Economy to be Obama's focus in State of the Union

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Barack Obama will focus his State of the Union address on boosting job creation and economic growth at a time of high unemployment, underscoring the degree to which the economy could threaten his ability to pursue second-term priorities such as gun control, immigration policy and climate change.
Obama also may use Tuesday's prime-time address before a joint session of Congress to announce the next steps for concluding the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan by the end of 2014.
Obama's State of the Union marks his second high-profile speech to the nation in about three weeks, after his inaugural address Jan. 21 that opened his second term. White House aides see the two speeches as complementary, with Tuesday's address aimed at providing specifics to back up some of the Inauguration Day's lofty liberal rhetoric.
The president previewed the address during a meeting Thursday with House Democrats and said he would speak "about making sure that we're focused on job creation here in the United States of America." Obama said he would try to accomplish that by calling for improvements in education, boosting clean energy production, and reducing the deficit in ways that don't burden the middle class, the poor or the elderly.
While those priorities may be cheered by some Democrats, they're certain to be met with skepticism or outright opposition from many congressional Republicans, especially in the GOP-controlled House. The parties are at odds over ways to reduce the deficit. Republicans favor spending cuts; Obama prefers a combination of spending cuts and increasing tax revenue.
The president said he would address taxes and looming across-the-board budget cuts, known as the sequester, in the speech. The White House and Congress have pushed back the automatic cuts once, and Obama wants to do it again in order to create an opening for a larger deficit reduction deal.
"I am prepared, eager and anxious to do a big deal, a big package that ends this governance by crisis where every two weeks or every two months or every six months we are threatening this hard-won recovery," he said last week.
The economy has rebounded significantly from the depths of the recession and has taken a back seat for Obama since he won re-election in November. He's instead focused on campaigns to overhaul the nation's patchwork immigration laws and enact stricter gun control measures following the massacre of 20 schoolchildren in Newtown, Conn., in December.
The president also raised expectations for action this year on climate change after devoting a significant amount of time to the issue in his address at the inauguration.
But the unemployment rate is persistently high at 7.9 percent, economic growth slowed last quarter and consumer confidence is falling, so the economy could upend Obama's plans to pursue a broader domestic agenda in his final four years in office.
Tony Fratto, who worked in the White House during President George W. Bush's second term, said Obama has to show the public that he's still focused on the economy before he can get their full support for his other proposals.
"We're not in a position where he can blame anybody else for the economy now," Fratto said, "Now it's his economy."
Obama is expected to use his address to press lawmakers to back his immigration overhaul, which includes a pathway to citizenship for 11 million illegal immigrants, and his gun control proposals, including universal background checks and a ban on assault weapons.
Voting rights groups expect the president to call for changes that would make it easier for people to vote.
"I think it's important to be able to do more than one thing at a time," said David Axelrod, who served as senior adviser in the White House and Obama's re-election campaign. "But the economy is an ongoing and significant challenge that you have to keep working on."
While the centerpiece of Obama's address is expected to be his domestic agenda, the president sees a chance to outline the next steps in bringing the protracted war in Afghanistan to an end. He's facing two pressing decisions: the size and scope of the U.S. military presence in Afghanistan after the war formally ends late next year, and the next phase of the troop drawdown this year.
More than 60,000 U.S. troops are in Afghanistan.
The president could update the public on cuts to the number of U.S. nuclear weapons, a priority for his administration. Vice President Joe Biden recently told a security conference in Germany that Obama probably would use the State of the Union to discuss "advancing a comprehensive nuclear agenda to strengthen the nonproliferation regime, reduce global stockpiles and secure nuclear materials."
White House allies are nudging Obama's team to move forward on a plan to expand education for children before they enter kindergarten. They are reminding Obama's political aides that female voters gave the president a second term, serving up a 10-point gender gap.
Obama carried 55 percent of female voters, many of whom are looking to the White House for their reward. While groups such as Latinos and gays have seen policy initiatives since Election Day, women's groups have not received the same kinds of rollouts.
Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, a rising Republican star and potential 2016 presidential candidate, will deliver the GOP response following Obama's address to Congress.
The president will follow up his speech with trips across the country to promote his calls for job creation. Stops are planned Wednesday in Asheville, N.C., and Thursday in Atlanta.
Obama's speechwriters started working on the speech shortly after the Nov. 6 election. The process is being led for the first time by Cody Keenan, who is taking over as the president's chief speechwriter.
___
Associated Press writers Philip Elliott, Robert Burns and Josh Lederman contributed to this report.
Obama also may use Tuesday's prime-time address before a joint session of Congress to announce the next steps for concluding the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan by the end of 2014.
Obama's State of the Union marks his second high-profile speech to the nation in about three weeks, after his inaugural address Jan. 21 that opened his second term. White House aides see the two speeches as complementary, with Tuesday's address aimed at providing specifics to back up some of the Inauguration Day's lofty liberal rhetoric.
The president previewed the address during a meeting Thursday with House Democrats and said he would speak "about making sure that we're focused on job creation here in the United States of America." Obama said he would try to accomplish that by calling for improvements in education, boosting clean energy production, and reducing the deficit in ways that don't burden the middle class, the poor or the elderly.
While those priorities may be cheered by some Democrats, they're certain to be met with skepticism or outright opposition from many congressional Republicans, especially in the GOP-controlled House. The parties are at odds over ways to reduce the deficit. Republicans favor spending cuts; Obama prefers a combination of spending cuts and increasing tax revenue.
The president said he would address taxes and looming across-the-board budget cuts, known as the sequester, in the speech. The White House and Congress have pushed back the automatic cuts once, and Obama wants to do it again in order to create an opening for a larger deficit reduction deal.
"I am prepared, eager and anxious to do a big deal, a big package that ends this governance by crisis where every two weeks or every two months or every six months we are threatening this hard-won recovery," he said last week.
The economy has rebounded significantly from the depths of the recession and has taken a back seat for Obama since he won re-election in November. He's instead focused on campaigns to overhaul the nation's patchwork immigration laws and enact stricter gun control measures following the massacre of 20 schoolchildren in Newtown, Conn., in December.
The president also raised expectations for action this year on climate change after devoting a significant amount of time to the issue in his address at the inauguration.
But the unemployment rate is persistently high at 7.9 percent, economic growth slowed last quarter and consumer confidence is falling, so the economy could upend Obama's plans to pursue a broader domestic agenda in his final four years in office.
Tony Fratto, who worked in the White House during President George W. Bush's second term, said Obama has to show the public that he's still focused on the economy before he can get their full support for his other proposals.
"We're not in a position where he can blame anybody else for the economy now," Fratto said, "Now it's his economy."
Obama is expected to use his address to press lawmakers to back his immigration overhaul, which includes a pathway to citizenship for 11 million illegal immigrants, and his gun control proposals, including universal background checks and a ban on assault weapons.
Voting rights groups expect the president to call for changes that would make it easier for people to vote.
"I think it's important to be able to do more than one thing at a time," said David Axelrod, who served as senior adviser in the White House and Obama's re-election campaign. "But the economy is an ongoing and significant challenge that you have to keep working on."
While the centerpiece of Obama's address is expected to be his domestic agenda, the president sees a chance to outline the next steps in bringing the protracted war in Afghanistan to an end. He's facing two pressing decisions: the size and scope of the U.S. military presence in Afghanistan after the war formally ends late next year, and the next phase of the troop drawdown this year.
More than 60,000 U.S. troops are in Afghanistan.
The president could update the public on cuts to the number of U.S. nuclear weapons, a priority for his administration. Vice President Joe Biden recently told a security conference in Germany that Obama probably would use the State of the Union to discuss "advancing a comprehensive nuclear agenda to strengthen the nonproliferation regime, reduce global stockpiles and secure nuclear materials."
White House allies are nudging Obama's team to move forward on a plan to expand education for children before they enter kindergarten. They are reminding Obama's political aides that female voters gave the president a second term, serving up a 10-point gender gap.
Obama carried 55 percent of female voters, many of whom are looking to the White House for their reward. While groups such as Latinos and gays have seen policy initiatives since Election Day, women's groups have not received the same kinds of rollouts.
Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, a rising Republican star and potential 2016 presidential candidate, will deliver the GOP response following Obama's address to Congress.
The president will follow up his speech with trips across the country to promote his calls for job creation. Stops are planned Wednesday in Asheville, N.C., and Thursday in Atlanta.
Obama's speechwriters started working on the speech shortly after the Nov. 6 election. The process is being led for the first time by Cody Keenan, who is taking over as the president's chief speechwriter.
___
Associated Press writers Philip Elliott, Robert Burns and Josh Lederman contributed to this report.
The only thing obama has done, is put us more indebt. Â He doesnt see a problem with that......something really wrong with him.
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@TheUglyTruth    What is funny is he had a super majority when he took office and he still couldnt get a budget or anything he wanted passed. He had to bag and plead just to get his Obama care passed. Two years later when the people finally said enough and gave the house majority to the Republicans then and only then did we hear him whine about the Republicans blocking everything.  Never have I heard a Democrat talk about his horrible leadership while maintaining a super majority.  Â
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BTW we are five years into him and its still the economy he was going to fix. To bad he cant claim he inherited it this time.  People love to "blame" bush for it but comeon folks even four years is enough to see some kind of turn around. Real turn around not fake numbers given on a report. One has to look no further than their own neighborhood to see we are in trouble. Â
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The one thing that we can count on is that he won't admit his failures and that all of the country's problems were caused by Bush and the Republicans.
We also know that we can not believe anything that he says. He has proved himself to be a compulsive prevaricator. He wouldn't know the truth if it jumped up and bit him.
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Obama doesn't need to fix the economy ...
The republicans left it in fine shape when they left right???Â
@uknow2 .....my god can you ever stop blaming Bush? ever?
@uknow2  For democrats to still bringing up W more than an entire term ago........ just goes to show what a epic failure B HO really is..........
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so by your logic We can Blame Clinton for what happened in the Bush #43 years
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Everything 0bama has "focused on" has turned to crap. Our almost-destroyed economy can't withstand any of 0bama's "help."
 @Altazi Everything 0bama has "focused on" has turned to crap.
So he focused on the republican party and Americas view of them??
Obamanomics........Â
Bronco Bamma  and his friends got the gold mine and we got the shaft.....
Lies lies lies. Make up the numbers as you go to make everything look rosy. So much for transparency Nobama. Your friends got richer, everyone else got the shaft. Four more years of this crap.
Obama tried for four years to compromise with the Republicans whose stated goal was to make him fail. America's best chance is for Obama to mobilize the public to push the Republicans into a more responsible position. The Tea Party doesn't represent America or even Republicans. If America stands up, moderate Republicans and Democrats can work together to keep the economy going. If the Tea Party and their ilk succeed in forcing sequester and crash the economy, the posters on this forum can sing and dance and celebrate Obama and America's failure, but they will also have to dance to the demise off the Republican Party. One way or the other, the Tea Party revolution is over.
@blotto   you seem to forget Bronco Bamma had absolute power for the first two years of his term. He could do anything he wanted and the R's could not have stopped him.
So point the finger all you want, but B HO's failures ARE HIS OWN.  All he did in the first two years is spend money like a drunken liberal and shove BarryCare down our throats. And BarryCare has many businesses putting their expansion plans on hold until it becomes clear how truly expensive BarryCare will be. Hell, for many low wages jobs BarryCare has made 30hrs a week the new full time work week.
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"""""the Tea Party revolution is over."""""
 Actually, if B HO's asinine levels of spending continues....... the tea party will be back in four years if not two and I expect them to be stronger than ever.Â
Quite frankly it is in America's best interest that the R's are saying no to asinine ideas.
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And fear not........ forcing cuts in federal spending will be a good thing, especially since the feds are borrowing north of 35 cents out of every dollar they spend.
 @kramr And fear not........ forcing cuts in federal spending will be a good thing, especially since the feds are borrowing north of 35 cents out of every dollar they spend.
And yet we STILL have to subsidize the tax cuts for the rich with money from china??
Is that still the republican plan???
@uknow2     The top 1% of wage earning tax payers pay 37 cents of every tax dollar  that comes into the feds. How much do you expect them to pay????
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FYI  even in the most socialistic European countries the top 1% only pays around 30%........ So B HO's class envy rhetoric that you are swallowing hook line and sinker is just that, rhetoric.....  The wealthy in this country are already paying MORE than their fair share, not less.......
 @kramr  you seem to forget Bronco Bamma had absolute power for the first two years of his term. He could do anything he wanted and the R's could not have stopped him.???????????????
So when mitch McConnell said ""He will pass nothing while we are here"" meant what??Â
Ever hear of the filibuster????Â
Elect a clown........expect a circus !
'Economy to be Obama's focus in State of the Union'Â Â Didn't fix the economy like he said he would in his first term, so what makes him think he can fix it this time?Â
 @theobserver So why did the economy need to be fixed ??
Oh Right the republicans were in office before him..
@uknow2 @theobserver   B HO has been in office AN ENTIRE TERM. Four years is long enough to turn the economy around. Reagan did it  so to keep blaming others for B HO's failures is rather pathetic.
@uknow2Â Â Â Â
  """"""""And how long did the great depression take to fix with the other party saying ""Hell no we won't""""""""
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You should really crack open a history book...... FDR had D majorities IN BOTH THE SENATE AND HOUSE  his ENTIRE PRESIDENCY!!!!!
If FDR can't get his own party to sign on to his crap,  can't be blaming the R's for FDR's failures. Â
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@kramr And how long did the great depression take to fix with the other party saying ""Hell no we won't""
Wasn't he supposed to have fixed this little problem already?
Is Obama going to tell us how good the economy is?
Is Obama going to tell us how well his policies are working?
Is Obama going to tell us how good it is for us to pay these atrocious energy costs?
Is Obama going to tell us how good it is for Americans to die on foreign soil?
My guess is the best he will do is to blame all of his failures on Bush!
Obama is the real looser!
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 @Freedom1267 Is Obama going to tell us how good it is for us to pay these atrocious energy costs?
The republicans Own the oil company's.
Is Obama going to tell us how good it is for Americans to die on foreign soil?
No bush did that when 3'500 American soldiers died for oil in Iraq..
Remember cheney divided up the Iraq oil 3 months before 9/11..
Then said American energy policy was top secret and you don't have a right to know..Â
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@Freedom1267 looser than what?
I've had doubts before about my Conservative values. Never again. America is in decline. To doubt this, is to embrace mediocrity.
"""""Economy to be Obama's focus in State of the Union"""""""
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Well, now that he can't blame his predecessor...... time for some smoke and mirrors.
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Obamanomics has kept the UE at 8% for years, economic growth is SO SLOW the economy actually CONTRACTED in December 2012
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Seems to be Bronco Bamma should be taking a class on economics and not talking about it........
Anyone who falls for obama's lies or have already fallen for them are a con artist's dream. Â They can be scammed out of anything. Â In their case, it was votes.
"Voting rights groups expect the president to call for changes that would make it easier for people to vote."Â
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Do they mean this easy?
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ww.wcpo.com/dpp/news/region_central_cincinnati/downtown/Poll-worker-accused-of-voter-fraud-in-Hamilton-County-speaks-out
He already had 4 years to fix the economy. Instead we are headed into another recession. All we need is one more negative quarter and we are officially in a recession.
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0bama can be the first president to be preside over 2 consecutive recessions.
@RalphCramden .......Ralph, Ralph, Ralph...........don't you realize by now it's all george bushes fault? Oh, and that east coast blizzard, the Super Bowl blackout and puksataney Phil seeing his shadow !
 @RalphCramden "0bama can be the first president to be preside over 2 consecutive recessions."
Â
How long do you think it will be before someone claims that you are racist for saying that?
 @HenryBowmanÂ
Most are tired of calling me a racist. They know I could care less about their comments....8-}
"Economy to be Obama's focus in State of the Union"Â The headline writer forgot to use the words "laser-like". If they had been included, I just might get a tingle up my leg.
'Economy to be Obama's focus in State of the Union'
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....as opposed to the focus of his office, which is more ideological witch hunts and partisan sniping.Â
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 "about making sure that we're focused on job creation here in the United States of America." Obama said he would try to accomplish that by calling for improvements in education, boosting clean energy production, and reducing the deficit in ways that don't burden the middle class, the poor or the elderly.
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Which saves us all an hour or so since that one sentence pretty much sums up the entirety of his proposals. Exactly the same as the last 4 years....
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Raise the cost of education (so that fewer and fewer people can afford it)
Dump more taxpayer money into the ideological quagmire that is the 'renewable energy' industry (payouts to special interests and campaign contributors)
and raise taxes on 'the rich' to pay for everything.Â
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Just out of curiosity, President Obama... How's that worked out thus far?Â
 @MarkKpic  "How's that worked out thus far?" For the American people or for him?
Finally! Hope and Change.
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/sarcasm off
It should have been that moron's focus for the past 4 years.
@NGerblansky it was; however, the Republican led congress refused to even hear anything that might help the economy so that they could attempt to blame it on the Presdient and get another Republican in office to hand out Corporate welfare checks like candy. It didn't quite work out in their favor and its not looking good for them in the 2014 midterms.
 @Ramsesthegreat  @NGerblansky Seems like you're the only one making excuses for the great job obama is doing ramse.
 Where are all the left wingers? how come only one person came to defend the great obama? Seems a lot more people agree that obama has no clue about running a country.
Um, no. He couldn't even get his own party to vote for his budget. It's been over 4 years since Harry Reid has passed a budget, which is against the law. The blame lays with the Democrats, and Democrats only.
Our economy? Or China's?