After pledging to send a job-creation package to Congress next month and daring Republicans to block it, President Barack Obama offered few specifics Tuesday about the form the plan might take as he stuck to a broad outline of how to improve the economy.
On the second day of Obama's three-day bus tour of the upper Midwest
the president worked off the same blueprint he used the day before, offering proposals as diverse as extending a payroll tax cut, spending money to repair the nation's roads and bridges, and ratifying pending trade agreements.
And he continued to hammer away at Republicans in Congress, suggesting they stand in the way of economic growth, even as some Democrats expressed discomfort with what they saw as a potentially divisive ultimatum from the president.
"We could do even more if Congress is willing to get in the game," Obama
to a gathering of small-business owners, community leaders, and rural development experts at a small college in Peosta, Iowa."There are bipartisan ideas — common-sense ideas — that have traditionally been supported by Democrats and Republicans that will put more money in your pockets, that will put our people to work, that will allow us to deal with the legacy of debt that hangs over our economy."
Republicans pushed back by escalating their criticism of Obama's trip, calling it nothing more than a glorified campaign swing at taxpayer expense.
"This week taxpayers made a donation to the Obama re-election campaign. No matter what the president
his Midwest bus tour is nothing but a campaign trip,of the Republican National Committee. "He's talking about campaigning against Congress and doling out talking points, not policy plans."
Congressional Democrats and former administration officials gave a mixed review of Obama's declaration
an interview. "He needs to say now, 'I've tried it your way, and now we have to create an aggressive approach to creating jobs.' "
But one Senate Democrat, who requested anonymity to speak candidly about the White House, was troubled by the president's gambit.
Voters are tired of the partisan back-and-forth and it would be a mistake for Obama to present Congress with a large-scale, high-stakes jobs bill and challenge them to pass it, the senatorA more sensible approach would be for Obama to roll out a series of smaller proposals, the senatoradding that the public "has very little patience for anything that looks like you're beating up on the other side."a former economic adviser to Vice President Joe Biden, argued that it's futile for Obama to try to accommodate Republicans determined to block the White House agenda. "If the president frames his jobs agenda based on what Republicans will accept, I don't think he's going to end up with muchHe has to prescribe what he and his team believes the country needs and fight for it."
White Housewouldn't comment on the shape or the scope of the plan, nor would he if it would ultimately take the form of legislation.But
reiterated the president's threat that if Congress failed to act, Obama would not hesitate to leverage that failure politically.
"If they don't do it,
he will take his arguments to the American people."Republicans were waiting to act on pending trade deals with Colombia, Panama and South Korea, but he complained that the White House hasn't sent them to the Hill
Obama didn't spend his entire day in Iowa talking economic policy. He stopped at a local high school in Maquoketa and visited a volleyball practice, bought ice cream cones for his aides in DeWitt and shopped at an antique store
On the second day of Obama's three-day bus tour of the upper Midwest
the president worked off the same blueprint he used the day before, offering proposals as diverse as extending a payroll tax cut, spending money to repair the nation's roads and bridges, and ratifying pending trade agreements.
And he continued to hammer away at Republicans in Congress, suggesting they stand in the way of economic growth, even as some Democrats expressed discomfort with what they saw as a potentially divisive ultimatum from the president.
"We could do even more if Congress is willing to get in the game," Obama
to a gathering of small-business owners, community leaders, and rural development experts at a small college in Peosta, Iowa."There are bipartisan ideas — common-sense ideas — that have traditionally been supported by Democrats and Republicans that will put more money in your pockets, that will put our people to work, that will allow us to deal with the legacy of debt that hangs over our economy."
Republicans pushed back by escalating their criticism of Obama's trip, calling it nothing more than a glorified campaign swing at taxpayer expense.
"This week taxpayers made a donation to the Obama re-election campaign. No matter what the president
his Midwest bus tour is nothing but a campaign trip,of the Republican National Committee. "He's talking about campaigning against Congress and doling out talking points, not policy plans."
Congressional Democrats and former administration officials gave a mixed review of Obama's declaration
an interview. "He needs to say now, 'I've tried it your way, and now we have to create an aggressive approach to creating jobs.' "
But one Senate Democrat, who requested anonymity to speak candidly about the White House, was troubled by the president's gambit.
Voters are tired of the partisan back-and-forth and it would be a mistake for Obama to present Congress with a large-scale, high-stakes jobs bill and challenge them to pass it, the senatorA more sensible approach would be for Obama to roll out a series of smaller proposals, the senatoradding that the public "has very little patience for anything that looks like you're beating up on the other side."a former economic adviser to Vice President Joe Biden, argued that it's futile for Obama to try to accommodate Republicans determined to block the White House agenda. "If the president frames his jobs agenda based on what Republicans will accept, I don't think he's going to end up with muchHe has to prescribe what he and his team believes the country needs and fight for it."
White Housewouldn't comment on the shape or the scope of the plan, nor would he if it would ultimately take the form of legislation.But
reiterated the president's threat that if Congress failed to act, Obama would not hesitate to leverage that failure politically.
"If they don't do it,
he will take his arguments to the American people."Republicans were waiting to act on pending trade deals with Colombia, Panama and South Korea, but he complained that the White House hasn't sent them to the Hill
Obama didn't spend his entire day in Iowa talking economic policy. He stopped at a local high school in Maquoketa and visited a volleyball practice, bought ice cream cones for his aides in DeWitt and shopped at an antique store
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