WASHINGTON, D.C. — President Obama will address the nation in his sixth State of the Union address on Tuesday night, laying out a series of proposals aimed at helping ordinary Americans who feel like the country’s economic gains have left them behind.
During the day, Republicans geared up to rebuke it, while the White House pointed to their economic successes as proof of their agenda.
“What I hope for tonight is that he presents some positive, bipartisan ideas of his own that can pass the Congress Americans just voted for,” the newly minted Majority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell said Tuesday on the Senate floor, a nod to the control his party holds over the president’s ambitions. “If the president is ready to ‘play offense,’ then we urge him to join the new Congress in playing offense on behalf of the American people.”
McConnell’s pre-rebuttal previews the formal response Iowa’s new Sen. Joni Ernst will give tonight, which promises to be just as combative as the junior senator’s campaign promise to “make ’em squeal.” Kentucky Republican and likely 2016 candidate Sen. Rand Paul announced that he’d release his own rebuttal speech on YouTube, as well, at around 10 p.m. ET.
White House surrogates, however, shrugged it off. “The people’s sentiment is everything,” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said on “Andrea Mitchell Reports” Tuesday.
Related: State of the Union: What do you expect to hear?
The numbers are on Obama’s side, too: unemployment is at its lowest point since the 2008 crash, the Dow Jones average has more than doubled, consumer confidence has doubled, the GDP has seen a complete turnaround, the deficit has been curbed, and low gas prices are expected to help grow consumer spending. More Americans are satisfied with the economy than at any point in the past 10 years and the president’s job approval is on the rise, according to the latest NBC/WSJ poll.
Asked why the president planned to propose so many proposals that “are never going to fly” with the GOP, White House Special Adviser Valerie Jarrett said “well, they fly with the American people.”
More specifically, Obama is determined to cast himself and his party as defenders of the middle class.
“We know that when the middle class is strong, our economy historically just does better. Our economy grows from the middle out and not from the top down,” Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota said on Tuesday, when asked about Obama’s new economic proposals. “That’s what the president’s message is about.”
Obama is expected to outline a series of big goals to hike taxes on the rich to fund free community college for qualified students and middle-class tax cuts. The tax plan would raise an estimated $320 billion of new revenue over the next 10 years by raising the capital gains and dividend tax rate to 28% for the wealthy, closing a tax loophole on inherited money, and imposing a new tax on big banks, among other changes. That money would help pay for expanded tax credits for working couples, retirement, college tuition, and child care, as well as his the $60 billion community college program. “Now that we have sort of put this crisis behind us, we can turn the page and actually have more freedom to be focusing on the kinds of policies that are going to benefit middle class families,” Earnest added.
But the Obama administration’s big plans show little promise of progressing in the current political environment: A polarized, combative Republican majority was just sworn into both chambers of the legislature. The GOP has continued to reject raising tax rates — even if they pay for other tax exemptions — and has already come out strongly against the president’s community college plan.
“The president has an opportunity to work with the House and the Senate, and the proposal tonight doesn’t sound like he’s interested in that,” Sen. Cory Gardner told msnbc. “If you look at the burdens he’s putting on American job creators, it is directly hurting the middle class and their ability to find the kind of work they need to in this country.” Earlier on the Senate floor, McConnell similarly dismissed Obama’s plan as “more tired tax hikes” that would simply “spend more money we don’t have.”
Leading Senate Democrats demurred when asked whether they supported President Obama’s plan, saying they were waiting to look at the specifics. But Sen. Ron Wyden, the leading Senate Democrat on tax reform, told msnbc it was a positive step.








