Obama: Won't wait for legislation to advance 2014 priorities
http://news.yahoo.com/obama-won-39-t-wait-legislation-advance-2014-162325560.html

President Barack Obama speaks
to the media before meeting his Cabinet meeting, Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2014,
in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington. From left are,
Education Secretary Arne Duncan, and Health and Human Services Secretary
Kathleen Sebelius. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
By Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - President Barack Obama said on Tuesday he would not wait for
Congress to pass legislation to advance his policy priorities this year
and said he was "getting close" to finishing a review of U.S.
surveillance practices - to be unveiled on Friday.
Obama,
speaking to reporters during a cabinet meeting at the White House,
foreshadowed his upcoming State of the Union address and what appeared
to be a new messaging strategy by emphasizing his ability to take
executive actions without approval from lawmakers.
"We
are not just going to be waiting for legislation in order to make sure
that we're providing Americans the kind of help that they need," he
said.
"I've got a pen, and
I've got a phone. And I can use that pen to sign executive orders and
take executive actions ... and I've got a phone that allows me to
convene Americans from every walk of life," he said.
Obama
began last year with high hopes of making progress on gun control,
immigration reform, and other issues after giving an inaugural address
that rallied his base and set an aggressive tone for his second term.
But
the year concluded with few legislative achievements. His gun control
efforts largely failed and an immigration reform bill passed in the
Senate but stalled in the House of Representatives.
White
House officials, while referring to 2014 as a "year of action," have
already played down the prospect of getting a lot of laws passed and
told reporters that they would not measure the year's success by the
administration's list of legislative victories.
Obama
again listed immigration reform as a priority for the year. He will
need Congress to turn his goals on that issue into law. The president
also emphasized his goal of getting the U.S. economy to recover faster.
"The
message to my cabinet - and that will be amplified in our State of the
Union - is that we need all hands on deck to build on the recovery that
we're already seeing. The economy is improving, but it could be
improving even faster," Obama said.
"And
I am absolutely confident that in 2014, if we're all working in the
same direction and not worrying so much about political points but
worrying much more about getting the job done, that we can see a lot of
improvement this year," he said.
Republican
speaker of the House John Boehner, whose support Obama will need for
the administration's legislative priorities, said the president had lost
focus on the economy.
"If the
president's serious about wanting to improve the prospects for our
economy - and higher wages and better jobs - all he has to do is pick up
the phone and call Democrat leaders in the Senate and ask them to move
one of these dozens of bills that we've sent over there that would help
put Americans back to work," Boehner said.
On
a separate issue, Obama is scheduled to make a speech on Friday
outlining his decisions on how to reform controversial surveillance
activities by the National Security Agency that were made public through
revelations by former U.S. contractor Edward Snowden.
Asked if he had finished his NSA review, Obama said: "It's getting close."
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