Media Kit
Advertising
Subscribe

© 2025 American Bankers Association. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Topics
    • Ag Banking
    • Commercial Lending
    • Community Banking
    • Compliance and Risk
    • Cybersecurity
    • Economy
    • Human Resources
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Mortgage
    • Mutual Funds
    • Payments
    • Policy
    • Retail and Marketing
    • Tax and Accounting
    • Technology
    • Wealth Management
  • Newsbytes
  • Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Magazine Archive
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Podcast Archive
    • Sponsored Content Archive

© 2025 American Bankers Association. All rights reserved.