Dodd, Gregg, urge lawmakers to pass bailout
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Dodd, Gregg, urge lawmakers to pass bailout
Dodd, Gregg, urge lawmakers to pass bailout
By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Two leading players in efforts to devise a financial system bailout bill said Monday they hope for quick passage of a newly fashioned version, with checks and balances on the executive branch, which they said should make it palatable enough for fellow lawmakers still hearing vocal criticism from their home districts.
Asked Monday morning if the compromise bill will go through, Sen. Chris Dodd said, "We hope so." But the Connecticut Democrat said it's 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."
Dodd and Sen. Judd Gregg, who represented fellow Republicans in weekend talks, appeared on morning news shows as President Bush prepared to give a statement at the White House urging Congress to pass the bill. Investors worldwide and in early trading in the United States continued to demonstrate doubts about whether the bill would even go through, much less address the systemic problems that have unnerved financial markets across the globe.
The House was slated to vote later Monday on the deeply unpopular rescue package for the stressed financial industry. Bush on Sunday had conceded this was a difficult vote in an election year but said he was confident that Congress would pass the measure that his top economic officials argued is vital to averting a broader economic meltdown.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080929/ap_on_bi_ge/financial_meltdown;_ylt=Amunsw46W1w2pPZ7tNW0zS6s0NUE
By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Two leading players in efforts to devise a financial system bailout bill said Monday they hope for quick passage of a newly fashioned version, with checks and balances on the executive branch, which they said should make it palatable enough for fellow lawmakers still hearing vocal criticism from their home districts.
Asked Monday morning if the compromise bill will go through, Sen. Chris Dodd said, "We hope so." But the Connecticut Democrat said it's 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."
Dodd and Sen. Judd Gregg, who represented fellow Republicans in weekend talks, appeared on morning news shows as President Bush prepared to give a statement at the White House urging Congress to pass the bill. Investors worldwide and in early trading in the United States continued to demonstrate doubts about whether the bill would even go through, much less address the systemic problems that have unnerved financial markets across the globe.
The House was slated to vote later Monday on the deeply unpopular rescue package for the stressed financial industry. Bush on Sunday had conceded this was a difficult vote in an election year but said he was confident that Congress would pass the measure that his top economic officials argued is vital to averting a broader economic meltdown.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080929/ap_on_bi_ge/financial_meltdown;_ylt=Amunsw46W1w2pPZ7tNW0zS6s0NUE








