Saturday, January 16, 2010

President Obama presents his tax on banks plan in his weekly address.



Remarks of President Barack Obama
As Prepared for Delivery
Weekly Address
January 16, 2010

Over the past two years, more than seven million Americans have lost their jobs. Countless businesses have been forced to shut their doors. Few families have escaped the pain of this terrible recession. Rarely does a day go by that I do not hear from folks who are hurting. That is why we have pushed so hard to rebuild this economy.

But even as we work tirelessly to dig our way out of this hole, it is important that we address what led us into such a deep mess in the first place. Much of the turmoil of this recession was caused by the irresponsibility of banks and financial institutions on Wall Street. These financial firms took huge, reckless risks in pursuit of short-term profits and soaring bonuses. They gambled with borrowed money, without enough oversight or regard for the consequences. And when they lost, they lost big. Little more than a year ago, many of the largest and oldest financial firms in the world teetered on the brink of collapse, overwhelmed by the consequences of their irresponsible decisions. This financial crisis nearly pulled the entire economy into a second Great Depression.

As a result, the American people - struggling in their own right - were placed in a deeply unfair and unsatisfying position. Even though these financial firms were largely facing a crisis of their own creation, their failure could have led to an even greater calamity for the country. That is why the previous administration started a program - the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP - to provide these financial institutions with funds to survive the turmoil they helped unleash. It was a distasteful but necessary thing to do.

Many originally feared that most of the $700 billion in TARP money would be lost. But when my administration came into office, we put in place rigorous rules for accountability and transparency, which cut the cost of the bailout dramatically. We have now recovered most of the money we provided to the banks. That's good news, but as far as I'm concerned, it's not good enough. We want the taxpayers' money back, and we're going to collect every dime.


That is why, this week, I proposed a new fee on major financial firms to compensate the American people for the extraordinary assistance they provided to the financial industry. And the fee would be in place until the American taxpayer is made whole. Only the largest financial firms with more than $50 billion in assets will be affected, not community banks. And the bigger the firm - and the more debt it holds - the larger the fee. Because we are not only going to recover our money and help close our deficits; we are going to attack some of the banking practices that led to the crisis.

That's important. The fact is, financial firms play an essential role in our economy. They provide capital and credit to families purchasing homes, students attending college, businesses looking to start up or expand. This is critical to our recovery. That is why our goal with this fee - and with the common-sense financial reforms we seek - is not to punish the financial industry. Our goal is to prevent the abuse and excess that nearly led to its collapse. Our goal is to promote fair dealings while punishing those who game the system; to encourage sustained growth while discouraging the speculative bubbles that inevitably burst. Ultimately, that is in the shared interest of the financial industry and the American people.

Of course, I would like the banks to embrace this sense of mutual responsibility. So far, though, they have ferociously fought financial reform. The industry has even joined forces with the opposition party to launch a massive lobbying campaign against common-sense rules to protect consumers and prevent another crisis.

Now, like clockwork, the banks and politicians who curry their favor are already trying to stop this fee from going into effect. The very same firms reaping billions of dollars in profits, and reportedly handing out more money in bonuses and compensation than ever before in history, are now pleading poverty. It's a sight to see.

Those who oppose this fee say the banks can't afford to pay back the American people without passing on the costs to their shareholders and customers. But that's hard to believe when there are reports that Wall Street is going to hand out more money in bonuses and compensation just this year than the cost of this fee over the next ten years. If the big financial firms can afford massive bonuses, they can afford to pay back the American people.

Those who oppose this fee have also had the audacity to suggest that it is somehow unfair. That because these firms have already returned what they borrowed directly, their obligation is fulfilled. But this willfully ignores the fact that the entire industry benefited not only from the bailout, but from the assistance extended to AIG and homeowners, and from the many unprecedented emergency actions taken by the Federal Reserve, the FDIC, and others to prevent a financial collapse. And it ignores a far greater unfairness: sticking the American taxpayer with the bill.

That is unacceptable to me, and to the American people. We're not going to let Wall Street take the money and run. We're going to pass this fee into law. And I'm going to continue to work with Congress on common-sense financial reforms to protect people and the economy from the kind of costly and painful crisis we've just been through. Because after a very tough two years, after a crisis that has caused so much havoc, if there is one lesson that we can learn, it's this: we cannot return to business as usual.

Thank you very much.


There is a lot of unreasonable criticism directed at our President, but whenever I hear him speak I ALWAYS get the feeling that he is working his ass off to fix the mess left by the Bush administration and that it is a herculean task indeed.

I also do not believe this is mere hyperbole, I SEE him taking these issues on head to head and never shying away from the challenge. It sickens me to see him attacked by the same Right Wing nutjobs who supported George Bush as he did everything in his power to screw up this country.

20 comments:

  1. Anonymous12:40 PM

    Now there's a real common-sense solution. Suck it up Buttercup!

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  2. "...The industry has even joined forces with the opposition party to launch a massive lobbying campaign against common-sense rules to protect consumers and prevent another crisis..."

    I like to see how President Obama is using the term "common sense", so diametrically opposed to the vagueness of Sarah Palin's use of the term.

    I don't really mind that he just slammed "the opposition party", either.

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  3. Anonymous1:03 PM

    I still love Barack. I too believe he is busting his ass to fix the monumental mess left behind. To expect miracles after one year, considering what he's up against,is unreasonable. I don't always agree with what he's doing but I understand why he's doing it. Give the guy a flippin' break, gang

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  4. Anonymous1:08 PM

    GO MR. PRESIDENT!!!

    You are so cool.

    Love,
    Alaska

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous1:09 PM

    So, are we like non-voting stockholders or something? Well, as long as we aren't silenced. The banks in AK are slightly more conservative in their "loans". If you are a woman you have really give them a strong presentation for a loan of any type. Who are the top financial institutions in Alaska? Am I being too regional, again? Parochial?

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  6. Anne NC1:28 PM

    Yes, it is a common sense solution. But those "no-spin" right wingers will spin this into Obama is trying to take over the banks and the idiots that don't read or can't make a decision without the input of FOX will be screaming the same thing. Our President is absolutely correct and to think that they are handing out these enormous bonuses and claim they can't afford to pay the fee, it's disgusting. I'm sick of the Wall St. big shots paving the way for their representation with their campaign $$$.

    While I don't agree with our President about everything, I do believe he absolutely has the welfare of the American people at heart and that was never something I would say about the last administration. Hell, Cheney didn't even have a heart. He was evil personified pulling the strings of the idiot puppet in the White House.

    We really need to make our voices heard in unison that we approve of what the President is doing. All he ever really hears is the BS the GOP wingnuts shout on TV in front of pundits. But they never have a solution, just complaints.

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  7. Aussie Blue Sky1:34 PM

    "It's a sight to see" .... love it.

    Go, Mr President!

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  8. Anonymous1:50 PM

    This is great. People sometimes forget how much of their money is going into obscene bonuses and compensation. I'm glad he reminded them. I just hope the obstructionists aren't able to block any legislation that will right the wrongs of Wall St.

    Of course, I can hear the RW right now...socialist! They tried that with FDR, too, and look how many terms he served.

    Grandma68

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  9. LoveAndKnishesFromBrooklyn2:01 PM

    I wouldn't want his job.

    He's an intelligent, careful man who is trying to push a boulder up a hill and is succeeding, no matter how fast the Party of No spins against him.

    And it's making them NUTS!

    GOBAMA!!!

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  10. kdusmdd2:31 PM

    I LOVE OBAMA !!!!!

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  11. Thank you Mr. President....we so appreciate your acting on the behalf of everyday American citizens......going to post this at the white house also...thanks Gryphen

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  12. Anonymous2:46 PM

    Thank you Obama for trying to actually DO something, not just talk in generalities about everything. When you act it is easy to be criticized, it is much easier to just talk and criticize. Also too.

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  13. Thank you Mr President.
    My only concern is the banks will just pass this extra cost onto the little people.

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  14. What's the point in taxing banks? They'll just pass the costs on to us.

    Tax the bonuses and the stock options.

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  15. I voted for Obama, and am in agreement w/ most of the steps he has taken in Year 1. I don't like that he stacked his financial team w/ Wall Street insiders, but if they do the job, so be it. I watched Lawrence O'Donnell the other night, and Obama's legislative success rate in his first year was a new record compared to other presidents' first year in office. The Republicans, on the other hand, have given us: a weakened stimulus bill, and a counter-proposal that would have created just over half as many jobs at three times the cost (CBO analysis); countless lies about every issue, beginning w/ the Stimulus and never stopping; an alternative budget that lacked one teensy weensy detail - Numbers; sent a Republican envoy to China to tell the Chinese not to trust Obama; have embraced the lunatic fringe and replaced reason with conspiracy theories; have adopted the position that any enemy of Obama's is a friend of theirs; have insulted our President in front of the world during a joint session of Congress (and been an international embarrassment in general); have clung to the absurd memes that "Bush kept us safe" and "we are less safe w/ Obama in charge"; have tried to get international sales of the F-22 approved to create a justification for our having to continue throwing money away on them; and have openly advocated for America's failure, both domestically and internationally, b/c if our president looks bad, that's good for America (kinda' explains why they liked Bush); and have, at every opportunity, self-righteously tried to shove their bibles down our throats and into our law books. The conservatives have succeeded in making my life a lot easier this past year. I no longer have to think seriously about issues or question Obama's policies, or even know what they are to support him and enjoy peace of mind and lower blood pressure. All I now have to know is that the conservatives are opposed to know I support, or that they support to know I oppose. So Easy! Thanks, Repubs.

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  16. Anonymous4:21 PM

    If they try to pass it on to us we'll just call them on it like we did for the credit card abuse. I don't have any money in a big bank, but if I did it would be gone. Fired up!

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  17. If you are on Facebook, you can become a fan of President Obama, and leave your comments there for him to read. I too think he is caring and is working hard to straighten out the mess that this government has become.

    I'm glad he's asking for our money back. We lent them money, and now they don't want to share their profits?

    I'm not going to bad mouth Republicans, because I hate the divisive nature of the 2 party system with people on both sides of the aisle blaming the other side.

    Thank you, Mr. President. I'm glad you are the man in the White House, and not the old guy and his mischosen harpy (SP, not his wife).

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  18. Mac And Cheese Wiz6:59 PM

    I agree wholeheatedly with Hoken's comment. President Obama is a leader that we all can be proud of. He hasn't shown fear nor uncertainty and has helped put America back on the right track in the eyes of the world. And he's done way more in his first year than GWB had in eight years.

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  19. sammy7:10 PM

    Scott Brown wonders if Obama was born out of wedlock

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hecen-81w0g

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  20. sunnyjane3:17 AM

    Move your money to a small community bank or credit union. That will keep the biggies from slamming you with extra fees to "pay for" this outrage.

    They need to be taught a lesson. For the President to push this, he needs our help and our support. He is standing up for the middle class, who have been screwed long enough.

    Thank you, sir!

    ReplyDelete

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