Sept. 8 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama heads to the home turf of his 
Republican congressional adversaries tonight to lay out a choice for voters as 
much as a plan for lawmakers. 
 
 His address to a rare joint session of Congress on jobs, the top concern of 
voters as the 2012 election campaign gets under way, will frame the 
government’s response as one of either action or delay on reviving the economy. 
On taxes, the signature Republican issue, he will cast himself as a champion of 
relief for the middle class rather than for the wealthy. 
 
 Obama will propose a more than $300 billion stimulus plan in the 
Republican-controlled House chamber as job growth stalls and the unemployment 
rate hovers above 9 percent. His job- approval ratings are scraping new lows as 
public doubts about his stewardship of the economy rise. 
 
 “The president has had a difficult summer,” said Democratic political 
consultant Tad Devine, a senior strategist for the Al Gore and John Kerry 
presidential campaigns. “All of the polling is heading in the wrong direction. 
He needs a circuit breaker.” 
 
 White House officials anticipate congressional Republicans will resist much of 
the president’s jobs package, which includes payroll-tax cuts, money to build 
roads and renovate schools, and direct aid to state and local governments to 
stem layoffs of teachers and emergency workers. They expect the tax-cut 
proposals to have the best chance of passage. 
 
 Blame for Inaction 
 
 The speech will offer Obama a chance to both make a case to the public for his 
proposals and prepare the way to blame Republicans for inaction. 
 
 “He can later say they weren’t passed because of obstruction,” Devine said. 
“That’s an easy case for people to understand. You’ve got to put the benchmark 
down so they can remember it.” 
 
 Republican leaders criticized early reports of the jobs plan, saying it 
resembled Obama’s $830 billion economic-stimulus package of 2009. That 
legislation also combined tax cuts, infrastructure spending and aid to state 
and local governments, and Republicans say it didn’t work. 
 
 “If government spending were the answer, we’d be in the middle of a boom by 
now,” said Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. “We’ve been on 
a spending spree for the last two years.” 
 
 Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney laid out an economic-recovery 
proposal in a Sept. 6 speech that included many ideas favored by his party: a 
reduction in U.S. corporate taxes, fewer federal regulations, opposition to the 
president’s health-care overhaul, and the passage of new trade agreements. 
 
 Laying the Groundwork 
 
 Still, in the run-up to the speech Obama and his aides laid the groundwork for 
their case that Republicans are also accountable for the economy, arguing that 
the measures he will offer have had bipartisan support in the past. 
 
 White House Press Secretary Jay Carney predicted yesterday that members of 
Congress would “get an earful” from constituents if they don’t act on the 
package before the lawmakers’ end-of-the-year recess. 
 
 The decision to deliver the address to a joint session underscores the shared 
responsibility for the economy held by congressional Republicans, whose 
standing in opinion polls is lower than Obama’s. The cutaway video of 
Republican lawmakers’ reactions during the speech is likely to provide hints of 
tension, and the air of confrontation adds drama to the event. 
 
 Presidents traditionally reserve the forum for State of the Union addresses 
and for national crises. Besides his annual State of the Union speeches and an 
address delivered just after he took office, Obama spoke to a joint session 
only once before, in September 2009, when he was prodding lawmakers to act on 
his proposal to revamp U.S. health insurance. 
 
 Payroll Tax Cut 
 
 A centerpiece of his new jobs plan is extending a temporary 2-percentage-point 
cut in the portion of payroll taxes paid by workers that’s set to expire on 
Dec. 31. He’s likely to extend the tax break to employers as well. Obama has 
signaled he will challenge Republicans to show the same commitment to 
preserving a tax reduction that benefits middle-class families as they have to 
ones that go to higher-income households. 
 
 “You say you’re the party of tax cuts?” Obama said in a Sept. 5 speech in 
Detroit. “Well then, prove you’ll fight just as hard for tax cuts for 
middle-class families as you do for oil companies and the most affluent 
Americans.” 
 
 House Majority Leader Eric Cantor yesterday left open the possibility he might 
accept Obama’s proposal to maintain the payroll-tax cut. 
 
 “It is something I supported in the past” and “will be part of the discussions 
ongoing,” the Virginia Republican told reporters in Washington. 
 
 Plummeting in Polls 
 
 Other Republicans expressed reservations. 
 
 Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions, the top Republican on the Senate Budget 
Committee, said extending the payroll-tax cut would be “a difficult thing” 
because “you don’t pay it if you’re not working.” 
 
 Public opinion of Obama as well as Congress has plummeted to new lows since a 
partisan fight in July and August over raising the government’s debt limit that 
took the country to the edge of default. 
 
 Obama’s monthly job-approval rating in a Gallup Poll dropped to the lowest of 
his presidency, with 41 percent of U.S. adults saying they approved of his 
overall performance. 
 
 Concern over the economy also has increased as growth weakened during the 
first half of the year to its slowest pace since the recovery began, and market 
pessimism has risen over the European debt crisis. In August, U.S. employers 
added no new net jobs, the worst monthly results for payroll growth since 
September 2010. 
 
 Stocks Rebound 
 
 Still, stocks rebounded from a four-day global slump that drove valuations to 
the lowest level since 2009 as news of Obama’s plans fueled speculation the 
economic stimulus would boost growth. The MSCI All-Country World Index surged 
2.8 and the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index jumped 2.9 percent at 4 p.m. in New 
York yesterday. 
 
 Recent signs of economic weakness have led private economists to raise 
forecasts for the unemployment rate next year. The median forecast for 
unemployment during next year’s fourth quarter, when the presidential election 
will be held, is 8.5 percent, according to 51 economists surveyed by Bloomberg 
News Aug. 2 through Aug. 10. 
 
 Since World War II, no U.S. president has won re-election with a jobless rate 
above 6 percent, with the exception of Ronald Reagan, who faced 7.2 percent 
unemployment on Election Day in 1984. The jobless rate under Reagan had come 
down more than 3 percentage points during the prior two years. 
 
 Credit Downgrade 
 
 After partisan disputes dragged out negotiations over the debt limit, Standard 
& Poor’s lowered the U.S.’s credit rating to AA+ from AAA on Aug. 5. The rating 
firm said the government is becoming “less stable, less effective and less 
predictable.” 
 
 Even so, the government’s borrowing costs fell to record lows as Treasuries 
rallied. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell from 2.56 
percent on Aug. 5 to 2.02 percent as of 9:32 a.m. today in Tokyo. 
 
 Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings have affirmed their top rankings 
on the U.S. 
 
 To contact the reporter on this story: Mike Dorning in Washington at 
[email protected] . 
 
 To contact the editor responsible for this story: Mark Silva at 
[email protected] 

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