President
Obama Delivering 2015 State of the Union
|
President Barack Obama says it's
time to turn the page after years of economic hardship at home and wars
overseas. But Republicans in charge of Congress say the voters already took
care of that last November — and they're the proof, according to AP.
"Much of what he did tonight
... new taxes, new spending is sort of the same old thing that we've heard over
the last six years," said newly installed Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell of Kentucky, not long after the president wrapped up a State of the
Union speech studded with veto threats and challenges to newly empowered
congressional Republicans.
"What I had hoped was the
president was going to focus on areas of possible agreement. There are a few:
trade, tax reform, infrastructure," added McConnell, who was on the
receiving end of a presidential barb about climate change.
House Speaker John Boehner,
McConnell's partner atop the leadership of the new, Republican-controlled
Congress, agreed. "Finding common ground is what the American people sent
us here to do, but you wouldn't know it from the president's speech
tonight," he said.
The two Republican leaders spoke after Obama
declared the "shadow of crisis has passed," with the economy growing
and joblessness falling. He unfurled an agenda on taxes, spending, social
programs, energy and foreign policy notably at odds with Republican priorities,
although he ended with a plea for the two parties to "debate without
demonizing one another" and find compromise where possible.
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