Reporting from Washington— When he accepted the Democratic presidential nomination, Barack Obama made a prediction breathtaking in its ambition: Americans would look back at that night in Denver as the moment when "the planet began to heal" and the country began to provide "good jobs to the jobless."
Obama will deliver another speech to the nation Thursday, with his sights significantly lower and the scope sharply curtailed.
He'll roll out a new plan to revive the economy: a mix of tax credits and targeted spending increases for school renovation and job training amounting to about $300 billion. Obama bills it as a sensible proposal that Republicans could conceivably endorse.
Some economists familiar with the plan believe it could move the needle on unemployment over the next few months.
If Congress rejects it, some of Obama's aides believe it could move the political needle in their direction. A defeated plan, they hope, could become a political trap for Republicans, allowing Obama to portray the GOP as so intent on foiling the White House that they would sabotage economic progress.
"The president will present a meaningful, responsible set of ideas to create jobs and grow the economy," a senior White House advisor said. "The Republican Congress will have a choice whether they're going to work with the president to achieve those goals or play politics. If they choose to play politics, the president will go to the country and explain who's stopping progress and why."
But in either case — as an economic proposal that might improve the jobs outlook or as a political stratagem that might help his reelection effort — Thursday's speech is a long step from the vaulting ambitions that accompanied Obama's rise.
That shift underscores the extent to which his options have narrowed.
Obama can't run for reelection as a transformational president: The country has lost nearly 2.5 million jobs in the last three years and unemployment stands at 9.1%. His healthcare overhaul could be undone by the courts before it even fully takes effect.
Nor can he come out with a proposal that would make a major dent in unemployment right away. That would require another round of stimulus, a dirty word in today's political vocabulary.
So he's left with a jobs plan of modest proportions whose chief political value is that Republicans might look obstinate for opposing it.
But Republicans see Obama's moves as signs of weak leadership. A once-audacious politician now looks timid in the face of wrenching crises, Republicans contend.
"His campaign back in 2008 sold everyone this grand theory of a transformational presidency," said Kevin Madden, a Republican strategist who worked for former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney that year. "But what we're left with right now is just a conventional politician doing whatever it takes to get himself reelected."
But the low-key pragmatism that the White House has attempted to follow — searching for proposals that just might win Republican support — also angers many Democratic loyalists. They say that in the face of divided government, Obama isn't aiming high enough.
Many Democrats expect Republicans to oppose Obama no matter what he does, so they'd prefer that he demand a plan that would take a bolder approach to creating jobs. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II (D-Mo.), in a conversation earlier in the week with White House Chief of Staff William Daley, gave a football analogy. If the player is going to get a penalty no matter what he does, why not deliver a hard hit?
"The president's going to get hit when he introduces his proposal," Cleaver said, recounting the conversation, "so he might as well introduce something big and impactful, because they're going to come after him anyway."
Cleaver also said the president must campaign hard for the package and take the fight directly to Republicans.
On that point, Obama may accommodate. Less than 24 hours after his speech, he'll talk up the new jobs plan in Richmond, Va., the political turf of Republican House Majority Leader Eric Cantor.
White House officials maintain that the president didn't hold back on his proposal. Obama crafted a practical plan not hemmed in by political considerations, said White House Press Secretary Jay Carney.
Reporting from Washington— When he accepted the Democratic presidential nomination, Barack Obama made a prediction breathtaking in its ambition: Americans would look back at that night in Denver as the moment when "the planet began to heal" and the country began to provide "good jobs to the jobless."
Obama will deliver another speech to the nation Thursday, with his sights significantly lower and the scope sharply curtailed.
He'll roll out a new plan to revive the economy: a mix of tax credits and targeted spending increases for school renovation and job training amounting to about $300 billion. Obama bills it as a sensible proposal that Republicans could conceivably endorse.
Some economists familiar with the plan believe it could move the needle on unemployment over the next few months.
If Congress rejects it, some of Obama's aides believe it could move the political needle in their direction. A defeated plan, they hope, could become a political trap for Republicans, allowing Obama to portray the GOP as so intent on foiling the White House that they would sabotage economic progress.
"The president will present a meaningful, responsible set of ideas to create jobs and grow the economy," a senior White House advisor said. "The Republican Congress will have a choice whether they're going to work with the president to achieve those goals or play politics. If they choose to play politics, the president will go to the country and explain who's stopping progress and why."
But in either case — as an economic proposal that might improve the jobs outlook or as a political stratagem that might help his reelection effort — Thursday's speech is a long step from the vaulting ambitions that accompanied Obama's rise.
That shift underscores the extent to which his options have narrowed.
Obama can't run for reelection as a transformational president: The country has lost nearly 2.5 million jobs in the last three years and unemployment stands at 9.1%. His healthcare overhaul could be undone by the courts before it even fully takes effect.
Nor can he come out with a proposal that would make a major dent in unemployment right away. That would require another round of stimulus, a dirty word in today's political vocabulary.
So he's left with a jobs plan of modest proportions whose chief political value is that Republicans might look obstinate for opposing it.
But Republicans see Obama's moves as signs of weak leadership. A once-audacious politician now looks timid in the face of wrenching crises, Republicans contend.
"His campaign back in 2008 sold everyone this grand theory of a transformational presidency," said Kevin Madden, a Republican strategist who worked for former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney that year. "But what we're left with right now is just a conventional politician doing whatever it takes to get himself reelected."
But the low-key pragmatism that the White House has attempted to follow — searching for proposals that just might win Republican support — also angers many Democratic loyalists. They say that in the face of divided government, Obama isn't aiming high enough.
Many Democrats expect Republicans to oppose Obama no matter what he does, so they'd prefer that he demand a plan that would take a bolder approach to creating jobs. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II (D-Mo.), in a conversation earlier in the week with White House Chief of Staff William Daley, gave a football analogy. If the player is going to get a penalty no matter what he does, why not deliver a hard hit?
"The president's going to get hit when he introduces his proposal," Cleaver said, recounting the conversation, "so he might as well introduce something big and impactful, because they're going to come after him anyway."
Cleaver also said the president must campaign hard for the package and take the fight directly to Republicans.
On that point, Obama may accommodate. Less than 24 hours after his speech, he'll talk up the new jobs plan in Richmond, Va., the political turf of Republican House Majority Leader Eric Cantor.
White House officials maintain that the president didn't hold back on his proposal. Obama crafted a practical plan not hemmed in by political considerations, said White House Press Secretary Jay Carney.
Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times
Some economists familiar with the plan believe it could move the needle on unemployment over the next few months.
If Congress rejects it, some of Obama's aides believe it could move the political needle in their direction. A defeated plan, they hope, could become a political trap for Republicans, allowing Obama to portray the GOP as so intent on foiling the White House that they would sabotage economic progress.
"The president will present a meaningful, responsible set of ideas to create jobs and grow the economy," a senior White House advisor said. "The Republican Congress will have a choice whether they're going to work with the president to achieve those goals or play politics. If they choose to play politics, the president will go to the country and explain who's stopping progress and why."
But in either case — as an economic proposal that might improve the jobs outlook or as a political stratagem that might help his reelection effort — Thursday's speech is a long step from the vaulting ambitions that accompanied Obama's rise.
That shift underscores the extent to which his options have narrowed.
Obama can't run for reelection as a transformational president: The country has lost nearly 2.5 million jobs in the last three years and unemployment stands at 9.1%. His healthcare overhaul could be undone by the courts before it even fully takes effect.
Nor can he come out with a proposal that would make a major dent in unemployment right away. That would require another round of stimulus, a dirty word in today's political vocabulary.
So he's left with a jobs plan of modest proportions whose chief political value is that Republicans might look obstinate for opposing it.
But Republicans see Obama's moves as signs of weak leadership. A once-audacious politician now looks timid in the face of wrenching crises, Republicans contend.
"His campaign back in 2008 sold everyone this grand theory of a transformational presidency," said Kevin Madden, a Republican strategist who worked for former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney that year. "But what we're left with right now is just a conventional politician doing whatever it takes to get himself reelected."
But the low-key pragmatism that the White House has attempted to follow — searching for proposals that just might win Republican support — also angers many Democratic loyalists. They say that in the face of divided government, Obama isn't aiming high enough.
Many Democrats expect Republicans to oppose Obama no matter what he does, so they'd prefer that he demand a plan that would take a bolder approach to creating jobs. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II (D-Mo.), in a conversation earlier in the week with White House Chief of Staff William Daley, gave a football analogy. If the player is going to get a penalty no matter what he does, why not deliver a hard hit?
"The president's going to get hit when he introduces his proposal," Cleaver said, recounting the conversation, "so he might as well introduce something big and impactful, because they're going to come after him anyway."
Cleaver also said the president must campaign hard for the package and take the fight directly to Republicans.
On that point, Obama may accommodate. Less than 24 hours after his speech, he'll talk up the new jobs plan in Richmond, Va., the political turf of Republican House Majority Leader Eric Cantor.
White House officials maintain that the president didn't hold back on his proposal. Obama crafted a practical plan not hemmed in by political considerations, said White House Press Secretary Jay Carney.
Reporting from Washington— When he accepted the Democratic presidential nomination, Barack Obama made a prediction breathtaking in its ambition: Americans would look back at that night in Denver as the moment when "the planet began to heal" and the country began to provide "good jobs to the jobless."
Obama will deliver another speech to the nation Thursday, with his sights significantly lower and the scope sharply curtailed.
He'll roll out a new plan to revive the economy: a mix of tax credits and targeted spending increases for school renovation and job training amounting to about $300 billion. Obama bills it as a sensible proposal that Republicans could conceivably endorse.
Some economists familiar with the plan believe it could move the needle on unemployment over the next few months.
If Congress rejects it, some of Obama's aides believe it could move the political needle in their direction. A defeated plan, they hope, could become a political trap for Republicans, allowing Obama to portray the GOP as so intent on foiling the White House that they would sabotage economic progress.
"The president will present a meaningful, responsible set of ideas to create jobs and grow the economy," a senior White House advisor said. "The Republican Congress will have a choice whether they're going to work with the president to achieve those goals or play politics. If they choose to play politics, the president will go to the country and explain who's stopping progress and why."
But in either case — as an economic proposal that might improve the jobs outlook or as a political stratagem that might help his reelection effort — Thursday's speech is a long step from the vaulting ambitions that accompanied Obama's rise.
That shift underscores the extent to which his options have narrowed.
Obama can't run for reelection as a transformational president: The country has lost nearly 2.5 million jobs in the last three years and unemployment stands at 9.1%. His healthcare overhaul could be undone by the courts before it even fully takes effect.
Nor can he come out with a proposal that would make a major dent in unemployment right away. That would require another round of stimulus, a dirty word in today's political vocabulary.
So he's left with a jobs plan of modest proportions whose chief political value is that Republicans might look obstinate for opposing it.
But Republicans see Obama's moves as signs of weak leadership. A once-audacious politician now looks timid in the face of wrenching crises, Republicans contend.
"His campaign back in 2008 sold everyone this grand theory of a transformational presidency," said Kevin Madden, a Republican strategist who worked for former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney that year. "But what we're left with right now is just a conventional politician doing whatever it takes to get himself reelected."
But the low-key pragmatism that the White House has attempted to follow — searching for proposals that just might win Republican support — also angers many Democratic loyalists. They say that in the face of divided government, Obama isn't aiming high enough.
Many Democrats expect Republicans to oppose Obama no matter what he does, so they'd prefer that he demand a plan that would take a bolder approach to creating jobs. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II (D-Mo.), in a conversation earlier in the week with White House Chief of Staff William Daley, gave a football analogy. If the player is going to get a penalty no matter what he does, why not deliver a hard hit?
"The president's going to get hit when he introduces his proposal," Cleaver said, recounting the conversation, "so he might as well introduce something big and impactful, because they're going to come after him anyway."
Cleaver also said the president must campaign hard for the package and take the fight directly to Republicans.
On that point, Obama may accommodate. Less than 24 hours after his speech, he'll talk up the new jobs plan in Richmond, Va., the political turf of Republican House Majority Leader Eric Cantor.
White House officials maintain that the president didn't hold back on his proposal. Obama crafted a practical plan not hemmed in by political considerations, said White House Press Secretary Jay Carney.
Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times
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