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Hawaii News

New measures from Obama look to build on economic momentum

President Barack Obama, his two-week vacation in Hawaii over, will travel to Michigan, Arizona and Tennessee this week to draw a connection between actions his administration took early in his presidency and increasingly positive economic trends in sectors such as manufacturing and housing.

Officials say he will also offer specific new proposals — some that he’ll pursue with Congress and others he will implement by his own authority — that are intended to build on that progress, particularly for the middle class.

It’s an approach that upends the traditional White House script to start a year, when new policy proposals are usually reserved for the president’s annual address to Congress. His State of the Union address on Jan. 20 will be his seventh since taking office, but his first before a Congress entirely in GOP hands.

But the White House is eager to sustain momentum it says started to build after November with major actions on immigration and Cuba as Obama began what he calls the "fourth quarter" of his presidency.

The new Congress convenes Tuesday, with a new Republican Senate majority and the largest GOP House majority since 1931. Though incoming Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has pledged to seek common ground with the president on areas such as trade and tax reform, Senate Republicans’ first order of business will be to advance legislation to approve the Keystone XL pipeline.

"If the president is willing to work with us, we’ll have a real chance to address our nation’s most pressing challenges," Rep. Rodney Davis, R-Ill. said in the Republicans’ weekly address.

But behind the scenes, Republican leaders are planning new efforts to take on the Affordable Care Act and target other administration actions on the environment and immigration.

The White House sees an immediate political opportunity there and hopes to contrast a president offering new initiatives that build on past successes as the Republicans try to undo them.

In the Detroit area on Wednesday, Obama will discuss the auto industry, which has boomed since the administration’s 2009 rescue plan. He’ll then return to Phoenix, where he first announced steps to address the post-recession foreclosure crisis, to announce new steps to boost homeownership.

On Friday he will be joined by Vice President Joe Biden in Tennessee to discuss programs to expand access to college and worker training programs.

"The president is eager to get to work, and looks forward to working with the new Congress on policies that will make sure middle-class Americans are sharing in the economic recovery," White House spokesman Eric Schultz said. "There are a number of issues we could make progress on, but the president is clear that he will not let this Congress undo important protections gained, particularly in areas of health care, Wall Street reform and the environment."

The new approach outlined by White House officials is the kind of effort that many congressional Democrats said they were hoping for as the party tries to regroup after major midterm losses.

"They’ve been too reluctant in my view to promote the good things that they’re doing," Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., said in an interview last week. "They get sometimes frustrated when their friends and colleagues don’t go out and promote (them). But he’s got the biggest bully pulpit that anyone has, and it’s much more likely that he will have supporters promoting the positives if he himself does it."

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