The other party wants to go backward

Over the past two years, we’ve won a number of battles to defend the interests of the middle class.

One of the most important victories we achieved was the passage of Wall Street Reform.

This was a bill designed to rein in the secret deals and reckless gambling that nearly brought down the financial system.

It set new rules so that taxpayers would never again be on the hook for a bailout if a big financial company went under, and reform included the strongest consumer protections in history, to put an end to a lot of the hidden fees, deceptive mortgages, and other abusive practices used to tilt the tables against ordinary people in their financial dealings.

It was a tough fight.

The special interests poured millions into a lobbying campaign to prevent us from reforming the system, a system that worked a lot better for them than for middle class families.

Some in the financial industry were eager to protect a status quo that basically allowed them to play by their own rules, and these interests held common cause with Republican leaders in Washington who were looking to score a political victory in an election year.

But, their efforts failed, and we succeeded in passing reform in the hopes of ensuring that we never again face a crisis like the one we’ve been through, a crisis that unleashed an economic downturn as deep as any since the Great Depression.

Even today, we are still digging out of the damage it unleashed on the economy.

Millions of people are still out of work.

Millions of families are still hurting.

We’re also seeing the reverberations of this crisis with the rise in foreclosures, and recently, we’ve seen problems in foreclosure proceedings, mistakes that have led to disruptions in the housing markets.

This is only one more piece of evidence as to why Wall Street Reform is so necessary.

In fact, as part of reform, a new consumer watchdog is now standing up.

It will have just one job, looking out for ordinary consumers in the financial system, and this watchdog will have the authority to guard against unfair practices in mortgage transactions and foreclosures.

Yet despite the importance of this law, and despite the terrible economic dislocation caused by the failures in our financial system under the old rules, top Republicans in Congress are now beating the drum to repeal all of these reforms and consumer protections.

Recently, one of the Republican leaders in the Senate said that if Republicans take charge of Congress, repeal would be one of the first orders of business, and he joins the top Republican in the House who actually called for the law to be repealed even before it passed.

I think that would be a terrible mistake.

Our economy depends on a financial system in which everyone competes on a level playing field, and everyone is held to the same rules, whether you’re a big bank, a small business owner, or a family looking to buy a house or open a credit card, and as we saw, without sound oversight and common-sense protections for consumers, the whole economy is put in jeopardy.

That doesn’t serve Main Street.

That doesn’t serve Wall Street.

That doesn’t serve anyone, and that’s why I think it’s so important that we not take this country backward, that we don’t go back to the broken system we had before.

We’ve got to keep moving forward.

So, I need you to keep on believing.

I need you to keep hoping, and if you knock on some doors and make some phone calls, and keep marching and keep organizing, we won’t just win this election, we are going to restore the American Dream for not just some, but for everybody in this great land.
 
In 10 days, your decision will set the direction of this country for the next five years, the next 10 years, the next 20 years, for generations to come.

Just like you did in 2008, you’ve got an opportunity here to defy the conventional wisdom and defy the pundits, defy all those talking heads who say you can’t overcome cynicism in politics, you can’t overcome special interests, that millions of dollars in negative ads are what determine the outcome of races.

In 10 days, you’ve got a chance, once again, to say, “yes, we can.”
 
Now, look, let’s not fool ourselves.

This is a tough election.

This is a difficult election because this country has gone through one of the most difficult periods in our nation’s history, and it didn’t just start with the financial crisis.

Over the last decade, between 2001 and 2009, middle-class families had seen their incomes actually decline by 5 percent.

Think about that.

During that eight-year period, middle-class families had less money at the same time that their health care costs were shooting up, sending your kids to college was becoming more and more expensive.

Job growth between 2001 and 2009 was the most sluggish since World War II, more sluggish than it’s been over the last year, and so you had folks who were out there working two jobs, three jobs just to make ends meet.

You had parents who had to say to their kids, I’m not sure I can afford to send you to college, and families who had to make a decision, maybe we don’t go to the doctor even though we’re feeling sick.

All that was happening before the crisis hit, and then it culminated in the worst economy since the Great Depression.

We lost 4 million jobs in the six months before I was sworn in, 750,000 the month I was sworn in, 600,000 after that, 600,000 after that.

So, we had lost almost 8 million jobs before any of the economic policies that I helped to put into place had any chance to take an effect.

Now, when I got to Washington, my hope was that we were going to be able to bring the parties together to address this crisis, because although we are proud Democrats, we are prouder to be American, and every once in a while you’d think that folks would stand up and say, enough of the politics, enough of the game-playing, let’s get to work.

That’s my hope, but we know what actually happened.

The Republicans made a tactical decision.

I mean, they bragged about this, so this is not something I’m making up.

They basically said to themselves, you know what, we created such a big mess, we have dug such a big hole, the economy is going to take so long to recover that we’re better off not trying to solve the problems.

We’re better off standing on the sidelines and hoping people forget that we caused the problems, and then pointing our fingers and trying to place the blame on Barack Obama.

That was their strategy.

Their strategy was premised on amnesia.

That was their approach.
 
Now, we made a different decision.

We decided we can’t afford to play politics.

We understood that some of the decisions that had to be made might be unpopular, but what we said to ourselves was that we go to Washington not to have a fancy office and not to have a fancy title.

We go there to do what’s right.

You did not elect me to do what was easy.

You elected me to do what was right.
 
Now, we made a different decision.

We decided we can’t afford to play politics.

We understood that some of the decisions that had to be made might be unpopular, but what we said to ourselves was that we go to Washington not to have a fancy office and not to have a fancy title.

We go there to do what’s right.

You did not elect me to do what was easy.

You elected me to do what was right.

You lie!
 
Now, it is now up to you to let the Republicans know that we haven’t forgotten how we got here, that we don’t have amnesia.

It’s up to you to be clear that this isn’t a referendum.

This is a choice between the policies that got us into this mess and the policies that are going to lead us out of this mess.
 
This is a choice between the past and the future, between fear and hope, between moving backward and moving forward, and I don’t know about you, but I want to move forward.
 
The chair of the Republican campaign committee was quoted in the newspaper a while back.

He was asked, well, what would you do if you took power in the House?

He said, well, we’re going to pursue the exact same agenda that we pursued before Obama took office.
 
Now think about this.

This resulted in the worst economy in our lifetimes.

So, you could have imagined the Republicans going off into the desert and doing some reflection, and saying to themselves, boy, we really screwed up.

We need some new ideas, and then they might have come back and said, you know what, we got some great new ideas that we think can get the economy moving.

That’s not what happened.

They are clinging to the same worn-out, tired, snake-oil ideas that they were peddling before.
 
You know what they are.

They do have the benefit of being simple.

You cut taxes, mostly for millionaires and billionaires, regardless of the impact on the deficit.

You cut rules for all manner of special interests, and you cut middle-class families to fend for themselves.

So, if you’re somebody who just lost your job, tough luck.

You’re on your own.

You might not even get unemployment insurance, according to this philosophy.

You’re a young person who can’t afford to go to college?

Pull yourself up by your own bootstraps.

Tough luck, you’re on your own.

You don’t have health insurance?

Too bad, you’re on your own.

This agenda that poses as conservatism is not conservative.

It resulted in a radical shift from record surpluses to record deficits, allowed Wall Street to run wild.

Nearly destroyed our economy.
 
Now, I bring this up not to re-argue the past.

I bring it up because I don’t want to re-live the past.

We have been there.

We tried what they are trying to sell, and we’re not buying this time.
 
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