Editor's note: Morning Money is a free version of POLITICO Pro Financial Services morning newsletter, which is delivered to our subscribers each morning at 5:15 a.m. The POLITICO Pro platform combines the news you need with tools you can use to take action on the day's biggest stories. Act on the news with POLITICO Pro. We told you that Republicans would get angry about a new tool for financial institutions to track how much consumers spend at gun stores. Backing up, American Express, Mastercard and Visa earlier this month said they would implement a new merchant code that would identify purchases made at firearm and ammunition retailers. The announcement represented the culmination of a years-long campaign on the part of top Democrats and advocacy groups who claimed a dedicated merchant category would help law enforcement identify consumers who might be using their cards to finance gun trafficking or violent attacks. Hundreds of other types of businesses already have their own codes and, despite claims of undue corporate surveillance, the new merchant category wouldn't give banks and credit cards visibility into what products were actually purchased. The credit card companies and the leaders of major commercial banks have repeatedly insisted that the new code will have no bearing on legal firearm purchases and won't be used to block individual transactions. Now, with a little more than six weeks to go before the midterms, Republican policymakers across the country are kicking up a fuss. GOP members of the House Financial Services Committee and Senate Banking Committee this week urged the leaders of the country's largest commercial banks to avoid kowtowing to progressives — calling the new merchant code an example of overreach on the part of ESG-obsessed Democrats. "Please resist the impulse to respond to the very loud noise in your left ears," Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) told bank CEOs during a Senate hearing on Thursday. "I'm happy to be the loud noise in your right ears." From Sam: "Leaders from both parties have grown increasingly aggressive in using their power – and their financial resources – to cajole corporations into adopting practices that adhere to their respective ideologies. Those often conflict. For every blue state pension fund that charges ahead with climate-conscious investment initiatives, Republican leaders in states like West Virginia will halt public contracts with big banks that no longer finance coal." In the case of the gun store codes, Republican policymakers say the new merchant category is politicizing payment systems to the detriment of law-abiding gun owners. Democrats say that the GOP's claims about surveillance capitalism ignore a gun violence epidemic that kills tens of thousands of Americans annually. More from Sam: "'It's not just a question for policymakers and lawmakers to engage,' said Adam Skaggs, the chief counsel and policy director at Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence. 'Business leaders, just like others, have a role to play.' That line of thinking leaves out federal and state policymakers who are ultimately held accountable by voters, said Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti, a state Supreme Court appointee who spearheaded the GOP attorneys general letter. "'My worry is if boardrooms get more involved in politics, then politics is gonna get more involved in boardrooms,' Skrmetti said. 'We are moving in a direction where everything is becoming political — and that's bad.'" IT'S FRIDAY — And the dinner I plan to cook this weekend assures my card will be flagged for delicious activity. Have tips, story ideas or other feedback? Please send it to kdavidson@politico.com and ssutton@politico.com.
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