US president-elect Donald Trump campaigned against Wall Street's alleged influence on his Democratic Party rival Hillary Clinton.  In his transition team are hints that Trump plans to hand the keys over to Wall Street.

"The Financial Services Policy Implementation team will be working to dismantle the Dodd-Frank Act and replace it with new policies to encourage economic growth and job creation," reads the statement on the Trump Transition website.  The Dodd-Frank Act is the set of regulations put on US banks after the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, meant to outlaw the risky trade in derivatives that crashed the banks.

Another target appears to be the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which was created by the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act.  Congressional Republicans have long wanted to dismantle it.

"There's no question from the industry's standpoint that a Trump victory is a huge win," said attorney Scott Pearson of the Los Angeles financial law firm Ballard Spahr.  "But I think there is still some uncertainty.  We'll see what he follows through on."

After promising to "drain the swamp" of financial and political insiders, it appears that Trump's transition team is made up of those very people.  Lobbyists are swarming the Trump camp, including:  Cindy Hayden of tobacco company Altria; Michael Torrey, owner of a lobbying firm representing the American Beverage Association; Steve Hart, chairman of the Williams & Jensen firm; and Michael McKenna, who lobbies on behalf of Dow Chemical.  His financial advisory team is full of veteran Wall Streeters such as former Goldman Sachs banker Steven Mnuchin, and ex-Goldman Sachs chief Jamie Dimon is reportedly under consideration for Treasury Secretary.

Trump railed against "special interests" in 2015 and in June he criticized registered lobbyists.  That doesn't appear to have meant a thing.