US President Barack Obama challenged Congress on Thursday to enact a $447 billion package of tax cuts and new spending to revive a stalled job market but he faces an uphill fight with Republicans.
With his poll numbers at new lows amid public frustration with 9.1% unemployment, Obama called for urgent action on a broad set of proposals he laid out just 14 months before voters decide whether to give him a second term.
"You should pass this jobs plan right away," he said in a forceful tone in the televised speech to a rare joint session of Congress.
"The question is whether, in the face of an ongoing national crisis, we can stop the political circus and actually do something to help the economy," Obama said, taking a swipe at Republicans who have consistently opposed his initiatives.
Obama, who pushed through an $800 billion economic stimulus package in 2009, said his new plan would cut taxes for workers and businesses and put more construction workers and teachers on the job through infrastructure projects.
As fears rise of another US recession and more global economic gloom, G7 finance ministers meeting in France on Friday are set to encourage countries that can afford it to do more for growth.
US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner said on Thursday that efforts to create US jobs could help the world economy regain speed.
Finding common ground
During the speech, Republicans reacted to many of Obama's proposals with stony silence. Party leaders said later they would work with the president to find common ground even if they were unlikely to support the entire package.
"Let's do the things we agree on, set aside the things we differ on and get to work so we can have some results for people who are hurting so badly out there," Eric Cantor, the Republican leader in the House of Representatives, told Reuters.
Cantor suggested he could support expanding a payroll tax cut that passed Congress last year. But other Republicans said they were not inclined to back it this time.
A top Senate Republican, Jon Kyl, said Obama "merely dusted off a tired agenda of old ideas wrapped in freshly partisan rhetoric."
Obama is seeking to seize the initiative in his bitter ideological battle with Republicans, ease doubts about his economic leadership and turn around his presidency at a time when his 2012 re-election bid looks unexpectedly daunting.
"This struck me as a pretty well-balanced plan. It's got something for everybody," said Omer Esiner, senior market analyst at Commonwealth Foreign Exchange in Washington. "If Congress can't agree on something like this then there's not much hope for the paralysis changing."
Obama wants Congress to pass his "American Jobs Act" -- which administration officials said would cost $447 billion -- by the end of this year and offset the cost with deficit cuts.
But a deal may be hard to achieve with politicians already focusing on the national elections in November 2012.
If Obama can push through his plan, it might provide an economic boost quickly enough for him to reap political benefits. If it stalls in a divided Congress, his strategy will be to blame Republicans for obstructing the economic recovery.
"Provide a jolt"
Obama said his proposed plan would "provide a jolt to an economy that has stalled and give companies confidence that if they invest and hire there will be customers."
He proposed extending unemployment insurance at a cost of $49 billion, modernizing schools for $30 billion and investing in transportation infrastructure projects for $50 billion.
But the bulk of his proposal was made up of $240 billion in tax relief by cutting payroll taxes for employees in half next year and trimming employer payroll taxes as well.
Obama also said he was seeking to broaden US homeowners' access to mortgage refinancing to help the ailing housing market -- a proposal that drew rare applause from Republicans during the speech.
US stock index futures fell and analysts said investors would await clear signs of how the plan would fare in Congress.
How much of the jobs package is viable remains in question. Almost all of it ultimately depends on winning support from Republicans who control the House.
Bipartisan cooperation could be hard to come by in Washington's climate of political dysfunction where a bruising debt feud this summer brought the country to the brink of default and led to an unprecedented US credit downgrade.
But Obama insisted that "everything in here is the kind of proposal that's been supported by both Democrats and Republicans -- including many who sit here tonight -- and everything in this bill will be paid for. Everything."
Republicans will still be resistant, not wanting to give Obama a helping hand before the election. But they will be under pressure to cede some ground to help boost the economy or risk a voter backlash in 2012.
Obama's choice of a joint session of the House and Senate, a setting better known for the president's annual State of the Union address, was intended to lend ceremonial pomp to a critical speech and push Republicans to cooperate.
But it also carried the risk of raising public expectations that will be hard to meet.
Obama's speech has taken on new urgency after the latest Labor Department report showed zero employment growth in August, stoking fears of a slide back into recession.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, who has said the onus for helping the economy now lies mainly with lawmakers controlling spending, warned that overzealous belt-tightening could slow down the "erratic" recovery.