Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Bush hails ‘extraordinary’ bailout deal

President says he's confident bill will help stabilize the ailing economy

Video
  Full Bush statement on bailout plan
Sept. 29: President Bush delivers a statement on the financial bailout plan agreed to by Congress over the weekend.

MSNBC

Video: White House  
  
Is Obama a ‘natural born’ citizen?
Dec. 5: Barack Obama’s qualification to be president will go before the U.S. Supreme Court after lawsuits question whether he meets the constitutional requirement that he is a “natural born” citizen. NBC’s Pete Williams reports.

Video
  Looking back at the historic race
Nov. 5: NBC News offers a retrospective of the historic 2008 race for the White House.

Nightly News

  Presidential legacies
Truman Laughing
Getty Images
  Harry S. Truman
From the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the end of World War II to the beginning of the cold war.
AP
  John F. Kennedy
The Cuban missle crisis, civil rights and Vietnam dominated his short presidency.
President Richard Nixon meets with Elvis Presley
Getty Images
  Richard Nixon
Astronauts walk on the moon, shootings at Kent State, meetings with Brezhnev and the Watergate scandal.
Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher
UPI via Getty Images
  Ronald Reagan
Cold war, war on drugs, the Challenger disaster, Beirut and Berlin bombings and Iran-Contra scandal.
photo dated 17 March 1992 in Chicago shows Democra
AFP - Getty Images
  Bill Clinton
Welfare reform, the Brady bill, Somalia, Kosovo, budget surplus and the scandals that plagued him.
Image: George W. Bush campaigning in 2000
AFP/Getty Images
  George W. Bush
A contested election, Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, war in Iraq, hurricane Katrina, and economic crisis.
updated 8:11 a.m. ET Sept. 29, 2008

WASHINGTON - President Bush is urging lawmakers to pass the compromise financial system bailout bill they fashioned in marathon weekend bargaining, saying it is needed to "keep the crisis in our financial industry from spreading" across the economy.

Bush made the statement at the White House, and he also sought to assure Americans that approving his administration's $700 billion rescue plan is the right thing to do. Bush spoke amid continued nervousness in financial markets at home and overseas. He described the package as an "extraordinary" deal.

The president argued that jittery U.S. taxpayers will benefit from a number of safeguards that lawmakers wrote into the pending legislation during weekend negotiations on Capitol Hill, including checks and balances on the operation of the program.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Bush spoke shortly after two leading players in the Hill bargaining went on television news shows to urge passage, even as both acknowledged the necessity of this action represents a sad day for the nation.

Asked if the compromise bill indeed will go through Congress, Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., replied: "We hope so."

Not a panacea
But the Connecticut senator, chairman of the Banking Committee, also said the bill is not a panacea for all the problems that have bedeviled the U.S. financial markets. He also said, though, that failure to act would spread the contagion of frozen credit markets even further. "This is not just about Wall Street," Dodd said. He said that it's "potentially going to hurt other people across the country."

Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., who represented fellow Republicans in the weekend talks, called it a "tourniquet" for the ailing financial industry and slow-moving economy.

The latest assessments of prospects for passage came as investors worldwide and in early trading in the United States continued to show doubt about whether the bill would go through, much less go a long way toward curing the systemic problems that have unnerved financial markets across the globe for weeks.

The House was slated to vote later Monday on the deeply unpopular rescue package for the stressed financial industry. Bush on Sunday conceded this was a difficult vote in an election year — and repeated that sentiment in his statement Monday morning.

But he called a vote for the bill "a vote to prevent economic damage" to communities across the country.

He also said the legislation addresses the root cause of the problem — "assets related to home mortgages that have lost value during the housing decline."

And the president noted that under provisions of the pending bill, "the federal government will be authorized to purchase these assets" and said that will help financial institutions to resume lending to individuals and businesses.

"I know many Americans are worried about the cost of the bill," Bush said. But he also said the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office and the federal Office of Management and Budget expect that the "ultimate cost to the taxpayer" will be much less.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links

Resource guide

Get Your 2008 Credit Score

Find a business to start

Try for Free

Search Jobs

Find Your Dream Home

$7 trades, no fee IRAs

Find your next car