Obama focus on more jobs needed in US

WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama and Republicans are headed for a fight over deficit reduction and spending cuts despite the president's efforts to set a conciliatory tone in his State of the Union speech.

Obama, with an eye on his 2012 re-election bid, used his Tuesday speech to further a move to the political centre that he was forced to make after Republicans routed Democrats in congressional elections in November.

Obama offered some potentially appealing proposals to Republicans - a corporate tax cut, a retooling of the tax code and an end to pet spending projects relied on by many lawmakers.

In a bid to show he has fiscal discipline, he proposed a five-year freeze in some domestic spending, which he said would cut $400billion (R2,8trillion) from budget deficits over a decade, a move applauded by US debt and stock traders.

To Republican calls for even deeper cuts, Obama said, "Let's make sure what we're cutting is really excess weight."

Republicans seeking $100billion (R706billion) in cuts this year called Obama's plan too little, too late.

"A partial freeze is inadequate at a time when we're borrowing 41 cents of every dollar we spend, and the administration is begging for another increase in the debt limit," said House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner.

"There's got to be some kind of absolute iron-clad path to getting (spending) down," Republican senator John McCain said yesterday.

Obama sought to reassure Americans weary of stubbornly high 9,4percent unemployment, fearful of rising debt, dismayed at vicious political rhetoric and worried the US is falling behind economic powers such as China and India.

"At stake is whether new jobs and industries take root in this country, or somewhere else. It's whether the hard work and industry of our people is rewarded. It's whether we sustain the leadership that has made America not just a place on a map but a light to the world," Obama said.

Obama said the economy is growing again but more needs to be done. He called for a job-creating "Sputnik moment" fed by new spending in research and education like the 1950s space race unleashed when the Soviets launched the Sputnik satellite.

"Yes, the world has changed," he said. "The competition for jobs is real. But this shouldn't discourage us. It should challenge us."

The president headed to Wisconsin yesterday to drive home his message of innovation and job creation, visiting a renewable energy technology.

The challenge will be how he finances investment projects for future growth while addressing a dire fiscal outlook. On this Obama gave no hint, leaving details to his budget due in February.

It will be no easy task. The spending freeze would do little to alter a $1,4trillion deficit and the $14trillion national debt that Republicans vowed to slash.

Moreover, the freeze would not apply to social security and medicare - at the heart of the US's deficit problem.

Still, analysts praised the cautious start. Robert Tipp, chief investment strategist at Prudential Fixed Income, called it an important shift toward fiscal restraint that debt markets need to see.

"It's a big positive even with these baby steps toward that direction," he said.

Michelle Sharron, 47, a writer in the software industry in San Francisco, said: "This is definitely a lesson in compromise, but I think it is the hard reality of getting things done. Outrage is easy. Compromise is hard."

The speech took place in a changed atmosphere on Capitol Hill. Republicans enjoy increased power in Congress and Obama was forced to take account of that by emphasising areas of agreement.

But a civil tone was evident, with many Democrats and Republicans shaking hands and sitting together instead of in separate blocs. It was a show of solidarity with Democratic representative Gabrielle Giffords, who was shot in the head in a January 8 mass shooting in Arizona.

Obama hopes his State of the Union speech will build his approval ratings, which got a boost from his statesman-like response to the Tucson killings and his surprise legislative successes after the bruising mid-term elections.

Obama earned warm applause in the 61-minute address when he said it was time to get the US fiscal house in order.

He called for closing tax loopholes and using the savings to lower the corporate tax rate for the first time in 25 years.

He vowed to pursue trade deals with Panama and Colombia similar to a recent pact with South Korea.

But in a proposal Republicans could be expected to fight, Obama backed an end to tax subsidies for oil companies to help pay for clean energy innovation.

He set a goal of having 80percent of US electricity production to come from clean energy sources, nuclear, solar, wind and "clean coal," by 2035.

Obama also made clear he opposed permanently extending tax cuts for wealthiest Americans in the top 2percent of income after agreeing to a two-year extension in a December .

Republicans welcomed the more centrist tone. "Overall it sounds to me like the president's changed the tone and the rhetoric from the first two years," said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell. "And I think that's an appropriate adjustment in the wake of last year's election."

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