No Bipartisanship, No Problem: Official 2014 State of the Union Address Thread

Serious

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President Obama will announce a host of proposals to reshape America in his annual State of the Union address on Tuesday. But if past is prologue, only a handful of them will come close to execution.

From repeated calls to lower the corporate tax rate to last year's declaration that the "time has come" to pass immigration reform, Obama's State of the Union vows frequently have either run into congressional gridlock or been drowned out by other priorities.

This year's laundry list of promises is expected to focus on addressing "income inequality" and other economic issues. Obama will try to forge ahead with a few holdovers while quietly dropping several initiatives touted in his 2013 speech.


One item prominent in last year's address, which came on the heels of the Newtown school shooting, was a pitch for tighter gun control. Though Obama may revisit it in Tuesday's address, the push largely has been dropped after an intense but ultimately failed effort to get legislation passed on Capitol Hill.

Tax and entitlement reform also were big agenda items in last year's State of the Union address, but have lately fallen by the wayside -- considering White House officials who spent the weekend previewing the address did not mention them as a priority.

Obama, instead, will for the third straight year make the major theme of his address economic opportunity and bridging the income inequality gap for the poor and middle class.

However, he appears likely to make a subtle shift, focusing more on worker protections and job training than job creation. The White House says Obama will announce that he will sign an executive order increasing the minimum wage from $7.25 to $10.10 for new federal contracts.

The initiative dovetails with Obama's broader call for an increase to the federal minimum wage, something he also touched on last year.

“Let’s declare that in the wealthiest nation on Earth, no one who works full-time should have to live in poverty and raise the federal minimum wage to $9 an hour,” the president said to applause in his 2013 address.

However, the White House is now backing a congressional Democratic plan to increase the federal wage to $10.10 over three years, then indexing it to inflation.

Senior White House adviser Dan Pfeiffer told “Fox News Sunday” that Obama will try to “restore opportunity” through a series of proposals including ones on job training, education and manufacturing.

He also pointed out that Obama's effort to create 15 manufacturing hubs across the country has had some success, despite Congress rejecting his proposal, and remains a work in progress -- with four complete, two in place and two "in the pipeline."

Amid the apparent shift, Oklahoma GOP Rep. James Lankford is questioning whether Obama really intended to follows through on all of his 2013 plans.

“I don’t think he ever intended to achieve tax and entitlement reform,” Lankford, chairman of the Republican Policy Committee, told FoxNews.com on Monday. “That was pure rhetoric. The shift is really from Americans saying, 'This is a nice guy but we don’t think he can lead.' He’s lost their trust.”

His comments follows Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz saying Sunday that the president’s existing economic policies are "not working” and “exacerbating” income equality.

Cruz, whose effort last year to defund ObamaCare fueled a partial government shutdown, is also calling on the president to announce new investigations into the fatal Benghazi attacks and the IRS scandal and to admit his economic program has failed -- and that passing ObamaCare on a party-line vote was a mistake.

"I would expect ... he would call for some accountability now [on Benghazi], that he would join me and 24 other senators who have called for a joint select committee to get some answers," Cruz told Fox News on Monday.

The president is also expected to renew his push for free pre-kindergarten for 4-year-olds and comprehensive immigration reform, which if passed would almost certainly become a hallmark of his presidency. Both those initiatives were also featured in Obama's 2013 address.

The Democrat-controlled Senate passed a comprehensive immigration bill last summer. But the Republican-controlled House has not, largely because the chamber’s conservative wing has so far argued that granting citizenship to some of the country’s 11 million illegal immigrants is tantamount to “amnesty.”

House leaders reportedly will release a broad plan this week, but the White House has reserved comment until it is made public.

“We think it is progress that the Republicans are going to put something forward,” Pfeiffer also told "Fox News Sunday." “Let's see what they put forward and hopefully we can come together and make progress.”
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/01/28/obama-address-heavy-promises-results/

vetopen192way_wide-f56e4c7a6c3a9c40ac9cfb00fe34968040a3169a-s6-c30.jpg


Should be interesting to watch later on tonight, but I'm mainly waiting to see the heads roll @ Fox News. I already have all their post analysis shows set to DVR :takedat:
@BarNone @Brown_Pride pins this thread....
 
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Richard Wright

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Congress is absolutely useless, but more and more I am appreciating what Obama at least tries to do. He technically has us on the 'wrong path', but if he had not counted on the democratic majority in 2009 things would be a lot different. I am excited for what he has to say. I always feel inspired by his speeches.
 

cheek100

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gotta put some hot sauce on it tonite..
some of that "no more mr niceguy".. point directly to those sitting on the right
and call them out.. shine extra light on obstruction, state facts
no more apologies for ACA rollout failure
blood on the dancefloor
 

bzb

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the only substantive "bipartisan" progress to come out of congress in a while is they finally passed a budget. of course in order for the dems to secure funding for the aca, the gop got to cut funding in other areas (dept of education, labor and housing/development) and increase spending where they like it (military, etc) and both sides got their filling of pork.

as for the sotu address...i expect a rousing speech from obama with some stern words for congress and then the usual slack jawed response from the gop. e needs to stop holding back though. it's about time obama puts everyone on notice to stop fuking around and govern the country like adults instead of bickering little kids. dude needs to grab the baby powder and walk down the aisles of the congressional chambers like this... zoot suit and all...

iA49wEI.gif
 

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"Full Employment": The Two Words Obama Needs to Say Tonight
BY MIKE KONCZAL


The first president to say the words “full employment” during a State of the Union address was Franklin Delano Roosevelt. In 1939 he argued that it was the government’s responsibility “to attain the full employment of our labor and our capital.” Four years later, in 1943, he went further, arguing that actual freedom, the Four Freedoms that included "freedom from want," required “the right to expect full employment—full employment for themselves and for all able-bodied men and women in America who want to work.” And it was the responsibility of the government to deliver it when the war ended, he said.

The last decade has not been kind to the idea of “full employment.” Unemployment remains higher than anyone believes it should be, while wage growth has been nonexistent for workers who do have jobs. The concept of full employment, once so essential to the liberal project, remains missing from the agenda. Indeed you can see the collapse of the liberal economic project by walking through the use of the term in State of the Union speeches. If President Barack Obama wants to save his failure to end high unemployment in his first term, while also orienting the Democratic party to the future, he should use the State of the Union to resurrect these two words.

Full employment is exactly what it sounds like. As economists Dean Baker and Jared Bernstein show in their recent book, full employment is the point at which additional demand will not create any more jobs. Unemployment is then just a matter of people searching for work in-between jobs. It’s also a period in which workers have significantly strong bargaining power, ensuring that wages increase faster than normal.

Google ngrams show the term’s use coming out of nowhere with the midcentury Keynesian revolution, and then slowly fading from the discussion in the past few decades. A closer look at the evolution of State of the Union speeches in the past 70 years bears this out.

full-employment.png


For the rest of the mid-century period, presidents discussed full employment as something that was a responsibility of the government. Harry Truman used the phrase 16 times in his 1946 State of the Union, proposing a full employment bill, and arguing explicitly that “It is the responsibility of Government to gear its total program to the achievement of full production and full employment,” and, “All of the policies of the Federal Government must be geared to the objective of sustained full production and full employment.” In words that would be alien to our ears after living through the past five years, where deficit reduction consistently took precedence over the mass suffering of the unemployed, Truman noted that “the more successful we are in achieving full production and full employment the easier it will be to manage the debt and pay for the debt service.”

This continued into the Great Society, with Lyndon Johnson saying in 1965, “We seek full employment opportunity for every American citizen.” Richard Nixon, who was fundamentally constrained by liberalism in his domestic policy, mentioned full employment ten times between his 1971 and 1972 speeches, arguing that in the aftermath of Vietnam the government's new “goal” was “full employment in peacetime. We intend to meet that goal, and we can.”

After that, talk of full employment disappeared. When Reagan reintroduced the term in 1986, it was a much different concept. Here, the government’s responsibility is “to create a ladder of opportunity to full employment so that all Americans can climb toward economic power and justice on their own.” Full employment isn’t something that the government creates; it’s the result of individuals climbing, or not climbing, on their own. The implication is that full employment is always available, and unemployment is a personal failing—limited skills, weak motivation—rather than an overall market failure.

The term disappeared again during the Clinton and Bush years, and Obama has used it just once in a State of the Union, in 2010: “The only way to move to full employment is to lay a new foundation for long-term economic growth, and finally address the problems that America's families have confronted for years.” Like Nixon, Obama has always been fundamentally constrained by the ideology he was elected to overcome. Here, full employment isn’t something that the government could create through aggressive policy. Instead, it’s something it can only impact in the long-term with certain kinds of background investments.

This is a problem because the concept of full employment is a crucial element of Obama's getting a second chance at fixing our weak recovery and high unemployment, while also creating an agenda for liberalism after he’s left office.

Reclaiming full employment would help with the government’s failure to deal with the high unemployment in the aftermath of the Great Recession. Obama argued that the stimulus bill passed in 2009 would be sufficient to tackle the crisis, even though it was clear that this wouldn’t be the case. After that point, however, Obama couldn’t run against the economy, since it was his economy at that point.

Though the beginning of the response to the Great Recession was botched, the ending doesn’t have to be. And where the Federal Reserve declares full employment to be, the level at which they’ll stop their extraordinary measures to boost the economy, will matter just as much as the stimulus. If the Federal Reserve tightens money, and if the government continues its mad focus on deficits, unemployment will never get low enough to genuinely achieve a stronger economy.

It would also be an important way to convey how Obama and liberals want to tackle inequality. Conservatives will say that inequality is a matter of individuals making various choices—the poor don’t work enough, the rich marry the rich, and so on. The distributional impact of full employment, where wage growth at the bottom of the income distribution grows fast, shows that the economy as a whole plays just as much of a starring role in these outcomes.

Indeed, full employment would make many of our other problems easier to deal with. As Truman noted, the deficit would be easier to handle. It would allow us to have a more realistic notion of what things like education and marriage promotion are capable of doing to ensure economic security for our citizens. But make no mistake, this is a radical proposal, and it’s not surprising it vanished from public discussion in a conservative era. But bringing the idea back would be an important way of transitioning to a post-Obama liberalism.
 

dabestkeptsecret

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i never understood the modern purpose of the state of the union. Its basically a bunch of random promises with one side going :ohhh::blessed:
and the other isle sitting there like :birdman::camby:

the funniest ones were the bush ones. " the economy is terrible, we're fighting 2 useless wars, and the housing market has crashed, but the state of the union is strong :bryan:"
Really :rudy:
 

AAKing23

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Barry bout to announce how he want the legalization of weed :blessed:
 
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