As one of my Facebook friends posted last night, “President Obama has got his swag back.” And right on time, too. Although President Obama has been criticized in recent months for being long on compromise and short on muscle, he combined both in his jobs speech to Congress last night. Like the refrain in a treasured hymn, Obama repeatedly charged Congress to “pass this jobs plan right away” as he laid out the “American Jobs Act.”
In his characteristic commonsensical approach, Obama also told Congress and the country that nothing in his bill was controversial or had not been passed by some of these very Democrats and Republicans in the past. Some of the perks in the bill include: payroll taxes cut in half next year for small business owners, the repair and modernization of at least 35,000 schools, rehiring of laid off teachers, tax credits for companies that hire veterans and people who have been looking for a job for more than six months and a $1,500 tax cut for a typical working family. So what’s not to love in this bill?
After touting some of the benefits that everyone could agree on, Obama got into the nitty-gritty, attacking the sacred cows of the opposing sides. To the Dems, he said that Medicare needed to be reformed point blank and that “we are spending too fast to sustain the program.” And to the Repubs, he said “a few of the most affluent citizens and corporations enjoy tax breaks and loopholes that nobody else gets.” To drive home his point of irony, he mentioned that Warren Buffet has a lower tax rate than his secretary. Can we say a collective and prolonged, “Ouch?!” I’ll wait …
And Obama had a word for the rabble-rousing Tea Partiers too: government, in and of itself, is not evil. He reminded us how government built the transcontinental railroad, launched the National Academy of Sciences, set up the first land grant colleges, passed the GI Bill, and funded research leading to the creation of our beloved Internet.
And all of this hope and change comes with a price tag of reportedly $447 billion in tax cuts and government spending.
Although Obama attempted to steer the conversation away from an election still over a year away, I can’t help but wonder if his “Clint Eastwood-esque” speech, a speech reminiscent of his best election speeches, is just the bullet he needed to have a fighting chance in the 2012 election. After the debt ceiling fiasco, I’m thinking Congress better act in a balanced way toward this bill (i.e., putting the welfare of Americans first and their political careers last). If not, they will face the biblical principle of what is first being made last. For the GOP presidential candidates, their refrain is the same: spending bad, Obama bad. No surprise there.
The president’s speech may be a good start, but you know what they say about action versus words. In other words, faith without works is dead (James 2:14-26). If a person needs a job, and we shout, “This person needs a job,” but then no job is offered, what good is shouting? Good deeds must follow faith. Abraham followed up his faith by his willingness to sacrifice his son. Rahab the prostitute followed up her faith by hiding the Hebrew spies and leading them to a safe path.
What got Obama elected in the first place was not just his impassioned speeches but the fact that he was not a member of the commanding party that failed to act for the people (instead the corporate elite) as the economy tanked. While Obama will always be remembered as a great orator and even the president that passed health-care reform and took down bin Laden, if he does not inspire Congress to act in a way that produces tangible economic results — i.e., jobs — that can be listed 14 months from now, Obama’s reelection campaign might be dead on arrival.
Of course, the reality is that neither Congress nor the president really controls jobs or the economy. But as Obama’s renewed urgency suggests, that fact doesn’t mean anything to the American voters come Election Day. Likely, the only thing that will matter then is whether they — and their laid-off neighbors and their kids who just graduated from college and their friends from church whose companies went out of business — are working.
Great article. Mr. President needs to make a move. It’s getting late in the game and you know the Repubs are going to do everything in their power to ensure he’s not successful so he needs to go hard and do whatever he can do.
WOW! Excellent commentary! I, like many Smericans, am tired and soured on the election process. We have got to stop just talking about what’s wrong and start holding these “elected” officials’ feet to the perverbial fire. We’ve got to convince the bulk of America to start emailing, calling, and writing our congressmen & women, not just once or during the election cycle, but weekly, bi-weekly, all the time. They only get to hear from the ones that don’t think about anything but themselves. They seem to ignore or forget that they serve us and not the other way around.
Wink,
You are so right…We have to stay in contact with these people, or they will think we don’t really care, giving them a license to do anything they want to do…which is probably part of the reason why we have gotten into certain situations in the first place…
Well said! Certainly our president must continue in this spirit of boldness, particularly in holding Congress accountable in moving forward with this bill and dispensing with partisan nonsense. Indeed, the wealthy also need to pay their fair share, as even Buffett acknowledged in his recent op-ed in the New York Times. In the meantime, let us hold those we voted in accountable as well.
Great commentary! As a middle school history teacher, I must remind everyone of a basic civics lesson. While the majority public wants to blame the POTUS for our waning economy, we must remember that our government was founded on a system of checks and balances. The Executive Branch and the Legislative Branch have to cooperate in order to make change happen.
Very nice commentary. I thought the President did an excellent job of outlining his plan and presenting it in a way that is easy to understand… especially since the majority of his live audience seems to have trouble understanding truth and anything that makes sense simply because the President is the one saying it.
Yes, Obama spoke in plain English….no one can accuse him of speaking like a professor or as an elitist as some have done in the past…personally, I don’ think anything is wrong with speaking as if you have been educated which is not the same as being an elitist by any means…but with this president, everything, including his very birth, is up for debate…