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P.O. Box 340 Preston, MD 21655 Ph: 410.673.7123 Fax: 410.673.2374 Wednesday, September 8, 2010  


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Obama to Pitch Economic Proposals      09/08 05:24

   Seeking to give anxious Democrats a boost ahead of the November elections, 
President Barack Obama is pitching a trio of economic initiatives Wednesday and 
voicing unwavering opposition to Bush-era tax breaks for the wealthy, an issue 
on which he's looking to draw a stark contrast with Republicans.

   WASHINGTON (AP) -- Seeking to give anxious Democrats a boost ahead of the 
November elections, President Barack Obama is pitching a trio of economic 
initiatives Wednesday and voicing unwavering opposition to Bush-era tax breaks 
for the wealthy, an issue on which he's looking to draw a stark contrast with 
Republicans.

   The White House said the package of infrastructure investments and business 
tax incentives Obama was to outline during a speech in Cleveland is meant to 
put the economy on a path toward long-term growth while also allowing for some 
immediate job creation.

   But with Washington's already heated partisanship likely to escalate as the 
midterm elections approach, it's uncertain whether Congress could pass any of 
the incentives in time to help the economy --- and Democrats --- before 
November.

   Obama is asking Congress to consider three proposals:

   --- A $50 billion infrastructure investment to rebuild and repair the 
nation's roads, railways and runways.

   --- A permanent extension of research and development tax credits for 
businesses.

   --- Tax breaks to let businesses quickly write off 100 percent of their 
spending on new plants and equipment through 2011.

   Senior administration officials said the three proposals would be the full 
extent of new economic policies the president would announce before the 
midterms, eliminating the possibility of a pre-election freeze on payroll 
taxes, an idea supported by many businesses.

   The officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to preview the 
president's speech, said Obama would draw a contrast between his economic 
proposals and those of the GOP, going so far as to give his remarks in the same 
city where House Minority Leader John Boehner outlined the Republican economic 
agenda last month.

   As he often does, Obama will paint Republican leaders as seeking a return to 
what he calls the failed economic policies of the past, singling out Boehner's 
call to extend tax cuts for the wealthy that were enacted by former President 
George W. Bush.

   Obama and Democrats have long said they want to renew the tax cuts only for 
households earning under $250,000 a year, a policy difference with Republicans 
that administration officials said Obama would portray as a difference in the 
parties' values.

   "This economy is not hurting people that make $800,000 a year," White House 
spokesman Robert Gibbs said Tuesday. "It's hurting families that are making 
$40,000 a year.

   Boehner spokesman Michael Steel said the president's focus on the minority 
leader's speech showed that the White House is out of touch with Americans and 
"in full panic mode about the November elections."

   Some of the proposals Obama was to outline Wednesday have enjoyed broad 
bipartisan support in the past. That creates a dilemma for Republicans, who 
could be forced to choose between handing the president legislative victories 
ahead of the election or saying no to ideas they've previously supported.

   The White House made no apologies for unveiling its proposals during the 
contentious pre-election months.

   "We understand what season we've entered in Washington," Gibbs said. Even if 
Congress doesn't take up Obama's new proposals before the elections, Gibbs 
said, "the president and the economic team still believe that these represent 
some very important ideas."

   Mindful of the public's anger over the mounting federal deficit, the White 
House has carefully avoided calling the new economic proposals a stimulus plan, 
like the $814 billion economic package Congress passed last year.

   Even with fresh proposals in hand, officials said the president would 
continue to prod the Senate to pass a bill that calls for about $12 billion in 
tax breaks for small businesses and a $30 billion fund to help unfreeze small 
business lending. Republicans have likened the bill to the unpopular bailout of 
the financial industry.


(KA)


 
 
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