President Barack Obama Loses his Hyper-promoted "Jobs Bill" in the Democrat Controlled U.S. Senate |
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The loss was huge, his effort was great: And just what will President Barack Obama do now to regain the essential momentum to retake the campaign trail and secure his re-election?
In all of the President's supreme efforts to retain the White House with his 2014 re-election bid, the roughly 400 billion dollar Jobs Bill was his centerpiece in his ongoing campaign strategy that Republican politicians don't care about the problem of job creation.
At the core of this conundrum is that President Obama, and the majority of Democrat elected officials, at all levels of government, believe that the government should be the catalyst to create jobs. At similar levels of governing, Republican elected leaders believe that the private sector is primarily responsible for job creation: The marketplace that exists in any capitalist society creates jobs.
It appears that there is a severe impasse between the two factions.
The distinct problem for the President now is that there are a growing number of Democrats that no longer believe that Mr. Obama is correct in his application of a more socialistic approach to dealing with this economy.
At the heart of those ambitions is the Class Warfare component of his long re-election campaign. To some extent it is paying off.
The leading Democrats in Washington, DC have long been covetous of the Tea Party organization, which aligned itself with the Republicans to help them win so many seats in congress in the 2010 election cycle. President Obama's overt Class Warfare component of his enduring re-election campaign has lent its political philosophy to incubate the current "Occupy Wall Street" message, which is most incongruous at present; however, the galvanized talking points that are now taking shape: 1% / 99% and "fat-cat bankers" are evil, are straight out of Candidate Obama's constantly-campaigning playbook. It is apparent, by an examination of how leading Democrats in Washington, DC and their minions are now embracing the "Occupy Wall Street" movement, that they believe these occupier's can be their version of the "Tea Party."
The one problem with the trappings of constantly keeping in campaign mode, and in Candidate Obama's campaign sphere all Conservative Republicans are fair game, one is not paying close attention to their elected job at hand - governing as president.
Shortly after the outcome of the vote in the United
States Senate, which needed 60 votes to continue by avoiding cloture, Utah Senator Orin Hatch, in an interview with CNBC's co-anchors, Simon Hobbs and Melissa Lee, summed it up this way:
Senator Orin hatch: "I want you to know other Democrats would have voted against the plan had it passed cloture at that time. The Democrats didn't support it. They know it is a political game. When is the president going to sit down and work on trying to come up with language that would help jobs?"
The full interview with Senator Hatch is shown here below:
In all of the President's supreme efforts to retain the White House with his 2014 re-election bid, the roughly 400 billion dollar Jobs Bill was his centerpiece in his ongoing campaign strategy that Republican politicians don't care about the problem of job creation.
At the core of this conundrum is that President Obama, and the majority of Democrat elected officials, at all levels of government, believe that the government should be the catalyst to create jobs. At similar levels of governing, Republican elected leaders believe that the private sector is primarily responsible for job creation: The marketplace that exists in any capitalist society creates jobs.
It appears that there is a severe impasse between the two factions.
The distinct problem for the President now is that there are a growing number of Democrats that no longer believe that Mr. Obama is correct in his application of a more socialistic approach to dealing with this economy.
At the heart of those ambitions is the Class Warfare component of his long re-election campaign. To some extent it is paying off.
The leading Democrats in Washington, DC have long been covetous of the Tea Party organization, which aligned itself with the Republicans to help them win so many seats in congress in the 2010 election cycle. President Obama's overt Class Warfare component of his enduring re-election campaign has lent its political philosophy to incubate the current "Occupy Wall Street" message, which is most incongruous at present; however, the galvanized talking points that are now taking shape: 1% / 99% and "fat-cat bankers" are evil, are straight out of Candidate Obama's constantly-campaigning playbook. It is apparent, by an examination of how leading Democrats in Washington, DC and their minions are now embracing the "Occupy Wall Street" movement, that they believe these occupier's can be their version of the "Tea Party."
The one problem with the trappings of constantly keeping in campaign mode, and in Candidate Obama's campaign sphere all Conservative Republicans are fair game, one is not paying close attention to their elected job at hand - governing as president.
Shortly after the outcome of the vote in the United

Utah Senator Orin Hatch
Senator Orin hatch: "I want you to know other Democrats would have voted against the plan had it passed cloture at that time. The Democrats didn't support it. They know it is a political game. When is the president going to sit down and work on trying to come up with language that would help jobs?"
The full interview with Senator Hatch is shown here below:
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