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Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

Weekly Address: President Obama – Expanding Opportunity, Time for Congressional Action

The President’s Weekly Address post is also an Open News Thread. Feel free to share other news stories in the comments.

 

From the White HouseWeekly Address

In this week’s address, the President recapped his visits with folks who have written him letters about their own American stories — their successes and struggles. While congressional Republicans are blocking meaningful measures that would strengthen the middle class, the President continues looking for ways to grow the economy and expand opportunity for more hardworking Americans.

The President again urged Congress to join him, as they were elected to do, in working on behalf of everyday Americans – including those the President spent time with this week – by investing in our infrastructure to support American jobs, and ensuring that the Highway Trust Fund does not expire.

Transcript: Weekly Address: Expanding Opportunity – It’s Time for Congressional Republicans to Do Their Part

Hi, everybody.  This week, I spent some time in Colorado and Texas, talking with people about what’s going on in their lives.

One of them was Elizabeth Cooper, who’ll be a college junior this fall.  She wrote to tell me something I hear often: how hard it is for middle-class families like hers to afford college.  And she shared something I know many of you feel when you wonder what’s going on in Washington.  She said she feels “not significant enough to be addressed, not poor enough for people to worry [about], and not rich enough to be cared about.

I ran for President to fight for Americans just like Elizabeth – people who work hard, do everything right, and just want a chance to build a decent life for themselves and their families.

And after the worst economic crisis in generations, our businesses have now created nearly 10 million new jobs over the past 52 months.  The unemployment rate has fallen to its lowest point since 2008.  By almost every measure, our economy is better off than it was five years ago.

But while we’ve created more jobs at this point of the year than any year since 1999, too many families barely earn what they did in 1999.  It’s harder to pay for college, save, or retire, because people’s wages and incomes have not gone up.  Nearly all the gains of the recovery are going to the very top – and aren’t making a difference in your lives.

And I believe America does better when the middle class does better.  And I’ve laid out an opportunity agenda to create jobs, train workers, educate our kids, and make sure hard work actually pays off.

These are the things we should be doing to grow the middle class and help folks work their way into the middle class.  And it’s pretty uncontroversial stuff. I hope we can work together on it.  And I’m always willing to compromise if folks have other ideas or if it advances generally the interests of working Americans.

But so far this year, Republicans in Congress have blocked every serious idea to strengthen the middle class.  Lifting the minimum wage, fair pay, student loan reform – they’ve said no to all of it.  And that’s when I’ve acted this year to help working Americans on my own- when Congress won’t act.

I’ve taken actions to attract new jobs, lift workers’ wages, help students pay off their loans, and more.  And the Republican plan right now is not to do some of this work with me – instead, it’s to sue me.  That’s actually what they’re spending their time on.  It’s a political stunt that’s going to waste months of America’s time.  And by the way, they’re going to pay for it using your hard-earned tax dollars.

I have a better idea: do something, Congress.  Do anything to help working Americans.  Join the rest of the country. Join me, I’m looking forward to working with you.

You know, on Tuesday, I met with Carolyn Reed and her husband David, who own six Silver Mine Sub shops in Colorado.  Two days later, they announced they’re giving their hourly employees a raise to ten dollars and ten cents an hour.

They’re not waiting for Congress.  Carolyn said, “We are happy to be a part of what I hope will be a growing voluntary trend in increased wages.”

Carolyn and Americans like her all across the country are happy to do their part.  Congress now needs to step up and do its part.  And next week, I’ll travel to a couple of job sites to talk about how Democrats and Republicans can work together to grow the economy and protect nearly 700,000 jobs by passing a highway bill by the end of the summer.

I’m here because hardworking Americans like Elizabeth and Carolyn.  That’s something I’ll never forget – it’s something I’ll never stop fighting for.  Thanks, and have a great weekend.

Bolding added.

~


7 comments

  1. From the White House: Creating an Immigration System for the 21st Century


    Our nation’s immigration system is broken. Fixing it is an economic and national security imperative. That’s why President Obama is working to pass a common sense, comprehensive set of reforms that ensures everyone plays by the same rules.



    America’s immigration system is broken. Too many employers game the system by hiring undocumented workers and there are 11 million people living in the shadows. Neither is good for the economy or the country.

    The President’s plan builds a smart, effective immigration system that continues efforts to secure our borders and cracks down on employers who hire undocumented immigrants. It’s a plan that requires anyone who’s undocumented to get right with the law by paying their taxes and a penalty, learning English, and undergoing background checks before they can be eligible to earn citizenship. It requires every business and every worker to play by the same set of rules.

    The Senate has passed the bill … it is time for the Republican House of Representatives to step up.

  2. I did not realize that Title IX had an exemption that allowed religious schools to continue to discriminate against people on the basis of sex if it was against their religion to treat people decently. JHC! What is wrong with our country that the bible trumps common human decency?

    From a ThinkProgress article on religious discrimination against a transgender student:

    Title IX has prohibited discrimination on the basis of sex since it passed in 1972, and in 2010, the DOE issued guidance clarifying that Title IX also protects LGBT students from sex discrimination, which would include cases like Jayce’s. But the original 1972 law includes a broad exemption for religious universities: “This section shall not apply to an educational institution which is controlled by a religious organization if the application of this subsection would not be consistent with the religious tenets of such organization.”

    In other words, religious universities are free to ignore any sex nondiscrimination protection they disagree with, and George Fox has just used that exemption to discriminate against a transgender student.

  3. THIS underscores the value that Republican legislators place on a woman’s body: you are a vessel for an embryo. Period.

    Tennessee Arrests First Mother Under Its New Pregnancy Criminalization Law

    At the beginning of July, 26-year-old Mallory Loyola gave birth to a baby girl. Two days later, the state of Tennessee charged her with assault. Loyola is the first woman to be arrested under a new law in Tennessee that allows the state to criminally charge mothers for potentially causing harm to their fetuses by using drugs.

    The legislation, which officially took effect about a week ago, stipulates that “a woman may be prosecuted for assault for the illegal use of a narcotic drug while pregnant, if her child is born addicted to or harmed by the narcotic drug.” However, this may not actually apply to Loyola’s case. So far, there’s no evidence the young woman either used a narcotic drug or caused harm to her newborn child.

    Oh, and Facts Optional when prosecuting women.

  4. DeniseVelez

    didn’t see much coverage of this:

    First Lady Michelle Obama told a roaring crowd of nearly 1,500 Latino leaders, activists and students on Thursday that, “I believe in you. The President believes in you.”

    The First Lady headlined a luncheon of the League of United Latin American Citizens, which is holding its annual convention in New York for the first time in the group’s 85-year history.

    The group selected New York due to six in 10 residents being either immigrants or the children of immigrants, with the most recent arrivals coming from China and Mexico.

    “Make no mistake about it,” the First Lady said, “we have to keep on fighting as hard as we can on immigration, and as my husband said, we are going to do whatever administrative action it takes to fix this broken system.”

    Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new

    (there is video with the article)

    Transcript:

    Remarks by the First Lady at LULAC Unity Luncheon

    http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-

  5. This morning I read a piece from the AP (aka unAPologetically right wing) that discussed President Obama’s “escape” from the confines of Washington as something new and because of his polls. If that “reporter” had been paying attention, she would have seen that President Obama has always traveled around the country meeting with people and discussing his agenda. He does not need artifice to gain attention, as the author suggests:

    Almost all of these types of events are planned by the White House, though not publicly announced before the president’s arrival. And the White House’s increasing reliance on such events as a way to garner attention opened the president up to ridicule from Republicans when after he declared in Texas that he wasn’t going to take a first-hand look at the humanitarian crisis at the Texas border because he was “not interested in photo ops.”

    “Obama’s presidency has been defined by photo-ops and political theater,” said Kevin Madden, a Republican strategist who advised Obama’s 2012 presidential rival,

    Mitt Romney. “Every time he’s gotten in trouble, he’s sought to seize the airwaves or the podium to try to frame his crisis negatively.”

    Pro tip #1: do not quote an advisor to Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign as an expert on anything.

    Pro tip #2: pulling things out of context makes you look stupider in the long run. He did not say he was “not interested in photo ops” as in eschewing all photo ops. The actual quote: “This isn’t theater. This is a problem. I’m not interested in photo-ops; I’m interested in solving a problem.”. Notice that the photo-ops quote is sandwiched between “a problem”. You’re welcome.

    Here is who I will quote about those photo-ops that everyone is so freaking obsessed with: Smartypants

    Make no mistake about it – the children who are the object of these efforts have been traumatized. Its a very different kind of trauma than people experience as a result of a hurricane or other “act of god” – much more personal. Its clear that President Obama respects the need for privacy when people are in the midst of this kind of trauma.

    By refusing a photo-op with these children President Obama is protecting their privacy – and perhaps their safety. Can you imagine what the consequences might be of blasting their picture/story all over the global media if they ever have to go back home? In other words, he’s putting their needs above both ours and his own. That’s what grown-up empathetic people do!

    I don’t need to see President Obama visiting the border to know that he cares about what is happening to the real people who are stuck there and the real people who are trying to help them.

  6. (That seems to be a common theme … whenever Republican policies are thwarted, the American people win)

    Gallup Poll

    The uninsured rate in the U.S. fell 2.2 percentage points to 13.4% in the second quarter of 2014. This is the lowest quarterly average recorded since Gallup and Healthways began tracking the percentage of uninsured Americans in 2008. The previous low point was 14.4% in the third quarter of 2008.

    Want to see what that looks like? Feast your eyes on this:

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