Jan 31 2011

Sunday Breakfast Menu, Jan. 30

Sunday's Breakfast MenuStephen Crowley/The New York Times

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton appears on five of the Sunday television talk shows to discuss tensions in Egypt as the Obama administration ponders its next move in the fragile country.

Ms. Clinton will appear on ABC’s “This Week,” CBS’s “Face the Nation,” CNN’s “State of the Union,” “Fox News Sunday,” and NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

The rest of “This Week” will be taped in Cairo, the Egyptian capital.

William M. Daley, the new White House chief of staff, makes his Sunday debut on CBS. And Mr. Obama’s senior political adviser, David Axelrod, appears on Bloomberg TV’s “Political Capital.”

CNN also has John Negroponte, the former American ambassador to the United Nations; Edward Walker, the former American ambassador to Egypt; Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona; and Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York.

The two Republican Congressional leaders — Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Representative John Boehner of Ohio — make separate appearances to react to Mr. Obama’s State of the Union address. They’ll also discuss the situation in Egypt, the national debt and the G.O.P.’s agenda. Mr. McConnell appears on NBC, while Mr. Boehner appears on Fox News.

Mike Murphy, a Republican strategist, and former Representative Harold Ford, Jr., a Democrat who had represented Tennessee, participate in the NBC roundtable discussion.

On C-Span, Representative Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, the chairman of the House Oversight subcommittee responsible for federal bailout programs, appears on “Newsmakers.” Later, former President George W. Bush takes questions on “Q&A.”

Mr. Obama’s domestic policy adviser, Melody Barnes, is a guest on TVOne’s “Washington Watch,” along with Delegate Eleanor Holmes-Norton, Democrat of the District of Columbia.

President Mauricio Funes of El Salvador appears on Univision’s “Al Punto” to talk about his pending meeting with Mr. Obama. The White House announced Tuesday that Mr. Obama would stop in San Salvador in late March during his five-day swing through Latin America.

David Cameron, the prime minister of Britain, appears on CNN’s “GPS.”

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Jan 27 2011

Brown to Deliver State of the State on Monday

SACRAMENTO – Since his election in November, Gov. Jerry Brown has made few public appearances: among them, the release of his budget, his inauguration and some chance encounters with reporters as he moved through the halls of the state Capitol. Mr. Brown’s aides say he has been consumed with coming up with a plan to close the state’s $25 billion budget shortfall; whatever the case, the contrast with his predecessor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, has been notable.

But Mr. Brown is about to make another high-profile public appearance. Officials said he would deliver the State of the State address here on Monday at 5 p.m.

The State of the State, as Mr. Brown has been saying pretty consistently since taking office, is hardly good. But watch for him to use this speech to press the plan he unveiled two weeks ago to close the state’s massive budget gap and to begin a campaign to persuade voters to approve, in an initiative in June, a five-year extension of tax surcharges due to expire this year. As it is, Mr. Brown’s budget includes $12.5 billion in spending cuts. Should voters fail to approve the extension of the taxes — a distinct possibility — that would mean another $12 billion in cuts, almost certainly out of the state’s already beleaguered public schools.

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Jan 27 2011

The Early Word: The State of the Union

In Today’s Times:

– When President Obama lays out his policy agenda Tuesday night in his State of the Union address, he will speak under the cloud of a sluggish economic recovery. Motoko Rich writes that even if the economy is picking up, putting a dent in joblessness will be a crucial mission for the White House. Mr. Obama also faces difficulties with another theme of his speech — rebuilding the nation’s infrastructure. Michael Cooper reports that, anticipating Republican objections about costs, Mr. Obama is recalibrating his message and trying to make the case that public works are not just about short-term construction jobs, but about long-term economic competitiveness.The president will speak at 9 p.m. before a joint session of Congress gathered in the House gallery.

– Mr. Obama is also expected to discuss the recent shootings in Tucson that left six people dead and a congresswoman and several others injured. Jackie Calmes writes that the president has selected more than two dozen guests “to personalize his themes touching on the Arizona shootings, the benefits of his stimulus and health care laws, the importance of science education and business innovation, and the valor of American troops.”

– David Herszenhorn and Jennifer Steinhauer report that Democrats are taking aim at Republicans’ budget plans, including an effort to malign their point man, Representative Paul Ryan of Wisconsin. Mr. Ryan, chairman of the House Budget Committee, will deliver the Republican response to Mr. Obama’s speech.

– An independent government agency has concluded that the Bush White House routinely violated a federal law that prohibits use of federal tax dollars to pay for political activities. Eric Lipton writes about the conclusions in the agency’s report, including the observation that administration officials created a “political boiler room” that coordinated Republican campaign activities nationwide.

– John Broder reports that Carol Browner, an energy adviser to the president, is resigning. Ms. Browner, a former administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, was charged with directing the administration’s effort to enact comprehensive legislation to reduce emissions of climate-altering gases and moving the country away from a dependence on dirty-burning fossil fuels. That effort foundered in Congress last year, and Mr. Obama has acknowledged that no major climate change legislation is likely to pass in the next two years.

Mr. Obama nominated Donald B. Verrilli Jr., a White House deputy counsel and prominent litigator, to be solicitor general. The nomination drew early support across the political spectrum. Mr. Verrilli, a specialist in First Amendment, telecommunications and intellectual property law, has argued 12 times before the Supreme Court, as well as about 35 times before federal appeals courts and state supreme courts, representing clients from deep-pocket corporate interests to death-row inmates.

Economic Meetings and Indicators:

–The Federal Open Market Committee meets Tuesday morning to decide whether to keep the federal funds rate at rock bottom or raise it for the first time in more than two years. The figure determines the lowest interest rate that banks can charge one another for overnight loans. Lower rates help banks to free up money for loans to businesses and consumers.

– Home values across the nation are being monitored closely for signs of a second dip. Standard & Poor’s will release indices on home prices for November at 9 a.m. An hour later, the Federal Housing Finance Agency will release narrower measures of home prices for November.

– Before the president lays out his plan for job growth Tuesday night, at 10 a.m. he’ll get a sense of how the job market is faring. That’s when the Labor Department will put out regional and state employment and unemployment data for December.

– Also at 10 a.m., the Conference Board will release its consumer confidence index for January, which measures consumers’ post-holiday optimism about the economy through their saving and spending activities.

Happening in Washington:

– The actor Richard Dreyfuss will speak at the National Press Club at 10 a.m. on civics education and civility in politics.

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Jan 27 2011

The Caucus: Live Blogging the State of the Union

President Obama delivers his State of the Union address tonight at 9 p.m. Eastern time, and The Caucus will be live blogging it, starting an hour ahead. Come back here at 8 p.m. for the latest reporting about what we expect Mr. Obama to say. And then stay with us as we offer context to his speech and take note of the atmospherics.

On our nytimes.com homepage, we’ll be streaming the address live right when it starts at 9 p.m. EST. The Republican response, given this year by Representative Paul Ryan, a House leader from Wisconsin, will be broadcast immediately afterwards. Later on the Web site, we’ll have an interactive video feature that analyzing the speech, a graphical look at the number of times presidents have used selected words, slide shows and much, much more.

Want to offer your comments now? Join @nytimes on Twitter by using #NYTsotu to talk about the address. Selected tweets will appear on The Caucus .

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Jan 26 2011

What to Watch for in Obama’s State of the Union

President Obama at the White House on Tuesday.Drew Angerer/The New York Times President Obama at the White House on Tuesday.

12:53 p.m. | Updated President Obama will deliver a blueprint for economic recovery and American competitiveness on Tuesday night, as he tries to chart a two-year path to re-election in the face of newly empowered Republican adversaries.

In his first State of the Union address before a Congress under divided control, Mr. Obama will lay out his case for investment in education and infrastructure, advisers say, while tempering his call for new initiatives with an acknowledgment of the country’s long-term fiscal challenges.

Aides said Tuesday that Mr. Obama would propose a five-year freeze on “nonsecurity discretionary spending,” though they did not disclose the details of that proposal in advance of the speech.

A White House official, who declined to be identified discussing the speech in advance, called the proposal “a down payment toward reducing the deficit” and said the president “also will be looking for cuts and efficiencies.”

“For instance, the president is putting forward a five-year plan developed by Secretary Gates to achieve $78 billion in defense savings,” the official said, referring to Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

The move would be a step in the direction of some in Congress who have called for spending controls. But it would fall short of what House Republicans are calling for: a reduction in federal spending to 2008 levels.

Mr. Obama’s speech — the details of which have been held more closely than usual — offers the president an opportunity to redefine his administration at the start of the 2012 presidential campaign.

Mr. Obama has started to recover politically in the last few months by demonstrating a new willingness to engage in compromise with Republicans and by performing well in the wake of the Arizona shooting. Aides said that reality lowered the pressure on Mr. Obama to hit a grand slam Tuesday night.

But the stakes remain high for the president, who must find a way to re-energize his most ardent supporters, persuade independents to believe in him again and build a case against returning the White House to Republicans after four years.

Aides describe this year’s State of the Union address as a departure from the typical laundry list that is common with the yearly speech. Instead, the White House press secretary, Robert Gibbs, said Mr. Obama would focus most of his time on “the challenges that we face” financially in the short and long term.

What else will we hear? Here’s a brief rundown of what to look for:

The spending clash. Mr. Obama’s aides have hinted for days that the president will call for a new wave of investment to spur job growth and keep the country competitive globally. But how much spending? And on what? How will he make the case in the face of Republican opposition to what they view as moving in exactly the wrong direction.

Among the unknowns Tuesday night is whether Mr. Obama will endorse specific provisions of his commission to reduce the nation’s debt, and how much he will say about the need to confront overhaul  of Social Security and Medicare. Doing neither will invite criticism of his commitment to the country’s long-term fiscal health.

The tone. The elections last November caused Mr. Obama to adopt a more bipartisan tone during the lame-duck session of Congress. And the shooting in Arizona all but ensured that civility is essential. But Mr. Obama must also draw sharp policy contrasts with his rivals over the course of the next two years — a process that may begin in Tuesday’s speech.

The seating arrangements. The idea was originally floated by Third Way, a centrist group with close ties to the Obama administration, and soon no politician could ignore it. Instead of sitting by party to listen to the speech, lawmakers will mix themselves up. The upshot? Those moments when Democrats stand to applaud and Republicans sit on their hands may not be quite as obvious as they were in the past.

Making the left angry. Many of Mr. Obama’s most liberal supporters fear that his speech will cater to the interests of big business when it comes to trade policy and taxes. And there has been little indication that Mr. Obama plans to make any grand promises along the lines of his pledge last year to end the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy banning gay service. (A promise he kept at the end of 2010.)

After the president’s compromise with Republicans to extend the Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy — and the appointment of William M. Daley as chief of staff — Mr. Obama’s liberal supporters are eager for some red meat. Will he give them some?

Making the right angry. The success of the Tea Party candidates in November’s elections cemented the idea among conservatives that Mr. Obama’s $787 billion stimulus was a failure. So his likely call for increased government investment is bound to be something conservatives on Capitol Hill pounce on. What Mr. Obama calls investment, they view as more federal spending at a time when they are trying to shrink, not grow, the size of government.

Gun control. Watching Mr. Obama from his wife’s box in the House chamber will be several family members of the victims and heroes of the Arizona shootings. But how will their presence affect the content of the president’s speech? Gun control groups have stepped up their efforts to limit the production and sale of magazines that hold dozens of bullets. And interest groups have been lobbying furiously for Mr. Obama to endorse such legislation in his State of the Union address.

But since becoming president, Mr. Obama has rarely addressed gun issues, and it’s unclear whether he will want to wade into the controversial subject now. Mr. Gibbs told reporters Monday, “I don’t doubt that as a result of the impact of the issues of what happened in Tucson, that there will be a number of proposals that this White House and the Congress will evaluate, and we’ll wait until tomorrow to see what’s in the State of the Union.”

A brief mention of foreign policy? From all accounts, the president intends the speech Tuesday to be primarily about domestic policy. But it’s hard to imagine that he will avoid national security issues entirely. With the bombing of an airport in Russia fresh on everyone’s mind, Mr. Obama is likely to make a mention of the war against terrorism, perhaps in the context of his administration’s stepped-up use of drones to attack terrorists in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The president could talk about the beginning of troop withdrawal from Afghanistan this summer, though he has already made clear that many troops are most likely to remain there for several years. It remains unknown whether Mr. Obama will use the speech as an opportunity to send messages to the warring factions in the Middle East or to the leaders of Iran or North Korea.

The victory lap. State of the Union addresses are about the future. But Mr. Obama could decide to use the nationwide audience to recount the achievements of his first two years. Administration officials often promote the legislative battles they have won, in particular passage of the health care law and revamped financial regulations. Last week, Republicans in the House passed a symbolic repeal of the health care legislation. Mr. Obama could use the speech to highlight the impact that such a move would have on people who could lose benefits.

The big line. Unlike inaugural addresses, most State of the Union speeches pass into history with little notoriety. But a few serve as the vehicle for memorable lines. Bill Clinton declared that “the era of big government is over” in his 1996 speech. And in his 2002 address, after the 9/11 attacks, George W. Bush declared that Iran, North Korea and Iraq constituted “an axis of evil.”

Listen carefully. The next big line could be uttered Tuesday night.

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Jan 26 2011

Emanuel Keeps Campaigning, as He Fights to Get Back on the Ballot

CHICAGO – With Rahm Emanuel’s mayoral hopes resting in the hands of the Illinois Supreme Court, Chicago’s newspapers weighed in loudly – and grumpily — on Tuesday.

In a Chicago Tribune editorial headlined “Judicial Arrogance,” the newspaper bemoaned an Illinois Appellate Court decision on Monday to remove Mr. Emanuel from the city’s Feb. 22 ballot as having “ignored more than 100 years of legal precedent.” The panel of appellate justices concluded that Mr. Emanuel lost his legal residency in Chicago – and thus, his right to run for mayor – when he served as President Obama’s chief of staff. State law requires candidates for mayor to live in Chicago for a full year before Election Day.

The Chicago Sun-Times, in an editorial, deemed the ruling “a disservice to voters.”

And so, even as the Chicago Board of Elections was set to begin printing ballots (early voting starts on Monday), all eyes were turned to the state Supreme Court. The court – made up of four Democrats and three Republicans – may consider Mr. Emanuel’s request for an expedited appeal, or it can choose not to hear the case at all.

There could be some complications with the case, political analysts say. For instance, Anne M. Burke, one of the justices on the state panel, is married to Ed Burke, a powerful veteran city alderman who has made known his support for Gery Chico, another candidate for mayor. Among the questions emerging: Would Ms. Burke, a Democrat, recuse herself from deciding Mr. Emanuel’s fate? And if she did, might that create a tie that would result in Mr. Emanuel being left off the ballot?

Mr. Emanuel, meanwhile, has said that he would continue to campaign, and that he expected to prevail. He spent Monday night campaigning at a bowling alley. His aides said more events would proceed, as ever, on Tuesday morning. First stop: an appearance before members of a local Teamsters council.

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