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Missouri GOP Senator Josh Hawley introduced a bill that would cap credit card interest rates at 18%, which critics say could impact those with imperfect credit or consumers' rewards.
Sen. Josh Hawley plans to introduce legislation that would set an 18% cap on credit card interest rates, according to a report.. The Republican denounced soaring interest rates — which hit an ...
Sen. Josh Hawley will introduce legislation to cap the annual percentage rate of credit cards at 18%, RealClearPolitics is first to report. The average APR, by most estimates, now hovers near the ...
If passed, Hawley’s bill would cap the annual percentage rates of credit cards at 18%. Additionally, it would prevent credit card companies from imposing new fees to recoup lost profits from the ...
Hawley’s credit card cap won’t do anything to stem the debt and deficits that have grown when both parties controlled Congress at various times, compounded by the Biden administration’s big ...
Josh Hawley introduced new legislation on Tuesday to cap record-high credit card interest rates. ‘Americans are being crushed under the weight of record credit card debt—and the biggest banks ...
Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Sen. Josh Hawley, a Republican from Missouri, introduced legislation to cap credit card interest rates at 10% this past Tuesday.
Occam’s Razor applies to Sen. Josh Hawley’s stance on credit cards, and the rates issuers of those cards charge borrowers: price controls of any kind invariably lead to scarcity. If credit ...
Sen. Josh Hawley is calling on Republicans to support his plan to cap credit card APRs at 18%. Photo by FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images Exploiting people through high interest rates is ...
Sen. Josh Hawley is a really bright person who aims to dumb his abundant smarts down. His call for caps on credit card debt will be used to make the previous case here, though not for the reason that ...
Missouri GOP Senator Josh Hawley and Vermont’s liberal Bernie Sanders team up to cap credit card interest rates at 10% for five years.