Historic financial overhaul signed into law by Obama

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Reveling over a new milestone in his presidency, a triumphant Barack Obama on Wednesday signed into law the most sweeping
overhaul of lending and high-finance rules since the Great Depression, adding safeguards for millions of consumers and aiming
to restrain Wall Street excesses that could set off a new recession.

The president's signing ceremony capped nearly two years of intense and partisan debate over how to avoid a recurrence
of the 2008 financial meltdown that buckled the U.S. economy and left sharp, lasting imprints on the nation's politics
and in Americans' homes.

"Because of this law, the American people will never be asked again to foot the bill for Wall Street's mistakes,"
Obama said.

In a heated midterm election season that has dented his public support, Obama sought to put the complex law in pocketbook
terms. Emphasizing provisions that guard borrowers from abusive lenders, he claimed "the strongest financial protections
for consumers in the nation's history."

Not everyone agreed. Republicans portrayed the bill as a burden on small banks and the businesses that rely on them and argued
that it will cost consumers and impede job growth.

Rep. Mike Pence of Indiana, a member of the House GOP leadership, on Wednesday joined House Minority Leader John Boehner
of Ohio in calling for the law's repeal.

The law, passed despite nearly unanimous Republican opposition, attempts to catch up to a financial system that has sped
ahead of outdated regulation and slackened rules that allowed banks, traders and others to take increased risks.

Wall Street's near collapse, Obama said, "was a crisis born of a failure of responsibility from certain corners
of Wall Street to the halls of power in Washington."

The new rules, however, are only at a midpoint. Banking and market regulators will have up to two years to write many of
the new regulations required by the law, extending uncertainty and ushering in a new phase of lobbying by financial firms.

"Regulators will have to be vigilant," Obama said.

The president sought to quell public anger over the $700 billion bank rescue fund the government created at the height of
the crisis to reassure the markets. While the infusion is credited with providing stability, the public recoiled at the idea
of taxpayer money being used to help prop up huge banks.

The law gives regulators new authority to liquidate large, interconnected financial firms that are failing.

. "There will be no more tax-funded bailouts, period."

The law, however, does permit the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to borrow taxpayer money from the Treasury temporarily
to help cover the costs of winding down a large firm. Other large banks would have to pay the Treasury back over time.

Firms have been poring over the massive bill, anxious to assess its most immediate impact. Credit rating firms, for instance,
say they will no longer allow the issuers of debt-backed securities to put their ratings for them in public sale documents,
wary of a provision in the law that makes it easier to sue ratings agencies.

The law assembles an influential council of regulators to be on the lookout for risks across the finance system. It also
crates a powerful independent consumer financial protection bureau within the Federal Reserve to write and enforce new regulations
covering lending and credit.

It places shadow financial markets that previously escaped the oversight of regulators under new scrutiny and gives the government
new powers to break up companies that threaten the economy.

Major Wall Street banks have welcomed some provisions in the bill but have fiercely opposed others that would limit their
banking business and cut into their profitability.

And Republicans have argued that the law will hurt rather than help people still reeling from the recession .

"Millions of Americans are struggling to find jobs, and yet all they see in Washington are Democrats passing massive
bills that, at their core, seem to have one thing in common: more job loss," Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.,
said on the Senate floor Wednesday.

Thomas Donohue, the president and CEO of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, called the law "a financial regulatory boondoggle."

The new law comes at a politically delicate time for the president. A growing number of business leaders describe his administration
as antagonistic to their interests, and polls show the American public increasingly wary of his policy initiatives.

Eager to portray the law as one with broad appeal, the White House included some top bankers among those at the bill signing
ceremony. They included Vikram Pandit, CEO of the financial giant Citigroup, and top executives from Bank of New York Mellon
and Barclay's PLC. Noticeably absent, however, were JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon, a past Obama backer, and
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. CEO Lloyd Blankfein. Dimon has been vocal in his criticism of some provisions in the bill.

"The CEOs who opposed reform never expected to be invited to the bill signing, and not a single one has complained to
the administration," Deputy Communications Director Jen Psaki wrote in a White House web log Wednesday.

Also in the audience were Maryland Vietnam veteran, Andrew Giordano, who was hit with bank overdraft fees, and Robin Fox,
a Georgia teacher stung by retroactive interest rate increases on her credit card balance — two issues the legislation
aims to remedy.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker and Elizabeth Warren, head of the panel assigned to oversee the bank bailout
fund, also attended. Both have been instrumental in shaping parts of the bill.

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