by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Satyam Khanna, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, and Ryan Powers
Obama's Recovery Address
Thirty-five days after being inaugurated as America's 44th president,
Barack Obama discussed his economic agenda before a joint session of
Congress last
night. He focused on three
priorities -- health care, energy, and education -- that will form the
backbone of his long-term vision for economic growth and development.
Those three
core policy areas also received significant attention in the American
Recovery and
Reinvestment Act,
which Obama signed into law earlier this month. "Now
is the time to act boldly and wisely
-- to not only revive this
economy, but to build a new foundation
for lasting prosperity," Obama said last night. Although the President
came into
the
House chamber with sky-high
approval ratings, Americans
remain deeply
worried about the recession. He
offered them not just a
budget plan but what he called "a
vision for America -- as a
blueprint for our future." He declared, "We
will rebuild, we will recover,
and the United States of America
will emerge stronger than before."
MOVING
IMMEDIATELY ON HEALTH CARE: Obama
emphasized health care reform as the key to both restoring economic
health and ensuring that the American dream lives on, and he made it
clear
he would not wait to move on a bold plan. "So
let there be no doubt: health
care reform cannot wait, it must not wait, and it
will not wait another year," he
said. Congress
is already acting. In November,
Sen. Max Baucus (D-MT), the
powerful chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, released
his own principles
for health reform and has since held numerous meetings on restructuring
the
system. And under the direction of Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-MA), "many of
the leading figures in the nation's long-running health care debate
have been meeting secretly in a Senate hearing room" and "appear to be
inching towards" a consensus that real
reform will require every American to have health insurance
and find ways to make it affordable. The Wonk Room's Igor
Volsky notes that Obama left the details of reform up to Congress --
and "the
devil will certainly lie in the details."
Still, as Obama pointed out, he and Congress have already
"done more to advance the cause of health care reform in
the last thirty days than we have in the last decade,"
including passing landmark health IT innovation, new incentives for
disease research, and unprecedented funding for preventive care, all
in
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. He also signed a law
providing health
insurance to 11 million children,
a bill Bush vetoed twice.
'IT
BEGINS WITH ENERGY': Obama's
vision for restoring robust economic growth and reclaiming new
opportunity for all "begins
with energy," he said. The
recovery plan has already taken
big steps to advance the goal of
clean energy: It made huge
investments in renewable energy, efficiency, and building a new, clean
electrical grid.
But Obama went further last night, challenging Congress to pass a broad
cap-and-trade program that places a price on dirty fuel and invests in
renewables -- and will allow the U.S. to "to truly transform our
economy, to protect our security and save our planet from the ravages
of climate change." The Obama administration is serious about
implementing cap and trade; its budget factors
in revenues from carbon pricing
starting in 2012. Transforming how America gets its energy will go a
long way toward rebuilding the American economy as well. A Center for
American Progress study found that a $100 billion
investment in green energy and technology creates
two million jobs within two years.
This week, the Center for American Progress Action Fund hosted the National
Clean Energy Summit,
where political leaders from across the ideological spectrum joined
business, labor, and environmental leaders to discuss the urgent need
to shift to a clean energy economy. They identified a national clean
energy smart grid as a top priority in transforming America's energy
economy -- and CAP
is leading the way, with a
report explaining how
such a grid would work,
enumerating the jobs it would create, and
recommending the policies needed to implement it.
EDUCATION
IS 'A PRE-REQUISITE': The
recovery plan Obama signed into law this month enacted "the
largest increase in federal aid
since Washington began to spend significantly on education after World
War II," spending $150 billion on school districts, child care centers
and universities. Education
Secretary Arne Duncan praised
the bill, saying it would "avert
literally hundreds of thousands of teacher layoffs." The bill also
included $13.9
billion in added funding for Pell Grants.
Rebuilding
crumbling schools and injecting
needed funds into university
scientific research,
however, is not enough. "In a global economy, where the most valuable
skill you can sell is your knowledge, a good education is no longer
just a pathway to opportunity. It
is a pre-requisite,"
Obama said, announcing a goal "to ensure that every child has access to
a complete and competitive education." He earned a prolonged standing
ovation when he declared that dropping out of high school "is no longer
an option. It's not just quitting on yourself; it's quitting on your
country." Obama asked Americans to commit to at least one year of
higher
education or career training -- a goal that will require more flexible
university programs as well as a renewed focus
on secondary education to
prepare students for higher learning.
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Yesterday, the Senate voted 80-17 to confirm Hilda Solis as Labor Secretary. The vote is a defeat for anti-worker conservatives, who have been stalling her nomination for weeks.
THINK PROGRESS:
Study: Network news coverage favored Republicans from 1992-2004.
WONK ROOM:
Republicans revive Sen. John McCain's
(R-AZ) debilitating spending freeze proposal.
YGLESIAS:
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke:
Anti-stimulus governors are hurting the economy.
NEW MEXICO INDEPENDENT:
GOP poll on domestic
partnerships bill misstates the facts.
MISSOURI:
Gov. Jay Nixon's (D) office is "reporting that his new Web
site
seeking input on the federal stimulus package has already generated
more than 400 responses."
TEXAS:
"Gov. Rick Perry (R) yesterday certified that he is going to accept
Recovery Act funds" after hesitating earlier.
MONTANA:
State Senate endorses a measure "that would revive a requirement
for parental notification when a woman under 18 plans to have an
abortion."
Q: Are they [Republicans] pledging no earmarks themselves?
STEELE: Absolutely, they better be, if they know is good for them they
had better be.
-- RNC Chairman Michael
Steele, 02/24/09
VERSUS
"Republicans are expected to deliver a daylong rant today against
Democratic spending legislation, yet the bill is loaded with thousands
of pet projects that Republican lawmakers inserted."
-- McClatchy, 02/25/09
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