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After defiant speech, Obama heads to Republican heartland

Published 21/01/2015, 21:11
© Reuters. U.S. President Barack Obama delivers his State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington

By Jeff Mason

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A day after delivering a defiant State of the Union speech to the Republican-led U.S. Congress, President Barack Obama headed to the conservative heartland on Wednesday to promote his plans for bolstering the middle class.

Obama left Washington for a two-day trip to Idaho and Kansas to push his message that the economy has recovered from years in the doldrums and everyone should stand to gain from that.

No longer restrained by having to face voters again, Obama struck a confident tone in his State of the Union address on Tuesday night, saying, "the shadow of crisis has passed."

It is now time for policies like raising taxes on the rich and offering community college for free for two years, he said.

The Democrat threatened to veto Republican efforts to roll back key decisions such as his signature healthcare law and the loosening of immigration policy, and the administration's opposition to the planned Keystone XL oil pipeline.

Republicans called for Obama to be more humble, given that they took control of both chambers of Congress this month after winning November's midterm elections handsomely.

"We've only been here 2-1/2 weeks, and he's put seven veto threats. I think that's probably not the best start. Let us work the legislation before you decide something's going to be vetoed," House of Representatives Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy said on the CBS "This Morning" programme.

One area where Obama might win support from Republicans is on trade. He called in his speech for Congress to give him

so-called fast-track authority to help complete major trade pacts like the Trans-Pacific Partnership deal currently being negotiated with Asia.

He warned that China would be the winner if that deal falters.

"The president made very clear last night that TPA (Trade Promotion Authority) and TPP is now a top presidential priority and now is the time to get it done," said Evan Medeiros, the top White House aide on Asia.

While some conservative Republicans oppose giving Obama fast-track authority, the heaviest resistance might be from fellow Democrats who worry that trade deals could hurt American workers.

"Of almost everything we've heard that the president has proposed, it seems ... it (trade) is the one issue where he can get Republicans on board," said Paul Sracic, head of the political science department at Ohio's Youngstown State University and a trade expert. "The problem is trying to get Democratic votes."

McCarthy said Republicans are also willing to work with Obama on tax reform.

Treasury Secretary Jack Lew said on Wednesday that after recent talks with Republicans he was confident a business tax reform plan can make it through Congress.

Lew put the chances of passage at "better than 50-50."

The tax plan includes a lower top corporate rate, ensuring more taxes are paid on foreign earnings, and closing a host of loopholes.

IN THE HEARTLAND

On his trip, Obama will visit a lab at Boise State University's Micron Engineering Center in Idaho.

Both Idaho and Kansas are "red" or Republican-leaning states, which White House officials took into account in an effort to show his policies can appeal to a bipartisan audience.

Obama told lawmakers and millions watching on television that it was time to "turn the page" from recession and war, and work together to boost middle-class Americans.

His vision of a stronger and more expensive safety net stands little chance of becoming law this year, but it could shape the debate for the 2016 presidential election.

Hillary Clinton, the likely frontrunner for the Democratic nomination, is already facing heat from Massachusetts Senator

Elizabeth Warren and others on the left, who worry Clinton may bow to pressure from Wall Street and not push enough of a populist agenda on the economy.

© Reuters. U.S. President Barack Obama delivers his State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington

In a post on Twitter after the speech, Clinton wrote: "@BarackObama #SOTU pointed way to an economy that works for all. Now we need to step up & deliver for the middle class. #FairShot #FairShare".

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