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Senator Barack Obama |
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Sen. Obamas Statement of Principles
on a Financial Rescue Plan
WASHINGTON DC (Below is a Statement of
Principles for the Treasury Proposal
from Senator Barack Obama) September 21,
2008
The era of greed and irresponsibility
on Wall Street and in Washington has led
to a financial crisis as profound as any
we have faced since the Great
Depression.
But regardless of how we got here, the
circumstances we face require decisive
action because the jobs, savings, and
economic security of millions of
Americans are now at risk.
We must work quickly in a bipartisan
fashion to resolve this crisis and
restore our financial sector so capital
is flowing again and we can avert an
even broader economic catastrophe. We
also should recognize that economic
recovery requires that we act, not just
to address the crisis on Wall Street,
but also the crisis on Main Street and
around kitchen tables across America.
But thus far, the Administration has
only offered a concept with a staggering
price tag, not a plan.
Even if the Treasury recovers some or
most of its investment over time, this
initial outlay of up to $700 billion is
sobering. And in return for their
support, the American people must be
assured that the deal reflects some
basic principles.
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No blank check. If we grant the
Treasury broad authority to address
the immediate crisis, we must insist
on independent accountability and
oversight. Given the breach of trust
we have seen and the magnitude of
the taxpayer money involved, there
can be no blank check.
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Rescue requires mutual
responsibility. As taxpayers are
asked to take extraordinary steps to
protect our financial system, it is
only appropriate to expect those
institutions that benefit to help
protect American homeowners and the
American economy. We cannot
underwrite continued
irresponsibility, where CEOs cash in
and our regulators look the other
way. We cannot abet and reward the
unconscionable practices that
triggered this crisis. We have to
end them.
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Taxpayers should be protected. This
should not be a handout to Wall
Street. It should be structured in a
way that maximizes the ability of
taxpayers to recoup their
investment. Going forward, we need
to make sure that the institutions
that benefit from financial
insurance also bear the cost of that
insurance.
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Help homeowners stay in their homes.
This crisis started with homeowners
and they bear the brunt of the
nearly unprecedented collapse in
housing prices. We cannot have a
plan for Wall Street banks that does
not help homeowners stay in their
homes and help distressed
communities.
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A global response. As I said on
Friday, this is a global financial
crisis and it requires a global
solution. The United States must
lead, but we must also insist that
other nations, who have a huge stake
in the outcome, join us in helping
to secure the financial markets.
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Main Street, not just Wall Street.
The American people need to know
that we feel as great a sense of
urgency about the emergency on Main
Street as we do the emergency on
Wall Street. That is why I call on
Senator McCain, President Bush,
Republicans and Democrats to join me
in supporting an emergency economic
plan for working families a plan
that would help folks cope with
rising gas and food prices, save one
million jobs through rebuilding our
schools and roads, help states and
cities avoid painful budget cuts and
tax increases, help homeowners stay
in their homes, and provide
retooling assistance to help ensure
that the fuel-efficient cars of the
future are built in America.
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Build a regulatory structure for the
21st Century. While there is not
time in a week to remake our
regulatory structure to prevent
abuses in the future, we should
commit ourselves to the kind of
reforms I have been advocating for
several years. We need new rules of
the road for the 21st Century
economy, together with the means and
willingness to enforce them.
The bottom line is that we must change
the economic policies that led us down
this dangerous path in the first place.
For the last eight years, weve had an
on your own-anything goes philosophy
in Washington and on Wall Street that
lavished tax cuts on the wealthy and big
corporations; that viewed even
common-sense regulation and oversight as
unwise and unnecessary; and that
shredded consumer protections and
loosened the rules of the road. Ordinary
Americans are now paying the price. The
events of this week have rendered a
final verdict on that failed philosophy,
and it is a philosophy I will end as
President of the United States, said
Senator Barack Obama.
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