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President Barack Obama delivers a speech to a joint session of Congress at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 8, 2011. Watching are Vice President Joe Biden and House Speaker John Boehner.
AP Photo/Charles Dharapak
By BEN FELLER
AP White House Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Attacking a deepening crisis on jobs,
President Barack Obama challenged a reluctant Congress Thursday
night to urgently pass a larger-than-expected $450 billion plan to
"jolt an economy that has stalled." He urged lawmakers to slash
Social Security taxes for tens of millions of Americans and for
almost every business to encourage hiring.
"Stop the political circus," an animated Obama told a joint
session of Congress in a nationally televised speech. Over and over
he implored lawmakers to "pass this jobs bill."
Open to discussion but making no promises, Republican House
Speaker John Boehner said Obama's ideas would be considered but the
president should give heed to Republicans' as well. "It's my hope
that we can work together," he said.
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In announcing a plan heavy on the tax cuts that Republicans
traditionally love, Obama sought to achieve multiple goals: offer a
plan that could actually get through a deeply divided Congress,
speed hiring in a nation where 14 million are out of work, shore up
public confidence in his leadership and put Republicans on the spot
to take action.
Obama never estimated how many jobs would be created by his
plan, which also includes new federal spending for construction,
hiring and an extension of jobless benefits for the long-term
unemployed. Despite his promise that it would all be paid for, he
has not yet released the details on how.
His message was unmistakable to the point of repetition, as he
told Congress more than 15 times in one way or another to act
quickly. That was meant as direct challenge by a Democratic
president to the Republicans running the House to get behind his
plan, especially on tax cuts, or be tarred as standing in the way.
The urgency of the jobs crisis is as pronounced as it's been
since the early days of Obama's term. Employers added zero jobs
last month. A whopping number of Americans - about eight in 10 -
think the country is headed in the wrong direction.
In the House chamber, Obama received a warm response but then
the usual political pattern took hold, Republicans often sitting in
silence on the applause lines that had Democrats roaring. Boehner
had chummy moments with Vice President Joe Biden at his side during
the speech but was somber over Obama's shoulder as the president
spoke.
President Barack Obama speaks to a joint session of Congress at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 8, 2011.
AP Photo/Evan Vucci
"The people of this country work hard to meet their
responsibilities. The question tonight is whether we'll meet
ours," Obama said. "The question is whether, in the face of an
ongoing national crisis, we can stop the political circus and
actually do something to help the economy."
The newest and boldest element of Obama's plan would cut the
Social Security payroll tax both for tens of millions of workers
and for employers, too.
For individuals, that tax has been shaved from 6.2 percent to
4.2 percent for this year but is to go back up again without action
by Congress. Obama wants to deepen the cut to 3.1 percent for
workers.
Obama would also apply the payroll tax cut to employers, halving
their taxes to 3.1 percent on their first $5 million in payroll. Businesses that hire new workers or give raises to those they
already employ would get an even bigger benefit: On payroll
increases up to $50 million they would pay no Social Security tax.
Obama proposed spending to fix schools and roads, hire local
teachers and police and extend unemployment benefits. He proposed a
tax credit for businesses that hire people out of work for six
months or longer, plus other tax relief aimed as snaring bipartisan
support in a time of divided government.
The White House put the price tag of Obama's plan at $447
billion, with about $253 billion in tax cuts and $194 billion in
federal spending.
The president said he would make his case to the public and will
waste no time taking his sales pitch on the road. His first stop
will be on Friday at the University of Richmond in the Virginia
congressional district of House majority Leader Eric Cantor, a
frequent critic of the president's policies.
Politics shadowed every element of Obama's speech. He appealed
to people watching on TV to lobby lawmakers to act. He did the same
thing before his speech in an email to campaign supporters,
bringing howls of hypocrisy from Republicans who wondered why Obama
was telling them to put party above country.
The American public is weary of talk and wary of promises that
help is on the way.
And the window for action is shrinking before the 2012
presidential election swallows up everything.
Under soaring expectations for results, Obama sought to put
himself on the side of voters who he said could not care less about
the political consequences of his speech. "The next election if 14
months away," Obama said, adding that the people who hired every
elected leader in the room need help "and they need it now."
Administration officials bristle whenever critics of their
original stimulus plan note that it did not live up to the job
creation estimates the White House issued in 2009. As a result, the
White House is leaving it to outside economists to render their
verdict on the new plan.
Mark Zandi, one of several economists asked by the White House
to evaluate the president's proposal ahead of his speech, said that
if enacted it would add 1.9 million jobs and reduce the
unemployment rate by one percentage point. Zandi, chief economist
for Moody's Analytics, said the expanded payroll tax cut would be
responsible for the most increase in hiring, adding about 750,000
jobs. The tax cut for employers, he said, would add about 300,000
new jobs.
As to paying for it, Obama will ask a special debt panel in
Congress to find enough savings to cover the costs of his ideas. He
says he'll release specifics a week from Monday along with a
proposal to stabilize the country's long-term debt.
The president said deepening the payroll tax cut would save an
average family making $50,000 a year about $1,500 compared to what
they would if Congress did not extend the current tax cut.
"I know some of you have sworn oaths to never raise any taxes
on anyone for as long as you live," Obama said, a reference to the
conservative tea party influence on many House Republicans. "Now
is not the time to carve out an exception and raise-middle class
taxes, which is why you should pass this bill right away."
No incumbent president in recent history has won re-election
with the unemployment rate anywhere near the current 9.1 percent.
Obama's jobs plan put a special emphasis on the long-term
unemployed - those who have been out of work for six months or
more. He repeated his calls for a one-year extension of
unemployment insurance in order to prevent up to 6 million people
from losing their benefits, and he proposed a $4,000 tax credit for
businesses that hire workers who have been out of work for more
than six months.
--- Associated Press writers Jim Kuhnhenn, Darlene Superville, Julie Pace and Erica Werner contributed to this report.
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President Barack Obama delivers a speech to a joint session of Congress at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, Sept. 8, 2011. Watching are Vice President Joe Biden and House Speaker John Boehner.
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