White House Recap February 4-10, 2012: The Obama Presidency’s Weekly Recap — President Obama Hosts Second Annual White House Science Fair & Hails Housing Agreement with Banks over Mortgage Fraud & Abuses

WHITE HOUSE RECAP

WHITE HOUSE RECAP: February 4-10, 2012

Weekly Wrap Up: The Next Generation of Scientists, Engineers and Inventors

Source: WH, 2-10-12

All-hands-on-deck for Science and Innovation: Monday marked the second annual White House Science Fair, featuring research and inventions from more than 100 students representing 30 student teams. With marshmallows catapulting through the State Dining Room and robots roaming around the Blue Room, this celebration of research highlighted the talent of America’s next generation and their ability to change the world through science and engineering. If you missed President Obama’s historic launch of 14-year-old Joey Hudy’s marshmallow cannon, you can check it out here.

Housing Agreement: On Thursday morning, President Obama spoke about what he called a “landmark settlement”– an agreement with the nation’s five largest mortgage providers that will result in their issuing at least $25 billion to address mortgage loan servicing and foreclosure abuses. This settlement, in which “America’s biggest banks – banks that were rescued by taxpayer dollars – will be required to right these wrongs,” will aid thousands of working families now, and establish new protections for homeowners henceforward.

Kids Can’t Wait: From the East Room of the White House, the President announced that 10 states have agreed to implement impactful education reforms and will receive waivers from the burdensome mandates of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), also known as No Child Left Behind. These waivers will ensure that states have the flexibility necessary to raise student achievement standards, improve school accountability and increase teacher effectiveness.

Happy Second Birthday, Let’s Move!: There’s reason to celebrate – Thursday marked the Let’s Move! initiative’s second anniversary. Significant progress has been made to solve the problem of childhood obesity over the course of the past two years – President Obama signed the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act into law in December 2012; grocers including Walgreens, Supervalu and Walmart committed to build or expand 1,500 stores in food deserts; among many other accomplishments that are making a difference in the lives of our children.

Full Text February 9, 2012: President Barack Obama’s Speech Hails the Housing Agreement — States’ $25 Billion Deal With Banks Over Foreclosure Fraud & Abuses

POLITICAL SPEECHES & DOCUMENTS

OBAMA PRESIDENCY & THE 112TH CONGRESS:

President Barack Obama delivers remark on a landmark housing  agreement (February 9, 2012)

President Barack Obama delivers remarks announcing the finalization of a $26 billion settlement between mortgage providers, state attorneys general and the Justice Department, in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building of the White House, Feb. 9, 2012. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)

Officials set to announce landmark foreclosure fraud settlement:  State and federal officials on Thursday will announce a landmark settlement with five of the nation’s banks over their flawed and fraudulent foreclosure practices.
The deal, which officially will be unveiled at a 10 a.m. Department of Justice news conference, aims to help troubled borrowers by reducing the amount they owe on their mortgages, lowering their interest rates and paying restitution to homeowners who suffered mortgage-related abuses…. – WaPo, 2-9-12

States Reach $25 Billion Deal With Banks Over Foreclosure Abuses:
More than two million American homeowners will get at least $25 billion in relief from the nation’s biggest banks as part of a broad settlement to be announced as early as Thursday with state and federal authorities. It is the latest effort by the government to halt the housing market’s downward slide.
Despite the billions earmarked in the accord, the aid will help only a relatively small portion of the millions of borrowers who are delinquent and still facing foreclosure. The success could depend in part on how effectively the program is implemented, because earlier attempts by Washington to help troubled borrowers aided far fewer than had been expected.
Still, the agreement marks the broadest effort yet to help borrowers who owe more than their houses are worth, with roughly 1 million to see their mortgage debt reduced by banks. In addition, 300,000 homeowners are to be able to refinance at lower rates, while another 750,000 people who lost their homes to foreclosure between September 2008 and the end of 2011 will receive checks for about $2,000.
Brokered by officials in Washington, the final details of the pact were being negotiated until the last possible minute, including how many states would participate and when the formal announcement would be made in Washington. The two biggest holdouts, California and New York, now plan to sign on, according to officials familiar with the negotiations…. — NYT, 2-9-12

President Obama Hails the Housing Agreement

Source: WH, 2-9-12

This morning, the federal government and the attorneys general of 49 states announced an agreement with the nation’s five largest mortgage providers — Ally Financial, Bank of America, Citigroup, JP Morgan, and Wells Fargo.

Because of that agreement, the financial institutions will provide at least $25 billion to address mortgage loan servicing and foreclosure abuses. It will not only help thousands of working families now, it will establish new protections for homeowners going forward.

Earlier, President Obama spoke about what he called a “landmark settlement.” He discussed the irresponsible practices from lenders that created the housing crisis and said:

Under the terms of this settlement, America’s biggest banks — banks that were rescued by taxpayer dollars — will be required to right these wrongs.  That means more than just paying a fee.  These banks will put billions of dollars towards relief for families across the nation.  They’ll provide refinancing for borrowers that are stuck in high interest rate mortgages.  They’ll reduce loans for families who owe more on their homes than they’re worth.  And they will deliver some measure of justice for families that have already been victims of abusive practices.

All told, this isn’t just good for those families — it’s good for their neighborhoods, it’s good for their communities, and it’s good for our economy.

But this is no where near all that needs to be done to help working families. In his State of the Union, President Obama pledged to create a Financial Crimes Unit to investigate the practice of packaging risky mortgages for sale that led to the financial crisis. He also called for legislation that will help every responsible homeowner in America refinance their mortgages and save thousands of dollars each year.

Learn more about these proposals here.

Read the Transcript  |  Download Video: mp4 (86MB) | mp3 (8MB)

POLITICAL QUOTES & SPEECHES

Remarks by the President on the Housing Settlement

Room 430
Eisenhower Executive Office Building

12:28 P.M. E

THE PRESIDENT:  All right, good afternoon, everybody.  Before I start, I just want to introduce the folks on stage here, because the extraordinary work that they did is the reason that a lot of families are going to be helped all across the country.

First of all, our Attorney General Eric Holder; Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan; Associate Attorney General — and former classmate of mine — Tom Perrelli.  We’ve got Attorney General George Jepsen from Connecticut; Roy Cooper, Attorney General from North Carolina; Lisa Madigan from my home state of Illinois, and former seatmate of mine when we were in the state legislature together; Dustin McDaniel from Arkansas; Gregory Zoeller from Indiana; and Tom Miller from Iowa.  And I also want to acknowledge Bob Ryan, who worked with Shaun Donovan extensively on this issue, as well as Tim Massad of Treasury.  And I’m going to acknowledge also Gene Sperling, who doesn’t always get the credit he deserves for doing outstanding work.

The housing bubble that burst nearly six years ago triggered, as we all know, the worst economic crisis of our lifetimes.  It cost millions of innocent Americans their jobs and their homes.  And it remains one of the biggest drags on our economy.

Last fall, my administration unveiled a series of steps to help responsible homeowners refinance their mortgages to take advantage of historically low rates.  And last week, I urged Congress to pass a plan that would help millions more Americans refinance and stay in their homes.  And I indicated that the American people need Congress to act on this piece of legislation.

But in the meantime, we can’t wait to get things done and to provide relief to America’s homeowners.  We need to keep doing everything we can to help homeowners and our economy.  And today, with the help of Democratic and Republican attorney generals from nearly every state in the country, we are about to take a major step on our own.

We have reached a landmark settlement with the nation’s largest banks that will speed relief to the hardest-hit homeowners, end some of the most abusive practices of the mortgage industry, and begin to turn the page on an era of recklessness that has left so much damage in its wake.

By now, it’s well known that millions of Americans who did the right thing and the responsible thing — shopped for a house, secured a mortgage that they could afford, made their payments on time — were, nevertheless, hurt badly by the irresponsible actions of others:  by lenders who sold loans to people who couldn’t afford them; by buyers who knew they couldn’t afford them; by speculators who were looking to make a quick buck; by banks that took risky mortgages, packaged them up, and traded them off for large profits.

It was wrong.  And it cost more than 4 million families their homes to foreclosure.

Even worse, many companies that handled these foreclosures didn’t give people a fighting chance to hold onto their homes.  In many cases, they didn’t even verify that these foreclosures were actually legitimate.  Some of the people they hired to process foreclosures used fake signatures to — on fake documents to speed up the foreclosure process.  Some of them didn’t read what they were signing at all.

We’ve got to think about that.  You work and you save your entire life to buy a home.  That’s where you raise your family.  That’s where your kids’ memories are formed.  That’s your stake, your claim on the American Dream.  And the person signing the document couldn’t take enough time to even make sure that the foreclosure was legitimate.

These practices were plainly irresponsible.  And we refused to let them go unanswered.  So about a year ago, our federal law enforcement agencies teamed up with state attorneys general to get to the bottom of these abuses.  The settlement we’ve reached today, thanks to the work of some of the folks who are on this stage — this is the largest joint federal-state settlement in our nation’s history — is the result of that extraordinary cooperation.

Under the terms of this settlement, America’s biggest banks — banks that were rescued by taxpayer dollars — will be required to right these wrongs.  That means more than just paying a fee.  These banks will put billions of dollars towards relief for families across the nation.  They’ll provide refinancing for borrowers that are stuck in high interest rate mortgages.  They’ll reduce loans for families who owe more on their homes than they’re worth.  And they will deliver some measure of justice for families that have already been victims of abusive practices.

All told, this isn’t just good for those families — it’s good for their neighborhoods, it’s good for their communities, and it’s good for our economy.

This settlement also protects our ability to further investigate the practices that caused this mess.  And this is important.  The mortgage fraud task force I announced in my State of the Union address retains its full authority to aggressively investigate the packaging and selling of risky mortgages that led to this crisis.  This investigation is already well underway.  And working closely with state attorneys general, we’re going to keep at it until we hold those who broke the law fully accountable.

Now, I want to be clear.  No compensation, no amount of money, no measure of justice is enough to make it right for a family who’s had their piece of the American Dream wrongly taken from them.  And no action, no matter how meaningful, is going to, by itself, entirely heal the housing market.  But this settlement is a start.  And we’re going to make sure that the banks live up to their end of the bargain.  If they don’t, we’ve set up an independent inspector, a monitor, that has the power to make sure they pay exactly what they agreed to pay, plus a penalty if they fail to act in accordance with this agreement.  So this will be a big help.

Of course, even with this settlement, there’s still millions of responsible homeowners who are out there doing their best.  And they need us to do more to help them get back on their feet. We’ve still got to stoke the fires of our economic recovery.  So now is not the time to pull back.

To build on this settlement, Congress still needs to send me the bill I’ve proposed that gives every responsible homeowner in America the chance to refinance their mortgage and save about $3,000 a year.  It would help millions of homeowners who make their payments on time save hundreds of dollars a month, and it can broaden the impact building off this settlement.

That’s money that can be put back into the homes of those folks who are saving money on the refinancing, helping to build their equity back up.  They may decide to spend that money on local businesses.  Either way, it’s good for families, and it’s good for our economy.  But it’s only going to happen if Congress musters the will to act.  And I ask every American to raise your voice and demand that they do.

Because there really is no excuse for inaction.  There’s no excuse for doing nothing to help more families avoid foreclosure. That’s not who we are.  We are Americans, and we look out for one another; we get each other’s backs.  That’s not a Democratic issue, that’s not a Republican issue.  That’s who we are as Americans.

And the bipartisan nature of this settlement and the outstanding work that these state attorneys general did is a testament to what happens when everybody is pulling in the same direction.  And that’s what today’s settlement is all about — standing up for the American people, holding those who broke the law accountable, restoring confidence in our housing market and our financial sector, getting things moving.  And we’re going to keep on at it until everyone shares in America’s comeback.

So, ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your outstanding efforts.  We are very, very proud of you.  And we look forward to seeing this settlement lead to some small measure of relief to a lot of families out there that need help.  And that’s going to strengthen the American economy overall.

So thank you very much.

END
12:37 P.M EST

Political Buzz US Economy in Crisis August 10, 2011: Dow Again Plunges 520 Points

US ECONOMY IN CRISIS

THE HEADLINES….

Stocks plunge after another day of volatile trading: Stocks finished the day down sharply as sellers returned to the market in full force following Tuesday’s dramatic rebound.
The Dow Jones industrial average was down about 520 points, or 4.6 percent, putting the blue-chip index below the 11,000 level it had managed to break through during Tuesday’s rally. The Standard & Poor’s 500, a broader market measure, was down about 52 points, or 4.4 percent, while the Nasdaq, a more tech-heavy index, was down 101 points, or about 4 percent.

The plunge on Wall Street, which reached around 4 percent in late trading, drove home a powerful message to investors: That the rally of about 4.7 percent in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index and other indexes on Tuesday had no basis to last. — NYT, 8-9-11

  • Banks drag Wall Street lower on Europe debt: Fear returned to Wall Street on Wednesday, sending the S&P 500 to another 4 percent decline, triggered by worries that Europe’s debt crisis could engulf French banks and spill onto the U.S. financial sector.
    Trading was once again marked by sharp moves on heavy volume. For a fifth straight day, the Dow industrials fluctuated in a range of more than 400 points…. – Reuters, 8-10-11
  • Dow Closes Down 520 Points, Reverses Tuesday Gains: The rollercoaster stock market took another downward turn Wednesday, with the Dow closing down 520 points, wiping out Tuesday’s recovery from a 600-point dip on Monday…. – PBS Newshour, 8-10-11
  • Stocks Drop 4%, Dow Skids 500, Led by Banks: Stocks finished near session lows in choppy trading Wednesday, with the Dow and S&P wiping out all of the previous session’s gains led by financials, as investors continued to cautiously monitor developments in the European banks. … – CNBC.com, 8-10-11
  • Wall Street Loses Previous Day’s Gains: A major sell-off in the last minutes of today’s trading made the Dow Jones Industrial Average lose 520 points, making Wall Street lose the gains it earned yesterday. A few minutes before 4 p.m., the Dow fell about 150 points, making today’s total its ninth-largest loss in history. The S&P 500 fell 51 points and the technology-heavy Nasdaq also fell 101 points…. NY1, 8-10-11
  • Dow Declines 520 Points, Volatility Spikes: There was little to cheer in the market Wednesday, a day in which the Dow’s 4.6% decline negated Tuesday’s gains, gold prices surged and volatility spiked. The Dow Jones Industrial Average sank 519.83 points to 10719.94. … – Barron’s, 8-10-11
  • Wall Street Veterans Struggle To Comprehend Recent Market Moves: The stock market’s steep declines have not only produced jittery daily gyrations and heightened volatility, but they have also stunned some of Wall Street’s well-known veterans. … – WSJ, 8-10-11
%d bloggers like this: