White House denies jobs ‘sideshow’
‘It’s irrelevant, this is small stuff’:
US: The White House Thursday denied President Barack Obama’s latest
row with Republicans proved he will struggle to pass a major new jobs
program, describing the clash as an irrelevant sideshow.
Obama’s decision to back down Wednesday over an issue as mundane as
the timing of a major economic address before a joint session of
Congress next week cast new scrutiny on his diminished political heft in
the US capital.
New polls meanwhile showing Americans sour on his leadership and
management of the economy further raised the stakes for Obama’s new plan
— possibly his last chance to revive the economy before his 2012
reelection bid fires up.
White House spokesman Jay Carney said Wednesday’s political shoving
match over the date of the speech with Republican House Speaker John
Boehner left most Americans cold, as they look to Washington to lift
their economic gloom.
The sideshows don’t matter. The economy matters. The American people
matter. Jobs matter,” Carney said. Though the White House took the high
ground, the episode revived questions aired during a July debt standoff
over whether Obama’s penchant for compromise leads to him getting rolled
over by Republicans.
Obama offered a bold gambit on Wednesday by asking Boehner to host a
rare joint session of Congress to debut his new economic plan on
September 7 — the same night as a Republican presidential candidates
debate in California. The White House insisted the timing was
“coincidental” though few Washington observers buy that, reasoning that
the president wanted to steal the spotlight from candidates vying to
turf him out of office.
But Boehner refused to budge, and in what Capitol Hill sources said
was an unprecedented move, said Obama should speak the next night
instead.
The White House insisted Boehner’s camp had raised no prior
objections to the date, but the speaker’s aides said he had never given
the go-ahead as the recriminations flew between the two sides.
Knowing a president lacks the authority to simply show up at Congress
and give a speech, Obama eventually relented and agreed to Boehner’s
date of September 8.
Boehner spokesman Brendan Buck filled in the last blank late
Thursday, saying that the speaker had “respectfully invited” the
president “at his request” to address lawmakers at 7:00 p.m. (2300 GMT)
on Thursday. The president is promising measures that in a normal
political climate would attract bipartisan support, which will likely
include a proposal to extend a payroll tax cut and invest in job
creation infrastructure projects. AFP |