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Obama pushes case for bank reform Obama attacks bank reform critics
(10 minutes later)
US President Barack Obama is pushing the case for more government regulation of big banks in a speech to financial leaders in New York. US President Barack Obama has attacked critics of his banking reforms in a speech which warned that without change the financial crisis will be repeated.
He is set to warn that if lessons of the financial crisis were not learnt, "we... doom ourselves to repeat it". Reckless pratices and financial firms that acted like "bandits" should never be allowed to operate again, he said.
He is telling bankers it is in their interests to have fresh regulation and they should not fight them. Regulatory reform was in the financial sector's interests, and bankers and lobbyists should not fight against it.
The BBC's North America editor Mark Mardell said it would be "part-lecture, part-appeal". Mr Obama is speaking to an audience of bankers and financial experts at the Cooper Union college in New York.
President Obama is making the speech at Cooper Union college in New York where, as a Presidential candidate in 2008, he warned that failures of regulation had resulted in "a distorted market that creates bubbles instead of steady, sustainable growth; a market that favours Wall Street over Main Street, but ends up hurting both". A bill proposing tighter regulation is due to be debated in the US Upper House, the Senate, next week.
Later that year, the financial system was gripped by crisis after the collapse of the Lehman Brothers investment bank sent shockwaves around the world.
ANALYSIS By BBC North America editor Mark Mardell
This will be part-lecture, part-appeal to Wall Street and 100% political strategy.
He'll tell financiers that it is in their interests to have new rules, not to fight them and that they should lean on politicians in Washington and urge them to pass the new legislation.
Despite a lot of intense wooing not a single Republican in the Senate plans to vote for the new laws at the moment. But they all understand what the president is up to. If they vote against his plan, when it comes to the Senate and House elections in the Autumn, they will be painted as the party that backed their wealthy friends on Wall Street, and put at risk the people on Main Street.
He is set to tell the Cooper Union audience: "It is essential that we learn the lessons of the crisis, so we don't doom ourselves to repeat it.
"And make no mistake, that is exactly what will happen if we allow this moment to pass - an outcome that is unacceptable to me and to the American people."
Proposed reforms
A bill proposing tighter regulation, which has five major themes, is due to be debated in the US Upper House, the Senate, next week.
It was approved by the Lower House, the House of Representatives, in December.It was approved by the Lower House, the House of Representatives, in December.
The proposed rules would include a new body to safeguard consumers' rights - a consumer protection agency at the US central bank, the Federal Reserve - which would have powers to regulate all lending.The proposed rules would include a new body to safeguard consumers' rights - a consumer protection agency at the US central bank, the Federal Reserve - which would have powers to regulate all lending.
The bill also includes the formation of a nine-member Financial Stability Oversight Council, which would have powers to break up large companies if they were deemed to pose a threat to the stability of the financial system. But many people in the financial sector are aghast at the proposed changes.
The proposals include setting up a $50bn (£32.5bn) fund to assist with orderly liquidation. But Republicans see this as still allowing taxpayer bail-outs, arguing that any fund could borrow from the Treasury. Mr Obama said that he was not, as some have argued, against the power of the free market.
"But a free market was never meant to be a free licence to take whatever you can get, however you can get it. That is what happened too often in the years leading up to the crisis," he told the New York audience.
"Some on Wall Street forgot that behind every dollar traded or leveraged, there is a family looking to buy a house, pay for an education, open a business, or save for retirement.
"What happens here has real consequences across our country," he said.
He told his audience: "It is essential that we learn the lessons of the crisis, so we don't doom ourselves to repeat it."
The reform proposals include setting up a $50bn (£32.5bn) fund to assist with orderly liquidation of banks. But Republicans see this as still allowing taxpayer bail-outs, arguing that any fund could borrow from the Treasury.
The bill also suggests limiting banks' involvement in proprietary trading - where they trade their own money rather than that of investors - the so-called Volcker Rule, after the former head of the Federal Reserve who is now an adviser to President Obama.The bill also suggests limiting banks' involvement in proprietary trading - where they trade their own money rather than that of investors - the so-called Volcker Rule, after the former head of the Federal Reserve who is now an adviser to President Obama.
And it proposes limiting banks' investments in hedge funds and private equity funds, and more say for investors on executive pay.And it proposes limiting banks' investments in hedge funds and private equity funds, and more say for investors on executive pay.
Awkward spotAwkward spot
President Obama has a 59-41 Democrat majority over Republicans in the Senate, but that is one vote short of the number needed.President Obama has a 59-41 Democrat majority over Republicans in the Senate, but that is one vote short of the number needed.
Republicans largely view the bill as just more government bureaucracy, and they are pushing for parts of it to be changed.Republicans largely view the bill as just more government bureaucracy, and they are pushing for parts of it to be changed.
But the US Treasury Secretary, Timothy Geithner, says he is confident that financial reform legislation will pass. But the US Treasury Secretary, Timothy Geithner, said he was confident that financial reform legislation will pass.
He says Republican opposition appears to have softened. He told CBS Television: "If you just listen to the tone of the last couple of days, it's changed. He says Republican opposition appears to have softened. He told CBS Television earlier: "If you just listen to the tone of the last couple of days, it's changed.
"I spent a huge amount of time with Republicans over the last few weeks ... and I think they really want to be for this.""I spent a huge amount of time with Republicans over the last few weeks ... and I think they really want to be for this."
Opposition to the bill in any case puts Republicans in a awkward spot, says BBC North America editor Mark Mardell.Opposition to the bill in any case puts Republicans in a awkward spot, says BBC North America editor Mark Mardell.
"If they vote against it they will be painted as the party that backed their wealthy friends on Wall Street, and put at risk the people on Main Street.""If they vote against it they will be painted as the party that backed their wealthy friends on Wall Street, and put at risk the people on Main Street."
If he does succeed in attracting at least the one Republican vote and gets it through the Senate, it will still have to be reconciled in joint committee with the House, before it goes to the president for his signature and becomes law. If he does succeed in attracting at least the one Republican vote and gets it through the Senate, it will still have to be reconciled in a joint committee with the House, before it goes to the president for his signature and becomes law.