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Obama Calls for Action on Job Creation

By PHILIP ELLIOTT
,
AP
posted: 24 DAYS 5 HOURS AGO
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WASHINGTON (Dec. 3) -- President Barack Obama promised at a White House jobs forum on Thursday to take "every responsible step to accelerate job creation," including some ideas he said could be put into action quickly. He cited an expanded program to help make more U.S. homes energy-efficient as an example.
He also mentioned trade measures and possible new tax incentives among ways to stop job losses that are the worst since the 1930s.


"This has been a tough year, with a lot of uncertainty," Obama said as he wrapped up the half-day brainstorming session with more than 100 CEOs, academics, small business and union leaders and local officials. "There's no question that it's difficult out there right now,"
The president said there were some ideas that could be put to work almost immediately and other ideas that will become part of legislation for Congress to consider. He listed "moving forward on an aggressive agenda for energy efficiency and weatherization" as a prime candidate for quick action.
With unemployment levels above 10 percent, Obama said "We cannot hang back and hope for the best."
But, mindful of growing anxiety about federal deficits, Obama also tempered his upbeat talk with an acknowledgment that government resources could only go so far and that it is primarily up to the private sector to create large numbers of new jobs.
He said while he's "open to every demonstrably good idea ... we also though have to face the fact that our resources are limited."
Obama spoke a day before the Labor Department was to report unemployment figures for November. The October jobless level soared into double digits to 10.2 percent, and forecasters don't expect the November figures to be any better — and they could even be worse.
The president was expected to stay on topic with a Friday visit to economically distressed Allentown, Pa.
As Obama and participants focused on the big picture, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., was more narrowly focused, telling reporters that Congress will tap unused funds from last year's $700 billion Wall Street bailout to pay for new spending on roads and bridges and save the jobs of firefighters, teachers and other public employees.
Pelosi didn't give a price tag on the initiative.
However, congressional Democrats who have talked with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and other administration officials are eyeing up to $70 billion in funds, said a House Democratic aide who required anonymity to describe the private talks.
Obama opened the session by challenging participants to help him come up with innovative ideas for putting millions of Americans back to work, saying he wants the "biggest bang for the buck."
Then the guests broke into different working groups to brainstorm with administration officials.
Dropping in on a session on "Green Jobs of the Future," Obama said, "Not to tip our hand too much, but one of the things I would be surprised if we don't end up moving forward on is an aggressive agenda for energy efficiency and weatherization. Because that is an area where we can get it up and running relatively quickly. You don't need new technologies."
Obama told the group that clean energy was the nation's best candidate "if we are to shift from the bubble and bust model that we have. ... We want to make a push in this area."
He cited the success of the administration's Cash for Clunkers program, noting that car companies carried much of the marketing responsibilities that helped make the effort so popular. Home improvement companies like Home Depot would be key as partners in any future jobs program focusing on energy efficiencies, Obama told company chairman Frank Blake.
Obama also dropped in on a group looking at job creation tied to spending on the nation's aging infrastructure. He told participants he believed a number of "tensions" made development of green jobs difficult, including a struggle with Congress on legislation to combat global warming, the federal government's limited ability to invest the billions needed and the short-term push to create immediate jobs that might clash with long-term environmental initiatives.
The forum was kicked off by Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, who called the present unemployment rate "a stark reminder of how much we have to do." She said the administration "will not rest" until it had been successful at job creation.
Vice President Joe Biden also addressed an audience that included the CEOs of Google, Xerox, Boeing and General Electric, labor leaders and prominent economists and told them they were vital components in any strong recovery. "Without you, it will not become a reality," he said.
Perhaps unwittingly, Biden took the event a bit off-message at the start, painting a more dire picture of the nation's economy than typically heard out of the administration.
He recalled an old Ronald Reagan line that people see the problem as merely a downturn when a stranger is out of work and a recession if it's a relative who is unemployed — but a full-blown depression when they themselves lose a job.
"And it is a depression" for the nation's more than 10 million unemployed, Biden added
Obama said he'd heard some "exciting ideas and proposals" on how to spur hiring. He also said he welcomed the suggestions as well as some "good, hardheaded feedback" from some people who don't always share his views, including the former top economic adviser to 2008 Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain, economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin, who also addressed a rival GOP jobs forum earlier in the day.
Obama said. "Digging ourselves out of the hole we have dug into is not going to be easy."
Republicans invited mostly conservative economists to their competing round-table discussion on jobs.
At that session, Holtz-Eakin suggested the single best thing Obama could do to create jobs was "to reverse course on a dangerous agenda of debt-financed spending, crippling regulation, expensive mandates and intrusive government expansion."
Another person invited to the White House forum who was not a fan of the president during last year's campaign was Jim Whitehurst, the president and CEO of open source software company Red Hat.
But after sitting through his session, he was surprised how officials were asking business leaders for specifics.
"It really was trying to get some practical perspective on what of these things would work," Whitehurst said.
Whitehurst said he expected Obama would tell the nation in a speech on the economy on Tuesday that their first steps were to stabilize the economy and now the White House's economic team would focus on jobs, based on the rhetoric he heard repeatedly during his session.
Meanwhile, Obama rejected criticism from black members of Congress that he is ignoring the more dire economic problems of minorities. Blacks for instance have a much higher unemployment rate than the already high national average. The president said it would be wrong for him to focus narrowly on blacks or any other minority group.
Associated Press writers Andrew Taylor, Philip Elliott, Jennifer Loven, Joan Lowy, Brett J. Blackledge and Sam Hananel contributed to this report.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-12-03 07:04:19
COMMENTS ( 225 )
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Jodylrwebb
8:15AM Dec 3 2009 
Obama simply doesnt know what he doing.
REPLY RATING
(0 RATINGS)
 
ForgetParis04
7:51AM Dec 3 2009 
The President will hold this "jobs summit" today at the White House -- where a lot of folks who have never created a single job will talk about everything except serious and adult ideas on how to realistically create jobs.


While the complete list of attendees was not available at press time, we do know that the summiteers will include labor union members, environmentalists and liberal economists from the world of academia. The historical entirety of these groups' job creation: zero.
REPLY RATING
(4 RATINGS)
 
Flordanbach9
7:45AM Dec 3 2009 
JAN~20~09~*THE DISGRACING OF AMERICA*~AMERICA IS NOW A TOTAL DISGRACE N A DIASTER WITH THIS STUPID ,INEXPERIENCE MUSLIM BLACK CLOWN N ASHAMED N EMBARRESSED TO BE AN AMERICAN < FLY YOUR AMERICAN FLAG UPSIDE DOWN FOR THE DEATH OF AMERICA ,TAKE ALL YOUR MONEY OUT OF YOUR BANK ACCOUNTS N CLOSE ALL ACCOUNTS N DON'T BUY ANYTHING N SELL ALL YOUR STOCKS CAUSE THIS MUSLIM BLACK CLOWN IS BANKRUPTING AMERICA N PUT AMERICA IN A SEVERE ECONOMIC CRISES N CRIPPLED OUR NATION WITH NO END IN SIGHT.~AMERICA IS CLOSED N WILL STAY CLOSED UNTILL THIS MUSLIM BLACK CLOWN N ALL HIS TRASH ARE REMOVED FROM OUR WHITE HOUSE.~~REMEMBER 2010 N 2012 WILL BE THE* * CORRECTION ELECTION * * N WILL BE YOUR TURN TO ERASE THIS CATASTROPHE. ! WE THE PEOPLE ARE THE EMPLOYERS N * YOUR FIRED * YOU MUSLIM BLACK CLOWN. ! ! ! !
REPLY RATING
(2 RATINGS)
 
SarafinaYvette
7:42AM Dec 3 2009 
Only things Obama can do are have WH beer bashes and parties, WH hoops,
throw parties, and bash America before the world...while he is living his Socialist ideology and trying to foist it on us. No president has ever come into office and been allowed to blame his predecessor for everything he has screwed up in his first year. Now they want to throw out another 787 billion dollar stimulus package on us....but I don't see Obama putting his millions in the pot...or the Senatorial brown noses that drool over his every word. They are not doing without as we are.
Time to stand up and get them out of there America before they lay us down permanently.
REPLY RATING
(3 RATINGS)
 
WBEARL
7:26AM Dec 3 2009 
President Obama has successfully taken a bad situation and made it worse. I hate to tell him but the horses are gone, it's to late to close the barn door. He inherited a bad situation, few people will argue that point. How we got there is subject to interpretation. But he was elected because he claimed he had the answers to fix that problem. No one expected him to fix it over night, but no one expected him to let the problem get a lot worse. The time for blaming Bush has long since passed. Obama has now created his own mess. If he had spent as much money right away on unemployment as he did on banks, this problem would be on it's way to a solution. Instead of lending trillions to banks, with little or no guarantee of a pay back, he could have lent that money to home owners to pay off their mortgages, thus bailing out the banks by getting their money back to them and helping the working class. His plan took care of the rich investors and not the working class people. Now after millions have lost their homes and jobs he is finally getting around to looking at the working class peoples problems. For those working class people who still think the Democrats are your friends, please take a good look. Unfortunately for all of us, he has demonstrated he has no idea how to get out of this mess and his stumbling around has made it worse. The tragic end to all this is still away's off, he has 3 more years to stumble blindly around the Oval Office.
REPLY RATING
(4 RATINGS)
 
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