President Obama returns to work this week looking to revive his second term and regain the momentum after a frustrating 2013. And the next few weeks could be pivotal.
To get his presidency back on track, Obama badly needs some policy wins—even small ones—despite unyielding Republican opposition. To that end, Obama will kick off the year with a concerted focus on economic populist themes.
In his Jan. 28 State of the Union address, he’ll call for raising the federal minimum wage to $10 an hour, as well as other measures to combat growing economic inequality, the White House has said.
Support for a minimum-wage hike figures to be among Democrats’ top issues for the looming 2014 midterm campaign. If Obama is to have any chance of making progress on his lengthy to-do list for the next three years—in addition to reducing economic inequality, immigration and climate change still demand urgent attention—his party will need to avoid major losses in November.
Obama also is pushing Congress to extend unemployment insurance for the 1.3 million jobless Americans who lost their benefits late last month after lawmakers failed to renew them. On Tuesday, he’ll hold a White House event featuring people who lost their benefits.
“Denying families that security is just plain cruel,” Obama said in his weekly radio address Saturday. “We’re a better country than that. We don’t abandon our fellow Americans when times get tough — we keep the faith with them until they start that new job.”
A bipartisan effort to extend benefits was scheduled for a Senate vote Monday early evening. Republicans have said they won’t support it without offsetting spending cuts.
Also in the coming weeks, Obama will hit the road to tout the benefits of the Affordable Care Act—in part an effort to neutralize promised conservative attacks on the law ahead of the midterms. By some estimates, Obamacare has now allowed 10 million Americans to access affordable insurance—a good-news story the White House is eager to tell after the law’s troubled rollout. Monday afternoon, the White House held a press call to highlight the law’s impact in Texas, which has the largest uninsured population in the country.









