With apologies behind him, President Obama is looking to some of the other pressing issues facing the nation.
Much of what occupied Congress during the first half of the year has languished, and Obama and democratic leaders have only a short time to try and forge some sort of path to passage before the midterm election machine starts up in earnest.
On Friday, Obama gave a speech in New Orleans that served as a reminder to the public that Congress still has a litany of major legislation to deal with before the end of the year and that laid out, once again, his domestic priorities. After better than expected jobs numbers and recent record highs on Wall Street, Obama once again criticized Republicans for letting the poor and middle class suffer rather than pass much-needed legislation that would fund essential programs.
“The first thing we should do is stop doing things that undermine our businesses and our economy over the past few years — this constant cycle of manufactured crises and self-inflicted wounds that have been coming out of Washington,” he said.
With the next debt ceiling deadline set to hit in January, there isn’t much time. In the speech, Obama included a suggestion for the bipartisan committee currently in the midst of hashing out some sort of budget deal. “Rebuilding our infrastructure could be part of a bipartisan budget deal,” he said.
While Paul Ryan, the Wisconsin Republican leading negotiations in the committe is unlikely to take his suggestion, Obama is still going to try and sell his ideas to the public. This week, the president will dispatch members of his cabinet across the country to drive home the importance of infrastructure spending on the economy.









