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Obama State of the
Union Focuses on Jobs
January 28, 2010
U.S. President Barack Obama is urging Americans to overcome a deficit of
trust in government and work together to solve a damaged economy and
other problems. The economy was high on the president's list of
priorities in his annual State of the Union address Wednesday night.
President Barack Obama
delivering the State of the Union address, 27 Jan 2010
Mr. Obama acknowledged that many Americans are frustrated and angry,
doubting whether he can deliver the change he promised in his 2008
campaign. But he said change is not easy, and he will continue to pursue
it.
"We do not quit. I do not quit. Let us seize this moment-to start anew,
to carry the dream forward, and to strengthen our union once more," he
said.
In his hour-long speech before both houses of Congress, the president
several times confronted the public anger that has caused his approval
ratings to slide.
"We have to recognize that we face more than a deficit of dollars right
now. We face a deficit of trust-deep and corrosive doubts about how
Washington works that have been growing for years," he said.
Much of Americans' frustration concerns the nation's stubborn 10-percent
unemployment rate. Mr. Obama called for a number of initiatives to
address the problem and urged the Senate to join the House of
Representatives in passing a second jobs bill.
"People are out of work. They are hurting. They need our help. And, I
want a jobs bill on my desk without delay," he said.
Among the president's economic goals are doubling U.S. exports in five
years and freezing most domestic government spending for three years,
starting in 2011.
Mr. Obama also urged Democratic lawmakers not to abandon the effort to
reform the U.S. health care system, one of his administration's main
priorities.
"Do not walk away from reform. Not now. Not when we are so close. Let us
find a way to come together and finish the job for the American people,"
he said.
On
foreign policy, President Obama again pledged to remove all U.S. combat
troops from Iraq by the end of August. "But make no mistake: this war is
ending, and all of our troops are coming home," Mr. Obama said.
He also said he is confident the United States will succeed in the war
in Afghanistan and that diplomatic efforts are helping isolate Iran and
North Korea for their pursuit of nuclear weapons.
The Republican Party's response to the president's speech came from the
governor of the state of Virginia, Bob McDonnell. He said Democrats are
spending too much and causing an unsustainable level of debt.
"What government should not do is pile on more taxation, regulation and
litigation that kill jobs and hurt the middle class," McDonnell said.
He also said Americans want affordable health care, but do not want the
government to run it.
McDonnell is one of several Republicans who recently won elections in
states the Democrats swept in 2008. |