Obama pushes passage of Wall Street reform bill
WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama pushed on Saturday for passage of a financial overhaul bill being debated on Capitol Hill, saying it would empower consumers and bring backroom investment deals “into the light of day.”
In his weekly radio and Internet address, Obama said the legislation would also curb predatory lending practices, prevent banks from taking on too much risk and give shareholders more of a say.
“Put simply, Wall Street reform will bring greater security to folks on Main Street,” the president said.
“My responsibility as president isn’t just to help our economy rebound from this recession; it’s to make sure an economic crisis like the one that helped trigger this recession never happens again,” he said. “That’s what Wall Street reform will help us do.”
The legislation, the most sweeping rewrite of Wall Street rules since the Great Depression, is being debated in the Senate, with a final vote possible as early as next week. The bill would then have to be merged with a version passed by the House.
The legislation would set up a system to watch out for risks in the system, create a method to liquidate large failing firms and write new rules for complex securities blamed for helping precipitate the 2008 crisis. It also would create a new consumer protection agency, a key point for Obama.
The Senate version calls for an independent bureau within the Federal Reserve to write and enforce regulations that would police lending, while the House bill has a stand-alone agency.
Obama said the measures offer “the strongest consumer financial protections in history.”
Republicans and Democrats have bridged partisan divides to come together on some areas of the legislation, but the two parties still disagree on plenty, and Republicans used their weekly radio and Internet address to accuse Obama and Democrats of promoting economic policies that rely too much on spending and not enough on cutting.
The Republican counter-address was delivered by Rep. Chris Lee of New York, who represents Buffalo. Obama visited there Thursday to talk up his agenda for jobs and the economy, and Lee said he’d hoped Obama “would listen – really listen – to what the people are saying.”
What the president would have heard, according to Lee: Americans “want us to work together on common-sense solutions to stop the spending spree and focus on helping manufacturers and small businesses create jobs.”
Lee contended that the economic recovery act passed last year never lived up to Democrats’ promises that it would reduce unemployment and that Democrats’ health care bill will cost taxpayers money, not bring savings.
“So our choice is this: Make the tough decisions required to put our fiscal house in order or continue to duck them,” Lee said.
“That’s why Republicans have proposed several initiatives to cut spending now and make Washington do more with less, just as families and small businesses are doing.”
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