Political Hotsheet
May 14, 2009 1:14 PM

Obama Calls For Credit Card Bill By Memorial Day

(AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
President Obama on Thursday made his latest appeal for Congress to pass credit card reform legislation by Memorial Day, but he also suggested American consumers need to take more personal responsibility for debt.

At a town hall meeting at Rancho Rio High School in Rio Rancho, N.M., the president urged the Congress to finish up the deliberations, which could wrap up this week, over the Credit Card Holders' Bill of Rights, a bill that would give consumers greater protections from deceptive and unfair practices by credit card companies.

"There's no time for delay," Mr. Obama said. "It's time to get it done. We can't depend on profits that depend on misleading American families--those days are over."

The president said New Mexico supported him in the presidential election in the hopes that, "after an era of selfishness and greed, we could reclaim a sense of responsiblity... In a time of great inequality, we could restore a sense of fairness to our economy."

The Obama administration has lobbied hard for Congress to present him with a bill to sign by Memorial Day. He has urged the passage of the bill in his weekly radio address, and last month the president and his economic advisers met with 14 executives from credit card companies to discuss the impact of the current economic crisis on consumers.

The president said the executives he met with agreed any reforms shouldn't diminish access to credit. However, he said that consumers have to take more responsiblity as well.

"This is not free money, it's debt," he said. "We expect consumers to make sound choices and live within their means."

Banks have a right to insist that timely payments are made, he said, but with "the same sense of responsiblity that the American people aspire to in ther own lives."

The president's urgent call for credit card reform is an appealing message for the millions of consumers currently relying on credit to stay afloat during the economic recession. The Center for Responsible Lending this month showed that, within the last six months, the top eight credit card issuers have all increased the interest rates on existing balances for some of their account holders for no particular reason. The organization says an estimated 10 million account holders may have been impacted.

"You should not have to worry when you sign up for a credit card, you're signing away all your rights," Mr. Obama said Thursday.

Congress has responded to the president's message by pushing forward the Credit Card Holders' Bill of Rights. Differences remain between the House and Senate versions, but both would ban fees for customers who pay over the phone and prevent credit card companies from issuing cards to anyone under 18. The bill would ban retroactive interest rate increases except in certain cases, and it also would require that customers be notified of rate increases 45 days in advance.

The House passed its version of the bill on April 30. The Senate is expected to pass its version this week, after debating more than 20 amendments to the legislation. Senate Democrats and Republicans made some critical compromises over the bill on Monday.

Opponents of the legislation say more regulations on credit card companies will only further restrict credit at a time when it is most needed.

"There's no one on either side of the aisle who does not want to have more transparency so that people know what they're getting into and what they're dealing with," Rep. Scott Garrett (R-N.J.), a member of the House Financial Services Committee, told CBSNews.com last month. "But with the credit market already tightening, now is not the time to make it even more difficult for the moderate-income family, with even more reasons to rely on his credit card, to find out he can't get one."
Tags:
credit cards ,
Congress
Topics:
Economy
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Add a Comment See all 14 Comments
by SantaAna9 May 14, 2009 10:55 PM EDT
The AP needs to get their FACTS correct. President Obama spoke at Rio Rancho High School in Rio Rancho, New Mexico - NOT in Albuquerque. The City of Albuquerque is south of Rio Rancho. Also, Albuquerque is not the only city in New Mexico.
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by Ordflyer May 14, 2009 6:55 PM EDT
Or we can continue to pay 35 % interest to "save the credit card industry."

YEAH RIGHT!! THE BUMS SHOULD BE IN JAIL WITH DICK CHENEY....
Reply to this comment
by goosfraba2 May 14, 2009 6:42 PM EDT
psy_war at 2:35 PM : May 14, 2009

psy_war at 2:51 PM : May 14, 2009

Excellent comments, psy_war.
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by dkhorse11 May 14, 2009 4:43 PM EDT
Bankers can't rape you if you don't spend beyond your means. And I've never seen a banker outside my door making me spend.

If you HAVE to charge, you need help!
Reply to this comment
by pepperwood2 May 14, 2009 4:35 PM EDT
My but this Rhetoric sounds good...........BUT.............

Sen. Feinstein's Husband Cashes In on Crisis
California senator sought $25 billion for a government agency that had awarded her husband's real estate firm a lucrative contract to sell foreclosed properties.
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by whitemale08 May 14, 2009 4:31 PM EDT
WE WANT GOOD DECENT WAGES!!!

NOT CREDIT CARDS!!!
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by Jade_River May 14, 2009 4:16 PM EDT
Ya "live within your means" until you are interest rated, fee-ed, penalized, and billing cycled out of it. When almost 50% of one's balance is interest and fees it is not the debtor who has chosen to live beyond, he/she was pushed.
We don't need to be scolded about our debt, we just need to have it treated fairly.
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by shoedog20 May 14, 2009 3:43 PM EDT
I seen the press confrence and Obama seemed okay reading his speech but when it came time for questions he seemed to have been tired and confused, his speech was halting and he didn't seem to be aware of his surroundings.........did anyone else catch that? I was surprised when no news commentor brought that up.
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by clancy49 May 14, 2009 3:29 PM EDT
Nothing is going to change. The banks will still increase your rates without reason but instead of 30 days notice, will give you 45 days. They will still pull their fees and create more fees so a $100 balance will end up costing you $150. The Credit Companies will legally not offer you any advantages like no interest if paid in one year. There is nothing in the this bill of substance to protect the user. Read it and judge for yourself.
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by dkhorse11 May 14, 2009 3:17 PM EDT
I use a credit card to purchase online, etc, and then payoff the next month. Similar scenarios are how credit cards should be used, not to live like you have a million dollars. Does less "Bling" make me look less important in the eyes of others? Sure, but I?m not suffering as a result. If others only like me because of my material possessions then they don?t really like me (F*ck?em), I don?t need them.

If you are living off of your credit card you have serious issues that need to be addressed. Need a better job (I know that?s a stretch today), less ?Keeping up with the Jones,? trying to impress others, etc. Credit card companies are criminal if YOU let yourself fall into their trap. I have NEVER seen a banker outside my door with a gun telling me to spend beyond my means. My spending is all on me.
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by pragmatist1 May 14, 2009 2:58 PM EDT
Missing from this is government insistence on individual card holders to be accountable for their egregious abuses of their cards, which to a great extent has forced credit card companies to act in predatory ways. Why shouldn't the companies be this way, when card holders are repeatedly abusive of their responsibilities. These include not maxing out the credit card limit and then paying the minimum and often late or not at all and then running up the pay-off amount immediately. Living off of credit cards and borrowing against them to pay other bills off. Living beyond one's means. Dead beat credit card holders have no one to blame but themselves for their own stupidity. And, if card holders can't understand basic contract language, then they should either avoid having the card(s) or get someone who can simplify the terms. I don't have trouble understanding the terms. I also don't live beyond my means. I have a card with over a $30k limit and I owe less than $1,200 and my interest rate is less than six percent. I also pay my card bill early and don't wait until the due date because paying early pays down the interest bearing balance sooner. My one and only credit card hasn't had any increases in interest. No penalties, because I pay responsibly. Stop blubbering, whining and complaining deadbeats. You made the debt now be mature enough to pay it off without expecting your government to cover for your stupidity and negligence.
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by tomanyt May 14, 2009 2:30 PM EDT
Obama Calls For Credit Card Reform Now .... Good luck with that.
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by noloyalisti May 14, 2009 1:46 PM EDT
The only thing that will really work is to socialize the banks as they have in Canada.
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by dwilson59 May 14, 2009 1:37 PM EDT
Obama should make all CC rates at 1% over prime.
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