www.ccun.org
www.aljazeerah.info
Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
|
|
Editorial Note: The
following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may
also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology.
Comments are in parentheses. |
Putting Washington at the
Service of the Middle Class:
Highlights of President Obama's
First State of the Union Address
Posted by Mona Sutphen
on January 27, 2010 at 10:23 PM EST
In his
State of the Union Address tonight, the President laid out an agenda
attempting to attack one problem from every conceivable angle: the
terrible squeeze felt by America’s middle class. Fundamentally,
that means prying government away from special interests and dedicating
it to measures that put Americans to work and lay the foundation for a
stronger economy for our country – lowering health care and tuition
costs, spurring creation of the next generation of clean energy jobs.
It also means putting a cop on the beat on Wall Street, so major banks
can no longer take advantage of families and taxpayers.
To do all that, though, we need to change the way Washington works.
Already the President has taken unprecedented steps in this direction,
from releasing the names of all visitors to the White House for the
first time ever to clamping down on the revolving door between
government and lobbying. But as much progress was made on this
front in this first year, it was still only the first year, and the
President will keep pushing forward, whether that’s shining sunlight on
any contact between lobbyists and the White House, or pushing Congress
to disclose all earmark requests in one place for Americans to see.
This was the vision that shaped the President's address, but this is
not just a matter of rhetoric. The President made clear that there
is tremendously busy agenda ahead for his second year – the policies and
proposals below are just examples of the plans the President laid out in
his address to put government to work for the middle class.
Here are a few initiatives you might have missed in the course of
the speech:
- The President called on the Senate to pass a financial reform
package. “A strong, healthy financial market makes it
possible for businesses to access credit and create new jobs. It
channels the savings of families into investments that raise
incomes. And that can only happen if we guard against the same
recklessness that nearly brought down our entire economy.” Essential
reforms include measures to protect consumers and investors from
financial abuse; close loopholes, raise standards, and create
accountability for supervision of major financial firms; restrict
the size and scope of financial institutions to reign in excesses
and protect taxpayers and address the ‘too big to fail’ problem; and
establish comprehensive supervision of financial markets.
- A vision for a clean energy economy. “…to create more
of these clean energy jobs, we need more production, more
efficiency, and more incentives.” We will build on the historic
$80 billion investment made through the Recovery Act. The
President’s vision includes investments in important technologies to
diversity our energy sources and reduce our dependence on foreign
oil, including: the renewal of our nation’s nuclear energy industry
after a 30-year hiatus, cutting edge biofuel and clean coal
technologies, and additional offshore oil and gas drilling. To
fully transition to a clean energy economy and create millions of
new American jobs, we must pass comprehensive energy and climate
legislation to promote energy independence and address climate
change.
- The President will continue his push to invest in the skills
and education of our people. “This year, we have broken
through the stalemate between left and right by launching a national
competition to improve our schools. The idea here is simple: instead
of rewarding failure, we only reward success. In this country, the
success of our children cannot depend more on where they live than
their potential.” The Obama Administration supports a new vision
for increasing student achievement, delivering opportunity, and
supporting excellence in America’s public schools. The President’s
2011 budget supports a new framework for the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act that will foster innovation, reward
excellence, and promote reform in our schools, as well as invests an
additional $1.35 billion to continue the historic Race to the Top
program to open it up to districts in order to spur innovation and
additional progress. At the same time, the Administration is moving
to consolidate ineffective policies and practices. The President’s
Budget eliminates six programs and consolidates 38 others into 11
new programs that emphasize using competition to allocate funds,
giving communities more choices around activities, and using
rigorous evidence to fund what works.
- The President is committed to making college affordable for
all Americans. “(I)n this economy, a high school diploma no
longer guarantees a good job.” To increase college access and
completion, the Administration will make student loans more
affordable by limiting a borrower’s payments to 10 percent of
his/her income and forgives remaining debt after 20 years – 10 years
for public service works. We will also make permanent the American
Opportunity Tax Credit. The President urges the Senate to pass the
American Graduation Initiative, which invests more than $10 billion
over the next decade in reforming our nation’s community colleges,
promoting college completion, and moving toward the President’s goal
of having the highest proportion of college graduates in the world
by 2020. The President is also asking colleges and universities to
do their share to make college affordable for all Americans cutting
their own costs.
- The President is making investments to ensure that the middle
class benefits from this economic recovery. “(T)he price of
college tuition is just one of the burdens facing middle-class
families. That’s why last year I asked Vice President Biden to chair
a task force on Middle Class Families.” The President has
outlined immediate steps to reduce the strain on family budgets and
help middle class families manage their child and elder care
responsibilities, save for retirement and pay for college. He will
double the child tax credit this year, make it easier to save for
retirement with automatic IRAs for workers without access to
existing retirement plans, provide larger tax credits to match
retirement savings for millions of additional workers, and provide
new safeguards to protect retirement savings.
- Changing the way we do business. “To close that
credibility gap, we must take action on both ends of Pennsylvania
Avenue to end the outsized influence of lobbyists; to do our work
more openly; and to give our people the government they deserve.” The
President has called for additional new lobbyist reforms, including
enhanced disclosure of lobbyist contacts, strict campaign
contribution limits by lobbyists, and a single earmark database, so
American taxpayers find out what earmarks are being requested, and
where their money is going.
- Countering Citizens United. “I don’t think
American elections should be bankrolled by America’s most powerful
interests, or worse, by foreign entities.” Last week’s Supreme
Court Citizen’s United decision opens the floodgates to
special interests and foreign countries and companies bankrolling
national campaigns. The President called for bipartisan
support for legislation that will remedy the Supreme Court’s
unprecedented and troubling decision.
- The President stands by military families. “Tonight,
all of our men and women in uniform … must know that they have our
respect, our gratitude, and our full support.” The
President’s 2011 budget announces significant new investments,
totaling more than $8 billion, and protections for our nation’s
military families, including increased military pay and housing
allowances, increased funding for family support programs, expanded
availability of affordable, high-quality child care, the renovation
or replacement of schools, and expanded and improved care for
wounded, ill and injured service members.
- The President is establishing a National Equal Pay
Enforcement Task Force. “We are going to crack down on
violations of equal pay laws – so that women get equal pay for an
equal day’s work.” To make sure we uphold our nation’s core
commitment to equality of opportunity, the Obama Administration is
implementing an Equal Pay initiative to improve compliance, public
education, and enforcement of equal pay laws. The Task Force will
ensure that the agencies with responsibility for equal pay
enforcement are coordinating efforts and limiting potential gaps in
enforcement. The Administration also continues to support the
Paycheck Fairness Act, and is increasing funding for the agencies
enforcing equal pay laws and other key civil rights statutes.
- Immigration reform. “And we should continue the work
of fixing our broken immigration system – to secure our borders ,
enforce our laws so that everyone who plays by the rules can
contribute to our economy and enrich our nation.” The President
is pleased Congress is taking steps forward on immigration reform
that includes effective border security measures with a path for
legalization for those who are willing to pay taxes and abide by the
law. He is committed to confronting this problem in practical,
effective ways, using the current tools at our disposal while we
work with Congress to enact comprehensive reform.
And here are still more initiatives the President spoke to just
tonight:
- The President will fight to recover the money American
taxpayers spent to bailout the banks. “To
recover the rest, I have proposed a fee on the biggest banks. I know
Wall Street isn’t keen on this idea, but if these firms can afford
to hand out big bonuses again, they can afford a modest fee to pay
back the taxpayers who rescued them in their time of need.”
The President has proposed the Financial Crisis Responsibility
Fee, which will require the largest and most highly leveraged
Wall Street firms to pay back taxpayers and provide a deterrent
against excessive leverage for the largest firms. The conservative
estimate for the cost of TARP in the budget is $117 billion, but the
Treasury Department expects it to be much less and the fee will be
in place for a minimum of ten years or however long it takes to
recoup every last penny to the American taxpayer.
- The President recognizes that Small Businesses will be key to
our nation’s economic recovery. “I’m proposing that we take
$30 billion of the money Wall Street banks have repaid and use
it to help community banks give small businesses the credit they
need to stay afloat. I am also proposing a new small business tax
credit – one that will go to over one million small businesses who
hire new workers or raise wages.” To get small businesses
growing again, and growing our economy, the President has proposed a
range of provisions that include tax incentives to spur investment;
expanded access to capital and growth opportunities to create jobs;
and increased support for entrepreneurship to foster innovation. He
is proposing an employment tax credit for small businesses to
encourage hiring, eliminating capital gains taxes on small business
investments, extending enhanced small business expensing, and
transferring $30 billion in resources from TARP to a new program to
help community and smaller banks give small businesses the credit
they need. The President and members of his Administration will
announce additional details in the coming weeks.
- The President reiterates his support for continued investment
in our nation’s infrastructure. “Tomorrow, I’ll visit Tampa,
Florida, where workers will soon break ground on a new high-speed
rail road funded by the Recovery Act. There are projects like that
all across this country that will create jobs and help our nation
move goods, services, and information.” Through the Recovery
Act, we made the largest investment in our nation’s infrastructure
since President Eisenhower called for the creation of our national
highway system over half a century ago. In his speech, the
President announced funding to make a down-payment on a new
nationwide high-speed rail system being built in-part with ARRA
dollars.
- Tax breaks to keep jobs at home. “(I)t’s time to
finally slash the tax breaks for companies that ship our jobs
overseas and give those tax breaks to companies that create jobs in
the United States of America.” The President has called
for an end for tax breaks for companies that ship our jobs overseas
to help fund tax cuts – like making the R & E credit permanent –
that reward companies for investing and creating jobs in the United
States.
- The President also called on the Senate to pass a jobs bill
that he can sign. “The House has passed a jobs bill…. As the
first order of business this year, I urge the Senate to do the same.
People are out of work. They are hurting. They need our help. And
I want a jobs bill on my desk without delay.” The bold and
difficult steps the President took to stabilize the financial system
have reduced the cost of TARP by more than $200 billion, providing
additional resources for job creation and for deficit reduction. In
December, the President outlined a package of targeted measures to
help further stimulate private sector hiring, including measures to
facilitate small business growth, green jobs and infrastructure. The
House has passed strong legislation - it is time for the Senate to
do the same.
- We must invest in American ingenuity and innovation. “We
need to encourage American innovation.” The Obama
Innovation Agenda will get us closer to the President’s long-term
goal of increasing combined private and public R&D investment to
three percent of GDP. The Obama 2011 budget will move us closer to
restoring America to first in the world in college completion; and
invest in the next generation of scientists so we will not lag
behind countries like China in science and engineering graduates. More
details will be announced in the coming weeks.
- We need to export more of our goods around the world. “We
will double our exports over the next five years, an increase that
will support two million new jobs in America.” To meet this
goal, we’re launching a National Export Initiative that will
help farmers and small businesses increase their exports and expand
their markets. Details will be announced in the coming weeks, but
the NEI includes the creation of the President’s Export Promotion
Cabinet and an enhancement of funding for key export promotion
programs. We will work to shape a Doha trade agreement that opens
markets and will continue to work with key allies like South Korea,
Panama, and Colombia on trade agreements that provide real benefits
to our workers. The President and members of his Administration
will announce additional details in the coming week.
- The President remains committed to helping Americans stay in
their homes and help their homes retain their value. “… we’re
working to lift the value of a family’s single largest investment –
their home.” Last year, we took steps allowing millions of
Americans to take out new loans and save an average of $1,500 per
family on mortgage payments. This year, we will step up programs
that encourage re-financing so that homeowners can move into more
affordable and sustainable mortgages. In addition to the changes
proposed last week to ensure sound risk management, the FHA is
continuing to evaluate its mortgage insurance underwriting standards
and its measures to help distressed and underwater borrowers through
other FHA initiatives going forward. In order to ensure American
families receive the same consideration American corporations do,
the Obama Administration remains supportive of efforts to allow
bankruptcy proceedings to renegotiate all debts, including home
mortgages.
- As Americans are getting their budgets in order, the
President is getting the nation’s financial house in order. “Like
any cash-strapped family, we will work within a budget to invest in
what we need and sacrifice what we don’t.” The President
has announced the three year, non-security discretionary spending
freeze, and also called for a bipartisan Fiscal Commissionto
identify policies to improve the fiscal situation in the medium term
and to achieve fiscal sustainability over the long run. The
President and members of his Administration will announce additional
details in the coming weeks.
- The President’s focus on national security includes rooting
out terrorists where they hide. “Since the day I took office,
we have renewed our focus on the terrorists who threaten our
nation.” In the last year, hundreds of Al Qaeda’s
fighters and affiliates have been captured or killed – far more than
in 2008.
- The President’s commitment to Non-Proliferation results. “Even
as we prosecute two wars, we are also confronting the greatest
danger to the American people – the threat of nuclear weapons.” The
United States and Russia are completing negotiations on the
farthest-reaching arms control treaty in nearly twenty years. He
will also host a Nuclear Security Summit in April, which will bring
forty-four nations together behind a clear goal: to secure all loose
nuclear materials around the world in four years, so that they never
fall into the hands of terrorists.
- The President is launching a bioterror and pandemic threat
initiative. “We are launching a new initiative that will give
us the capacity to respond faster and more effectively to
bio-terrorism or an infectious disease – a plan that will counter
threats at home, and strengthen public health abroad.” The
President called to action key U.S. Government leaders to re-design
our medical countermeasure enterprise to protect Americans from
bioterror or infectious health threats. We will pursue a business
model that leverages market forces and reduces risk to attract
pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry collaboration with the
U.S. Government.
- The President announced that he will work this year to repeal
“Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” “I will work with Congress and the
military to finally repeal the law that denies gay Americans the
right to serve the country they love because of who they are.”
Mona Sutphen is Deputy Chief of Staff
Fair Use
Notice
This site contains copyrighted material the
use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright
owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance
understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic,
democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this
constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for
in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C.
Section 107, the material on this site is
distributed without profit to those
who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information
for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml.
If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of
your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the
copyright owner.
|
|
|