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■ West  Wing  Week :  07 / 24 / 15  or,

     " A  New  Direction "






This   week,

the   President  

visited   Steel   City   and   The   Big   Apple,


celebrated   the   anniversary   of   the   ADA

and   the   signing   of   AGOA,


and   hosted   a   newly   minted   head   of   state

--   all   while   a   U.S. delegation

led   by   Dr. Biden   traveled   through   Asia.



















































■ Weekly  Address :

     Wall  Street  Reform  is  Working






In   this   week's   address,

the   President   spoke   to   the   progress

we   have   made   in   making   our   financial   system  

stronger,   safer,   and   more   fair   in   the   years

since   financial   crisis.   Five   years   ago

this   week   our   country   enacted   the 

Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,   rules

that   have   substantially   reduced

recklessness   and   abuse    in   our   financial   system

that   predated   the   crisis. 

As   a   result   of   Wall   Street   reform,

our   banks   are   less   reliant   on   unstable   funding

and   less   likely   to   engage   in   risky   behavior,

the   independent   Consumer   Financial   Protection   Bureau   works

to   protect   American   consumers,

and   our   financial   system

is   significantly   better  -  regulated. 

Dodd-Frank   is   working,

and   the   President   emphasized   that

he   will   continue   to   fight   any   challenges

to   the   law   and   veto  

any   effort

to   unravel   the   new   rules

governing   Wall   Street.























 - Transcript - 






Remarks of President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
The White House
July 25, 2015

Hi, everybody.  It’s been seven years since the worst financial crisis in generations spread from Wall Street to Main Street – a crisis that cost millions of Americans their jobs, their homes, their life savings.  It was a crisis that cost all of us.  It was a reminder that we’re in this together – all of us.

That’s how we’ve battled back these past six and a half years – together.  We still have work to do, but together, we prevented a second Great Depression.  Our businesses have created nearly 13 million jobs over the past 64 months.  The housing market is healthier.  The stock market has more than doubled, restoring the retirement savings of millions.  Americans of all stripes buckled down, rolled up their sleeves, and worked to bring this country back.  And to protect your efforts, we had to do something more – we had to make sure this kind of crisis never happens again.

That’s why five years ago this week, we enacted the toughest Wall Street reform in history – new rules of the road to protect businesses, consumers, and our entire economy from the kind of irresponsibility that threatened all of us.  Five years later, here’s what that reform has done.

Wall Street Reform turned the page on the era of “too big to fail.”  Now, in America, we welcome the pursuit of profit.  But if your business fails, we shouldn’t have to bail you out.  And under the new rules, we won’t – the days of taxpayer-funded bailouts are over.

Wall Street Reform now allows us to crack down on some of the worst types of recklessness that brought our economy to its knees, from big banks making huge, risky bets using borrowed money, to paying executives in a way that rewarded irresponsible behavior.

Thanks to Wall Street Reform, there’s finally an independent Consumer Financial Protection Bureau with one mission: to protect American consumers.  Already, they’ve gone after predatory or unscrupulous mortgage brokers, student lenders, credit card companies, and they’ve won –putting nearly $11 billion back in the pockets of more than 26 million consumers who’ve been cheated.

So this law is working.  And we’re working to protect even more families.  Just this week, we announced that we’re cracking down on the worst practices of payday lenders on military bases, so that our troops and their families don’t wind up trapped in a vicious cycle of debt.  As long as I’m President, I’m going to keep doing whatever I can to protect consumers, and our entire economy from the kind of irresponsibility that led to the Great Recession in the first place.

None of this has been easy.  We’ve had to overcome fierce lobbying campaigns from the special interests and their allies in Congress.  In fact, they're still trying everything to attack everything this reform accomplishes—from hiding rollbacks of key protections in unrelated bills, to blocking the financial cops on the beat from doing their job.  And they continue to claim this Wall Street reform is somehow bad for business.  But that doesn’t explain 13 million new jobs and a stock market near record highs.  This law is only bad for business if your business model depends on recklessness that threatens our economy or irresponsibility that threatens working families.  We can’t put the security of families at risk by returning to the days when big banks or bad actors were allowed to write their own rules.  And if any bill comes to my desk that tries to unravel the new rules on Wall Street, I will veto it.  We’ve worked too hard to recover from one crisis only to risk another.

In America, we should reward drive, innovation, and fair play.  That’s what Wall Street reform does.  It makes sure everybody plays by the same set of rules.  And if we keep moving forward, not backward – if we keep building an economy that rewards responsibility instead of recklessness, then we won’t just keep coming back – we’ll come back stronger than ever.

Thanks, and have a great weekend.