A trader scurries to a post as he works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Monday Sept. 22, 2008. Wall Street tumbled again, sending the Dow Jones industrials down more than 370 points as volatility swept across the financial markets. Investors

President Bush sought to assure anxious world leaders on Monday
that the United States is taking

bold, aggressive, decisive action

to rescue the crisis-ridden economy with a $700 billion bailout
package.

The whole world is watching to see if we can act quickly,

Bush said, prodding lawmakers in Washington to approve his
plan.
President Bush sought to assure anxious world leaders on Monday that the United States is taking “bold, aggressive, decisive action” to rescue the crisis-ridden economy with a $700 billion bailout package.

“The whole world is watching to see if we can act quickly,” Bush said, prodding lawmakers in Washington to approve his plan.

Bush balanced the economic meltdown with foreign policy problems from Pakistan and North Korea to Russia and Iran as he opened three days of diplomacy with presidents and prime ministers assembled for the annual ministerial meeting of the U.N. General Assembly.

The activities were opening with a reception Monday night for foreign delegations hosted by Bush and his wife, Laura, at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.

After seven years of criticizing the U.N. for its huge, costly bureaucracy and indecisiveness in the face of grave problems, Bush will make his final address to the General Assembly on Tuesday. His speech, scheduled to last 15 minutes, was to stress the need for multinational diplomacy.

The nation’s burgeoning financial crisis, anchored on Wall Street not far from Bush’s hotel, overshadowed his U.N. visit. Bush is in the awkward position of advocating capitalism, free-trade and deregulation throughout this presidency but then overseeing a costly government takeover of failing financial institutions.

White House press secretary Dana Perino, explaining Bush’s turnabout, said “this was not the president’s first instinct; that he would not have wanted to take this action to help these companies if he wasn’t convinced by the considered judgment of his senior economic team that it was critical in order to protect the American taxpayers and the American economy as a whole.”

With the U.S. economy inextricably intertwined with the finances of other countries, the turmoil from Wall Street to Main Street will naturally be a topic of Bush’s discussions in New York, Perino said.

Before leaving Washington, Bush said differences over details of the administration’s bailout plan were understandable. But he warned lawmakers not to bog down.

“Americans are watching to see if Democrats and Republicans, the Congress and the White House, can come together to solve this problem with the urgency it warrants,” Bush said. “Indeed, the whole world is watching to see if we can act quickly.”

In the diplomatic world, it is a time of usual turmoil.

North Korea is backing away from pledges to abandon nuclear weapons, and Iran is pursuing a nuclear program in defiance of U.S. and international demands. Russia has drawn condemnation from the West for its invasion of U.S.-backed Georgia. Violence is mounting in Afghanistan, and Pakistan is reeling from a weekend truck bombing at the Marriott hotel that killed 53 people, including the Czech ambassador and two U.S. Defense Department employees.

Bush, on his way to New York, stopped in New Jersey to raise money for two GOP congressional candidates. About 200 people attended the event in an affluent area of Colts Neck, N.J., that benefited Chris Myers and state Sen. Leonard Lance. Tickets ranged from $1,000 to $10,000 for a photo with the president.

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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