White House News

President Bush participates in a South Lawn arrival ceremony for Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, left, at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds)

Bush: Banks will get help for access to capital

AP - Mon Oct 13, 12:28 PM ET

WASHINGTON - President Bush said Monday that his administration will work to implement measures to help banks gain access to capital, strengthen the financial system and unfreeze credit markets.

  • President Bush, right, smiles during the G20 ministerial meeting at the International Monetary Fund Saturday, Oct. 11, 2008 in Washington.  From left, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, and Bush.  (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
    For Bush, last 100 days to feature 'no letting up' AP - Sat Oct 11, 2:23 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - So how will it end?

  • Bush's statement on financial crisis AP - Sat Oct 11, 9:20 AM ET

    President Bush's statement Saturday on the financial crisis, as released by the White House. He spoke in the Rose Garden after meeting with financial ministers from the G-7 nations:

  • President Bush, far left, and first lady Laura Bush, far right, poses for a photo with members of the  2008 Little League Softball World Series Champions, during their arrival at Charleston Air Force Base, Friday, Oct. 10, 2008 in Charleston, S.C. The team is from Simpsonville, S.C. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
    Softball champs say meeting prez not Bush league AP - Fri Oct 10, 8:07 PM ET

    CHARLESTON, S.C. - Winning the Little League Softball World Series was great. But meeting the president isn't exactly Bush league.

  • White House disputes that Bush is hurting markets AP - Fri Oct 10, 5:57 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - President Bush on Friday offered reassuring words to stop the hemorrhaging on Wall Street, but once again the stock market fell.

  • In this photo provided by Megan von Ackermann, Kirk von Ackermann, a Department of Defense contractor is seen in this family photo, date unknown.  Five years ago, the retired Air Force intelligence officer became the first of 39 Americans to be kidnapped in Iraq. He's still missing and his wife fearing she'll never see him again.    (AP Photo)
    Iraq calmer but copycat kidnappings spread AP - Mon Oct 13, 6:34 AM ET

    WASHINGTON - Five years ago, retired Air Force intelligence officer Kirk von Ackermann became the first of 39 Americans to be kidnapped in Iraq. He's still missing, his wife fearing she'll never see him again.

  • U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson speaks at a news conference after the G7 Ministerial meeting in Washington October 10, 2008. The world's rich nations vowed on Friday to take all necessary steps to unfreeze credit markets and ensure banks can raise money but they offered no collective course of action to avert a deep global recession. (Yuri Gripas/Reuters)
    Bank stock purchase pushed; `no' to protectionism AP - Sun Oct 12, 5:13 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson told international leaders on Sunday that isolationism and protectionism could worsen the spreading financial crisis. With a new trading week dawning, U.S. lawmakers urged quick action by the Bush administration on measures to make direct purchases of bank stock to help unlock lending.

  • Special Envoy for the Six-Party Talks Sung Kim speaks at a news conference on Saturday, Oct. 11, 2008, in Washington. North Korea has agreed to all U.S. nuclear inspection demands and the Bush administration responded by removing the communist country from a terrorism blacklist.  (AP Photo/Kevin Wolf)
    NKorea off US blacklist after nuke inspection deal AP - Sun Oct 12, 2:47 AM ET

    WASHINGTON - After North Korea relented on nuclear inspection demands, the U.S. on Saturday erased from a terrorism blacklist the communist country President Bush once branded part of an "axis of evil."

  • AP - Sat Oct 11, 10:33 AM ET

    WASHINGTON - US official says North Korea has agreed to all nuclear inspection demands

  • Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice shakes hands with Latvian Foreign Minister Maris Riekstins, Thursday, Oct. 9, 2008, at the State Department in Washington.  (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
    Latvia discussing new military exercises with US AP - Sat Oct 11, 3:51 AM ET

    WASHINGTON - In the aftermath of Russia's invasion of Georgia, Latvia is talking with the United States about expanding joint military exercises and cooperation.

  • US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (L) shakes hands with Indian External Affairs minister Pranab Mukherjee (R) during a joint press conferece after the Indo-US nuclear meeting on October 4, 2008. Rice and Mukherjee signed a pact Friday to open up sales of civilian nuclear technology to India for the first time in three decades.(AFP/Raveendran)
    US, India sign unprecedented nuclear deal AP - Fri Oct 10, 5:10 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - The United States and India signed an accord Friday that allows American businesses to sell nuclear fuel, technology and reactors to India, reversing a three-decade ban on atomic trade with the fast-growing nuclear-armed Asian power.

  • President Bush, left, accompanied by Sylvia Iriondo, President, Mother and Women Against Repression (M.A.R.) Por Cuba, gestures during his meeting with Cuban-American Community leaders,  Friday, Oct. 10, 2008 in Coral Gables, Fla. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
    Bush raises $2 million in Florida, South Carolina AP - Fri Oct 10, 4:48 PM ET

    CORAL GABLES, Fla. - President Bush worked to allay fears about the financial crisis on Friday then left the White House and headed south to raise nearly $2 million for the Republican Party in South Carolina and the battleground state of Florida.

  • For military, bad economy aids recruiting AP - Fri Oct 10, 3:21 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - The tough economy could make it easier to sign up soldiers.

  • President Bush arrives on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington to welcome Italy's Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, Monday, Oct. 13, 2008. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
    Text of Bush's remarks Friday on the economy AP - Fri Oct 10, 11:20 AM ET

    Text of President Bush's remarks on the economy Friday, as provided by the White House:

  • U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates, right, and British counterpart John Hutton listen during a round table meeting of NATO defense ministers in Budapest, Friday Oct. 10, 2008. NATO defense ministers are working to find an agreement that would authorize their troops in Afghanistan to attack the heroin trade blamed for bankrolling the growing insurgency against international forces. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)
    Gates: More troops needed during Afghan elections AP - Fri Oct 10, 1:27 PM ET

    BUDAPEST, Hungary - Defense Secretary Robert Gates asked NATO allies Friday to consider increasing troop levels in Afghanistan next year during the elections, a move made for past votes in Iraq.

  • President Bush walks along the West Wing colonnade of the White House with Italy's Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi before they both made statements in the Rose Garden in Washington, Monday, Oct. 13, 2008. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
    Bush poised to talk about economic crisis AP - Fri Oct 10, 9:26 AM ET

    WASHINGTON - President Bush is ready to make a statement to the nation about the crisis in the credit markets that has caused substantial sell-offs on Wall Street.

  • Gov't probes US defense contractor over payments AP - Fri Oct 10, 9:30 AM ET

    WASHINGTON - Army criminal investigators are examining whether Combat Support Associates, a defense contractor that has earned more than $2 billion so far supporting U.S. troops in Iraq, overcharged the government. The company said it is cooperating in the case.

  • The White House is illuminated in pink for breast cancer awareness, Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2008, in Washington. The White House is one of over 200 landmarks worldwide lit up in pink this month as part of Breast Cancer Awareness Month. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
    Bush signs order to ease switch to next president AP - Thu Oct 9, 11:39 AM ET

    WASHINGTON - A piece of paper that President Bush signed Thursday helps ease his way out of the White House when his term ends and clears the way for his successor.

  • This Aug. 13, 2002 file photo is a  satellite image provided by Space Imaging Asia of the Yongbyon Nuclear Center, located north of Pyongyang, North Korea. North Korea announced Thursday Oct. 6, 2008 that it is preparing to restart the facility that produced its atomic bomb, clearly indicating that it plans to completely pull out of an international deal to end its nuclear program. North Korea told the International Atomic Energy Agency that it was stopping the process of disabling its main nuclear site and barring international inspectors from the Yongbyon facility, the agency said. (AP Photo/Space Imaging Asia, File)
    Sources: US nears removing NKorea from terror list AP - Fri Oct 10, 6:29 AM ET

    WASHINGTON - The Bush administration is nearing a decision to remove North Korea from a terrorism blacklist and may do so as early as Friday in a bid to salvage faltering nuclear disarmament talks, The Associated Press has learned.

  • Report: NSA listened in on personal military calls AP - Thu Oct 9, 7:40 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - The Senate Select Intelligence Committee is looking into allegations from two U.S. military linguists that the government routinely listened in on phone calls of American military and humanitarian aid workers serving overseas.

  • Logo of American International Group Inc. outside their office in the lower Manhattan area of New York. President George W. Bush's chief spokeswoman expressed outrage Wednesday at reports that AIG executives spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on a spa retreat after the US government rescued the firm.(AFP/File/Stan Honda)
    White House: AIG execs' retreat `despicable' AP - Wed Oct 8, 3:17 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - The White House said on Wednesday it was "despicable" that American International Group Inc. executives spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on a posh California retreat just days after getting a federal bailout.

  • Nuclear Weapons complex changes advance AP - Thu Oct 9, 5:30 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - The Energy Department moved ahead Thursday on further restricting the nation's most dangerous nuclear material, part of a plan to scale back and modernize management of the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile.

  • Afghan national army arrive at the site of an explosion in the city of Herat, southwest of Kabul Afghanistan, Sunday, Oct 4, 2008. Police said a bomb exploded in front of Herat governor office in the city of Herat with no casualties. (AP Photo/Fraidoon Pooyaa)
    Intel report: Afghanistan facing 'downward spiral' AP - Thu Oct 9, 4:03 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - The situation in Afghanistan now is the worst since the U.S.-led invasion of 2001 and the country is in danger of a "downward spiral" into violence and chaos, according to an intelligence report draft.

  • An undated handout photograph provided by the Jordan Times newspaper October 9, 2008, shows U.S. citizens Holli Chmela (L) and Taylor Luck. (Jordan Times/Handout - JORDAN/Reuters)
    Syria frees detained US journalists AP - Thu Oct 9, 3:44 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - The State Department says two American journalists who were detained by Syrian authorities have been released and are safe at the U.S. Embassy in Damascus.

  • The Russian nuclear-powered cruiser Pyotr Veliky (Peter the Great), one of the three Russian warships, sails near the Libyan port of Tripoli, Libya, Monday, Oct. 13, 2008. following a two-day stop on their way to Latin America to take part in joint naval exercises with Venezuela.  (AP Photo/Abdel Magid Al Fergany)
    US: Libya begins payments for US terror victims AP - Thu Oct 9, 3:16 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - Libya has started making payments into a nearly $2 billion fund to compensate the families of American victims of Libyan-linked terror attacks in the 1980s, another step in the full normalization of long-strained ties between Washington and Tripoli, the State Department said Thursday.

  • Feds go forward with NYC airport experiment AP - Thu Oct 9, 1:41 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - Federal officials are pushing ahead with an experiment to reduce rampant flight delays around the nation by auctioning off takeoff and landing times at New York City-area airports, where most delays begin.

  • President Bush, left, speaks with reporters as he stands on the steps of the Treasury Department with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson after the House passed the $700 billion financial bailout bill at the White House in Washington, Friday, Oct. 3, 2008. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
    Administration ponders ownership stakes in banks AP - Thu Oct 9, 8:59 AM ET

    WASHINGTON - The Bush administration is considering taking part ownership in certain U.S. banks as an option for dealing with a severe global credit crisis.

  • File photo shows a detainee at Camp X-Ray in Guantanamo Bay being escorted by two US Army military police officers. A US federal judge has ordered a group of 17 Chinese Muslim Uighurs held at the Guantanamo Bay military jail in Cuba to be released in the United States, officials have said.(AFP/File/Peter Muhly)
    Chinese Muslims' release into US blocked for now AP - Thu Oct 9, 5:44 AM ET

    WASHINGTON - A group of Chinese Muslims set to be freed into the U.S. this week from Guantanamo Bay found their freedom stymied yet again after a simple government plea: What's a couple more weeks or so in jail after nearly seven years?

  • Men find roadblock to opting out of Medicare AP - Wed Oct 8, 8:29 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - Three men who say they have adequate health coverage and enough money to pay for their health care needs want to opt out of hospital coverage under Medicare. Federal rules say they cannot collect Social Security benefits if they do that.

  • An Afghan refugee girl holds a toy as she sits outside her temporary shelter at a refugee camp on the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, Oct. 13, 2008. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)
    US: Airstrike killed 33 Afghan civilians in August AP - Wed Oct 8, 8:10 PM ET

    WASHINGTON - The military said Wednesday that U.S. airstrikes in Afghanistan on Aug. 22 killed 33 civilians, far more than previously acknowledged. While expressing regret, it blamed the Taliban, the targets, for taking up fighting positions near civilians.

1  2    Next