Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

Golden, Colorado


Over the last few days, we have seen clearly what’s at stake in this
election. The news from Wall Street has shaken the American people’s
faith in our economy. The situation with Lehman Brothers and other
financial institutions is the latest in a wave of crises that have
generated tremendous uncertainty about the future of our financial
markets. This is a major threat to our economy and its ability to
create good-paying jobs and help working Americans pay their bills,
save for their future, and make their mortgage payments.

Since this turmoil began over a year ago, the housing market has
collapsed. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had to be effectively taken over
by the government. Three of America’s five largest investment banks
failed or have been sold off in distress. Yesterday, Wall Street
suffered its worst losses since just after 9/11. We are in the most
serious financial crisis in generations. Yet Senator McCain stood up
yesterday and said that the fundamentals of the economy are strong

A few hours later, his campaign sent him back out to clean up his
remarks, and he tried to explain himself again this morning by saying
that what he meant was that American workers are strong. But we know
that Senator McCain meant what he said the first time, because he has
said it over and over again throughout this campaign – no fewer than
16 times, according to one independent count.

Now I certainly don’t fault Senator McCain for all of the problems
we’re facing, but I do fault the economic philosophy he subscribes to.
Because the truth is, what Senator McCain said yesterday fits with the
same economic philosophy that he’s had for 26 years. It’s the
philosophy that says we should give more and more to those with the
most and hope that prosperity trickles down. It’s the philosophy that
says even common-sense regulations are unnecessary and unwise. It’s a
philosophy that lets Washington lobbyists shred consumer protections
and distort our economy so it works for the special interests instead
of working people.

We’ve had this philosophy for eight years. We know the results. You
feel it in your own lives. Jobs have disappeared, and peoples’ life
savings have been put at risk. Millions of families face foreclosure,
and millions more have seen their home values plummet. The cost of
everything from gas to groceries to health care has gone up, while the
dream of a college education for our kids and a secure and dignified
retirement for our seniors is slipping away. These are the struggles
that Americans are facing. This is the pain that has now trickled up.

So let’s be clear: what we’ve seen the last few days is nothing less
than the final verdict on an economic philosophy that has completely
failed. And I am running for President of the United States because
the dreams of the American people must not be endangered any more.
It’s time to put an end to a broken system in Washington that is
breaking the American economy. It’s time for change that makes a real
difference in your lives.

If you want to understand the difference between how Senator McCain
and I would govern as President, you can start by taking a look at how
we’ve responded to this crisis. Because Senator McCain’s approach was
the same as the Bush Administration’s: support ideological policies
that made the crisis more likely; do nothing as the crisis hits; and
then scramble as the whole thing collapses. My approach has been to
try to prevent this turmoil.

In February of 2006, I introduced legislation to stop mortgage
transactions that promoted fraud, risk or abuse. A year later, before
the crisis hit, I warned Secretary Paulson and Chairman Bernanke about
the risks of mounting foreclosures and urged them to bring together
all the stakeholders to find solutions to the subprime mortgage
meltdown. Senator McCain did nothing.

Last September, I stood up at NASDAQ and said it’s time to realize
that we are in this together – that there is no dividing line between
Wall Street and Main Street – and warned of a growing loss of trust in
our capital markets. Months later, Senator McCain told a newspaper
that he’d love to give them a solution to the mortgage crisis, “but” –
he said – “I don’t know one.”

In January, I outlined a plan to help revive our faltering economy,
which formed the basis for a bipartisan stimulus package that passed
the Congress. Senator McCain used the crisis as an excuse to push a so-
called stimulus plan that offered another huge and permanent corporate
tax cut, including $4 billion for the big oil companies, but no
immediate help for workers.

This March, in the wake of the Bear Stearns bailout, I called for a
new, 21st century regulatory framework to restore accountability,
transparency, and trust in our financial markets. Just a few weeks
earlier, Senator McCain made it clear where he stands: “I’m always for
less regulation,” he said, and referred to himself as “fundamentally a
deregulator.”

This is what happens when you confuse the free market with a free
license to let special interests take whatever they can get, however
they can get it. This is what happens when you see seven years of
incomes falling for the average worker while Wall Street is booming,
and declare – as Senator McCain did earlier this year – that we’ve
made great progress economically under George Bush. That is how you
can reach the conclusion – as late as yesterday – that the
fundamentals of the economy are strong.

Well, we have a different way of measuring the fundamentals of our
economy. We know that the fundamentals that we use to measure economic
strength are whether we are living up to that fundamental promise that
has made this country great –that America is a place where you can
make it if you try.

Americans have always pursued our dreams within a free market that has
been the engine of our progress. It’s a market that has created a
prosperity that is the envy of the world, and rewarded the innovators
and risk-takers who have made America a beacon of science, and
technology, and discovery.  But the American economy has worked in
large part because we have guided the market’s invisible hand with a
higher principle – that America prospers when all Americans can
prosper. That is why we have put in place rules of the road to make
competition fair, and open, and honest.

Too often, over the last quarter century, we have lost this sense of
shared prosperity. And this has not happened by accident. It’s because
of decisions made in boardrooms, on trading floors and in Washington.
We failed to guard against practices that all too often rewarded
financial manipulation instead of productivity and sound business
practices. We let the special interests put their thumbs on the
economic scales. The result has been a distorted market that creates
bubbles instead of steady, sustainable growth; a market that favors
Wall Street over Main Street, but ends up hurting both.

Let me be clear: the American economy does not stand still, and
neither should the rules that govern it. The evolution of industries
often warrants regulatory reform - to foster competition, lower
prices, or replace outdated oversight structures. Old institutions
cannot adequately oversee new practices. Old rules may not fit the
roads where our economy is leading. But instead of sensible reform
that rewarded success and freed the creative forces of the market, too
often we’ve excused an ethic of greed, corner-cutting and inside
dealing that threatens the long-term stability of our economic
system.

It happened in the 1980s, when we loosened restrictions on Savings and
Loans and appointed regulators who ignored even these weaker rules.
Too many S&Ls took advantage of the lax rules set by Washington to
gamble that they could make big money in speculative real estate.
Confident of their clout in Washington, they made hundreds of billions
in bad loans, knowing that if they lost money, the government would
bail them out. And they were right.  The gambles did not pay off, our
economy went into recession, and the taxpayers ended up footing the
bill. Sound familiar?

And it has happened again during this decade, in part because of how
we deregulated the financial services sector. After we repealed
outmoded rules instead of updating them, we were left overseeing 21st
century innovation with 20th century regulations. When subprime
mortgage lending took a reckless and unsustainable turn, a patchwork
of regulators systematically and deliberately eliminated the
regulations protecting the American people and failed to raise warning
flags that could have protected investors and the pensions American
workers count on.

This was not the invisible hand of the market at work. These cycles of
bubble and bust were symptoms of the ideology that my opponent is
running to continue. John McCain has spent decades in Washington
supporting financial institutions instead of their customers. In fact,
one of the biggest proponents of deregulation in the financial sector
is Phil Gramm – the same man who helped write John McCain’s economic
plan; the same man who said that we’re going through a ‘mental
recession’; and the same man who called the United States of America a
“nation of whiners.” So it’s hard to understand how Senator McCain is
going to get us out of this crisis by doing the same things with the
same old players.

Make no mistake: my opponent is running for four more years of
policies that will throw the economy further out of balance. His
outrage at Wall Street would be more convincing if he wasn’t offering
them more tax cuts. His call for fiscal responsibility would be
believable if he wasn’t for more tax cuts for the wealthiest
Americans, and more of a trillion dollar war in Iraq paid for with
deficit spending and borrowing from foreign creditors like China. His
newfound support for regulation bears no resemblance to his scornful
attitude towards oversight and enforcement. John McCain cannot be
trusted to reestablish proper oversight of our financial markets for
one simple reason: he has shown time and again that he does not
believe in it.

What has happened these last eight years is not some historical
anomaly, so we know what to expect if we try these policies for
another four. When lobbyists run your campaign, the special interests
end up gaming the system. When the White House is hostile to any kind
of oversight, corporations cut corners and consumers pay the price.
When regulators are chosen for their disdain for regulation and we gut
their ability to enforce the law, then the interests of the American
people are not protected. It’s an ideology that intentionally breeds
incompetence in Washington and irresponsibility on Wall Street, and
it’s time to turn the page.

Just today, Senator McCain offered up the oldest Washington stunt in
the book – you pass the buck to a commission to study the problem. But
here’s the thing – this isn’t 9/11. We know how we got into this mess.
What we need now is leadership that gets us out. I’ll provide it, John
McCain won’t, and that’s the choice for the American people in this
election.

History shows us that there is no substitute for presidential
leadership in a time of economic crisis. FDR and Harry Truman didn’t
put their heads in the sand, or hand accountability over to a
Commission. Bill Clinton didn’t put off hard choices. They led, and
that’s what I will do. My priority as President will be the stability
of the American economy and the prosperity of the American people. And
I will make sure that our response focuses on middle class Americans –
not the companies that created the problem.

To get out of this crisis – and to ensure that we are not doomed to
repeat a cycle of bubble and bust again and again – we must take
immediate measures to create jobs and continue to address the housing
crisis; we must build a 21st century regulatory framework, and we must
pursue a bold opportunity agenda that creates new jobs and grows the
American economy.

To jumpstart job creation, I have proposed a $50 billion Emergency
Economic Plan that would save 1 million jobs by rebuilding our
infrastructure, repairing our schools, and helping our states and
localities avoid damaging budget cuts.

I worked with leaders in Congress to create a new FHA Housing Security
Program, which will help stabilize the housing market and allow
Americans facing foreclosure to keep their homes at rates they can
afford. Going forward, we need to replace Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
as we know them with a structure that is focused on helping people buy
homes – not engaging in market speculation. We can’t have a situation
like the old S&L scandal where its “heads” investors win, and “tails”
taxpayers lose. That’s going to take ending the lobbyist-driven
dominance of these institutions that we’ve seen for far too long in
Washington.

To prevent fraud in the mortgage market, I’ve proposed tough penalties
on fraudulent lenders, and a Home Score system that will ensure
consumers fully understand mortgage offers and whether they’ll be able
to make payments. To help low- and middle-income families, I will ease
the burden on struggling homeowners through a universal homeowner’s
tax credit. This will add up to a 10 percent break off the mortgage
interest rate for 10 million households. That’s another $500 each year
for many middle class families.

Unlike Senator McCain, I will change our bankruptcy laws to make it
easier for families to stay in their homes. Right now, if you’re a
family that owns one house, bankruptcy judges are actually barred from
helping you keep a roof over your head by writing down the value of
your mortgage. If you own seven homes, the judge is free to write down
any or all of the debt on your second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth or
seventh homes. Now that may be of comfort to Senator McCain, but
that’s the kind of out-of-touch Washington loophole that makes no
sense. When I’m President, we’ll make our laws work for working
people.

But as we’ve seen the last few days, the crisis in our financial
markets now reaches well beyond the housing market. That’s why it’s
time to do what I called for last September and again this past March
– and it is only more overdue today.

Our capital markets cannot succeed without the public’s trust. It’s
time to get serious about regulatory oversight, and that’s what I will
do as President. That starts with the core principles for reform that
I discussed at Cooper Union.

First, if you’re a financial institution that can borrow from the
government, you should be subject to government oversight and
supervision. When the Federal Reserve steps in as a lender of last
resort, it is providing an insurance policy underwritten by the
American taxpayer. In return, taxpayers have every right to expect
that financial institutions with access to that credit are not taking
excessive risks.

Second, we must reform requirements on all regulated financial
institutions. We must strengthen capital requirements, particularly
for complex financial instruments like some of the mortgage securities
and other derivatives at the center of our current crisis. We must
develop and rigorously manage liquidity risk. We must investigate
rating agencies and potential conflicts of interest with the people
they are rating. And we must establish transparency requirements that
demand full disclosure by financial institutions to shareholders and
counterparties. As we reform our regulatory system at home, we must
address the same problems abroad so that financial institutions around
the world are subject to similar rules of the road.

Third, we need to streamline our regulatory agencies. Our overlapping
and competing regulatory agencies cannot oversee the large and complex
institutions that dominate the financial landscape. Different
institutions compete in multiple markets - Washington should not
pretend otherwise. A streamlined system will provide better oversight
and reduce costs.

Fourth, we need to regulate institutions for what they do, not what
they are. Over the last few years, commercial banks and thrift
institutions were subject to guidelines on subprime mortgages that did
not apply to mortgage brokers and companies. This regulatory framework
failed to protect homeowners, and made no sense for our financial
system. When it comes to protecting the American people, it should
make no difference what kind of institution they are dealing with.

Fifth, we must crack down on trading activity that crosses the line to
market manipulation. The last six months have shown that this remains
a serious problem in many markets and becomes especially problematic
during moments of great financial turmoil.  We cannot embrace the
administration’s vision of turning over the protection of investors to
the industries themselves.  We need regulators that actually enforce
the rules instead of overlooking them.  The SEC should investigate and
punish market manipulation, and report its conclusions to Congress.

Sixth, we must establish a process that identifies systemic risks to
the financial system like the crisis that has overtaken our economy.
Too often, we end up where we are today: dealing with threats to the
financial system that weren’t anticipated by regulators. We need a
standing financial market advisory group to meet regularly and provide
advice to the President, Congress, and regulators on the state of our
financial markets and the risks they face. It’s time to anticipate
risks before they erupt into a full-blown crisis.

These six principles should guide the legal reforms needed to
establish a 21st century regulatory system. But the change we need
goes beyond laws and regulation. Financial institutions must do a
better job at managing risks. There is something wrong when boards of
directors or senior managers don’t understand the implications of the
risks assumed by their own institutions. It’s time to realign
incentives and CEO compensation packages, so that both high level
executives and employees better serve the interests of shareholders.

Finally, the American people must be able to trust that their
government is looking out for all of us - not the special interests
that have set the agenda in Washington for eight years, and the
lobbyists who run John McCain’s campaign.

I’ve spent my career taking on lobbyists and their money, and I’ve
won. If you wanted a special favor in Illinois, there was actually a
law that let you give campaign cash to politicians for their own
personal use.  In the State House, they called it business-as-usual.
I called it legalized bribery, and while it didn’t make me the most
popular guy in Springfield, I put an end to it.

When I got to Washington, we saw some of the worst corruption since
Watergate. I led the fight for reform in my party, and let me tell you
– not everyone in my party was too happy about it.  When I proposed
forcing lobbyists to disclose who they’re raising money from and who
in Congress they’re funneling it to, I had a few choice words directed
my way on the floor of the Senate.  But we got it done, and we banned
gifts from lobbyists, and free rides on their fancy jets.  And I am
the only candidate who can say that Washington lobbyists do not fund
my campaign, they will not run my White House, and they will not drown
out the voices of the American people when I am President of the
United States.  That’s how we’re going to end the outrage of special
interests tipping the scales.

The most important thing we must do is restore opportunity for all
Americans. To get our economy growing, we need to recapture that
fundamental American promise. That if you work hard, you can pay the
bills. That if you get sick, you won’t go bankrupt. That your kids can
get a good education, and that we can leave a legacy of greater
opportunity to future generations.

That’s the change the American people need. While Senator McCain likes
to talk about change these days, his economic program offers nothing
but more of the same. The American people need more than change as a
slogan– we need change that makes a real difference in your life.

Change means a tax code that doesn’t reward the lobbyists who wrote
it, but the American workers and small businesses who deserve it. I
will stop giving tax breaks to corporations that ship jobs overseas,
and I will start giving them to companies that create good jobs right
here in America. I will eliminate capital gains taxes for small
businesses and start-ups – that’s how we’ll grow our economy and
create the high-wage, high-tech jobs of tomorrow.

I will cut taxes – cut taxes – for 95% of all working families. My
opponent doesn’t want you to know this, but under my plan, tax rates
will actually be less than they were under Ronald Reagan.  If you make
less than $250,000 a year, you will not see your taxes increase one
single dime.  In fact, I offer three times the tax relief for middle-
class families as Senator McCain does – because in an economy like
this, the last thing we should do is raise taxes on the middle-class.

I will finally keep the promise of affordable, accessible health care
for every single American.  If you have health care, my plan will
lower your premiums.  If you don’t, you’ll be able to get the same
kind of coverage that members of Congress give themselves.  And I will
stop insurance companies from discriminating against those who are
sick and need care the most

I will create the jobs of the future by transforming our energy
economy. We’ll tap our natural gas reserves, invest in clean coal
technology, and find ways to safely harness nuclear power.  I’ll help
our auto companies re-tool, so that the fuel-efficient cars of the
future are built right here in America.  I’ll make it easier for the
American people to afford these new cars.  And I’ll invest 150 billion
dollars over the next decade in affordable, renewable sources of
energy – wind power and solar power and the next generation of
biofuels; an investment that will lead to new industries and five
million new jobs that pay well and can’t ever be outsourced

And now is the time to finally meet our moral obligation to provide
every child a world-class education, because it will take nothing less
to compete in the global economy.  I’ll recruit an army of new
teachers, and pay them higher salaries and give them more support.
But in exchange, I will ask for higher standards and more
accountability.  And we will keep our promise to every young American
– if you commit to serving your community or your country, we will
make sure you can afford a college education.

This is the change we need – the kind of bottom up growth and
innovation that will advance the American economy by advancing the
dreams of all Americans.

Times are hard. I will not pretend that the changes we need will come
without cost – though I have presented ways we can achieve these
changes in a fiscally responsible way. I know that we’ll have to
overcome our doubts and divisions and the determined opposition of
powerful special interests before we can truly reform a broken economy
and advance opportunity.

But I am running for President because we simply cannot afford four
more years of an economic philosophy that works for Wall Street
instead of Main Street, and ends up devastating both.

I don’t want to wake up in four years to find that more Americans fell
out of the middle-class, and more families lost their savings. I don’t
want to see that our country failed to invest in our ability to
compete, our children’s future was mortgaged on another mountain of
debt, and our financial markets failed to find a firmer footing.

This time – this election – is our chance to stand up and say: enough
is enough!

We can do this because Americans have done this before. Time and
again, we’ve battled back from adversity by recognizing that common
stake that we have in each other’s success. That’s why our economy
hasn’t just been the world’s greatest wealth generator – it’s bound
America together, it’s created jobs, and it’s made the dream of
opportunity a reality for generation after generation of Americans.

Now it falls to us. And I need you to make it happen. If you want the
next four years looking just like the last eight, then I am not your
candidate. But if you want real change – if you want an economy that
rewards work, and that works for Main Street and Wall Street; if you
want tax relief for the middle class and millions of new jobs; if you
want health care you can afford and education so that our kids can
compete; then I ask you to knock on some doors, and make some calls,
and talk to your neighbors, and give me your vote on November 4th. And
if you do, I promise you – we will win Colorado, we will win this
election, and we will change America together.


On Sep 24, 10:47 pm, voxitar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 24, 2008 at 5:52 PM, VT Sean Lewis
>
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Funny Obama had his plan out before McCains yet
> > McCains plan looks a lot like Obama's
>
> Plan?  What plan?  When asked about what he would do about the economy
> as president, Obama said "present."
>
> Unless Urkel pulled a plan out his ass in the last few hours, there
> ain't no plan.
>
>
>
> > Tell me what Mr. the economy is doing fine is going to
> > add to the discussion?
>
> > His good judgement?
>
> You mean like the judgement he showed when he co-sponsored the Federal
> Housing Enterprise Regulatory Reform Act of 2005 that would have
> REFORMED Fannie and Freddie and likely would have prevented the
> current crisis had it been supported by Democrats?  Why, yes, that
> good judgement will come in quite handy.
>
>
>
> > McCain said there was no crisis 10 days ago, WRONG.
>
> You are wrong, indeed - 10 days ago McCain told Harry Smith during an
> interview the economy was, in fact, "in crisis."
>
>
>
> > McCain was proud he helped to deregulate the industry, WRONG.
>
> Deregulation doesn't mean the oversight from Congress is supposed to
> STOP, dude!  Where was Chris Dodd and Barney Frank these last two
> years?  Oh yeah, that's right - enriching themselves with donations
> from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
>
>
>
> > McCain wants to make the Bush tax cust permanent because it
> > stimulated the economy, WRONG.
>
> Had it not been for those Bush tax cuts, we likely still would be in
> the recession Clinton left us.
>
>
>
> > Yeah lets get McCain in the discussion to earn the lobby money
> > Of $2,000,000 paid to his campaign manager.
>
> I'll take your 2 million and raise you 88 million...that gets us to
> the 90 million dollars Obama economic adviser Franklin Raines, former
> CEO for Fannie Mae, took as he drove Fannie into the ground via fraud
> and corruption....dude, I can play tit-for-tat with you all fuckin'
> day...bring it on!
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to