Myjoyonline News
 Home Page
 General News
 Business
 Politics
 Sports
 Health
 Education
 Articles/Features
 Science & Technology
 Entertainment
 Travel/Tourism
 Africa & International
 Nations Cup 2008
 
 
Obama promotes reforms on TV show
Previous Page
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
US President Barack Obama has appeared on a popular TV chat show to promote moves to resolve the economic crisis.

He told NBC's Tonight Show he was taking full responsibility "to fix" the economy, in the first-ever appearance on the show by a serving US president.

Mr Obama said he was "stunned" by the huge bonuses that bailed-out insurance firm AIG was paying its employees.

The bonuses - totalling $165m (£113m) in a company now 80% government-owned - have caused outrage in the US.

On Thursday, US lawmakers in the House of Representatives backed a bill to levy a 90% tax on big bonuses from firms bailed out by taxpayers.

Mr Obama told programme host Jay Leno in Burbank, California: "The immediate bonuses that went to AIG are a problem but the larger problem is we've got to get back to an attitude where people know enough is enough and people have a sense of responsibility.

"And if we can get back to those values that built America, then I think we're going to be OK."

Promoting his plans for broad reform of financial regulation, Mr Obama said they were needed because "most of the stuff that got us into trouble was perfectly legal".



The president also mounted a strong defence of his embattled Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner.

"This guy has not just a banking crisis. He's got the worst recession since the Great Depression," he said, adding: "I think Geithner is doing an outstanding job."

Mr Obama also exchanged jokes with Leno during the 35-minute interview.

Referring to his critics, he said: "I do think in Washington it's a little bit like American Idol, except everybody is Simon Cowell."

Questions veered away from politics and into the personal life of the president and his family in the White House.

He said it was "pretty cool" to fly on Air Force One, and that his daughters Sasha and Malia would get their promised pet dog "shortly".

For fans of the president it was an opportunity to see him looking calm and humorous, the BBC's Justin Webb in Washington says.

Mr Obama's staff also felt that they needed to use any opportunity they have to allow him to explain himself to the widest possible audience.

But his opponents say that the appearance demeaned his office and was a distraction from serious issues, our correspondent says.


Source: BBC


       

 
  Popular Stories


Search Our Website
 
 
 
OTHER INTERNATIONAL STORIES
   Human resource development vital for the nation – Mr Ekow Sampson
   Daily Guide: Lawyer cited for contempt
   Paris youths in row over condoms
   Obama ponders Afghan 'exit plan'
   Pakistan judge regains top post
   Australia nude photos were fakes
   Police arrest four robbers
   Rawlings: Eradicating racial discrimination is a collective effort
   Pontiff celebrates Mass in Angola
   US navy vessels collide in Gulf
   Madagascar's leader is sworn in
   Right to information bill ready
   Deadly army jet crash in Ecuador
   Obama promotes reforms on TV show
   North Korea 'holds US reporters'