In 2016, US Vice President Joe Biden warned against efforts to unravel banking regulations that Democrats had fought to implement following the nation’s financial crisis, just as the emerging Trump administration was determined to loosen those strict banking rules.iBden argued that without the far-reaching 2010 banking overhaul known as Dodd-Frank, financial institutions would continue to gamble with consumersā cash and ultimately hurt the middle class.We canāt go back to the days when financial companies take massive risks with the knowledge that a taxpayer bailout is around the corner when they fail, Biden said in a speech at Georgetown University in the waning days of the Obama administration.N ow thereās a banking crisis on his watch as president, and Biden is moving aggressively to assure the public that it is contained, bank executives will be fired, deposits are safe and taxpayers arenāt on the hook ā measures also designed to calm jittery financial markets.As he contemplates an announcement for a second term, Bidenās ability to avert a contagion among financial institutions will test his contention that his administration represents competence and stability in contrast to the chaos of the Donald Trump years. His call for additional regulation, though, is likely to run into stiff resistance in the Republican-controlled House and even among some moderate Democratic lawmakers who joined Republicans to loosen some rules in a 2018 law ā not to mention criticism from the still-forming 2024 Republican field that has already labeled his actions a bailout by just another name.

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