Quantcast Rocky Mountain Collegian
College Media Network

 

Obama pledges protections for credit-card users

Ben Feller The Associated Press

Issue date: 4/24/09 Section: News
  • Print
  • Email
President Barack Obama gestures to a member of the press corps as they are escorted out of the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday after he made remarks with representatives of the credit card industry. At left is Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, at right is Senior Adviser Valerie Jarrett. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
President Barack Obama gestures to a member of the press corps as they are escorted out of the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday after he made remarks with representatives of the credit card industry. At left is Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, at right is Senior Adviser Valerie Jarrett. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Barack Obama said Thursday he is determined to get a credit-card law that eliminates the tricky fine print, sudden rate increases and late fees that give millions of consumers headaches.

"I trust that those in the industry who want to act responsibly will engage with us in a constructive fashion, and that we're going to get this done in short order," Obama said, delivering a pointed message to leading executives of credit-card issuing companies after a closed-door White House meeting.

Both the House and the Senate are pursuing bills to give consumers greater protections as an expansion of new rules slated to take effect next year. Obama said his economic advisers will examine the various proposals and work with Congress and the industry, but he made clear he wants to sign a bill into law.

"The days of any time, any reason rate hikes and late fee traps have to end," Obama said.

At issue is how to protect consumers, particularly in a deep recession, while not imposing the kind of rules that could make it harder for banks to offer credit or put credit out of reach for many borrowers.

Industry executives left the White House without talking to reporters.

Later, one of the participants, American Bankers Association president Edward Yingling, said the executives listened to Obama's concerns and "agreed to work with the administration to address them." In a statement on behalf of the executives, he said consumer protection must be balanced with "ensuring that credit remains available to consumers and small businesses at a reasonable cost."

The credit-card executives made the case in the meeting that the sweeping rules already ordered by the Federal Reserve, due to take effect next year, address many of the concerns held by the president and Congress.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement


Advertisement

Home

Multimedia

News

Opinion

Sports

Cartoons

Entertainment

RamTalk

RamShots

Games

Sports Blog

Your Feat Blog

RSS Feeds

Buy Reprints

Poll

What is your favorite Thanksgiving dish?

Vote

View Results

Front Page PDF

Download Print Edition PDF