As a key committee in the Senate takes up reforming the ways of Wall Street, the President lays down a marker: I urge those in the Senate who support these reforms to remain strong, to resist the pressure from those who would preserve the status quo, to stand up for their constituents and our country. And I promise to use every tool at my disposal to see these reforms enacted: to ensure that the bill I sign into law reflects not the special interests of Wall Street, but the best interests of the American people.
Entire Show Here insiderexclusive.com In this powerful interview, Joel Fineberg and Dean Gresham of Fineberg:Gresham address the new financial fraudsters of the 21st century including: corporate fraud, credit default swaps, derivatives, securitized debt, securitized mortgages, securitized receivables, collateralized debt, collateralized mortgages, Internet fraud, insider trading, accounting fraud, mutual fund fraud, short selling abuses and Ponzi schemes. By “following the money to follow …
National Economic Council Chair Lawrence Summers speaks the fundamentals of financial regulatory reform to a meeting of stakeholder groups at the White House. October 14, 2009. (Public Domain)
Austan Goolsbee of the Council of Economic Advisers talks the Consumer Financial Protection Agency and overall financial regulatory reform. (public domain)
The President pushes for one of the pillars of his new economic foundation: reforming our financial system to look out for consumers, not just banks. October 9, 2009. (Public Domain)
As the culmination of a months-long process in which the President consulted with the most expert and experienced regulators, leaders in Congress, and his entire economic team, he announces his vision for desperately needed financial regulatory reform. A major brick in the new foundation for Americas economy. June 17, 2009. (Public Domain)