President delivers a sweeping indictment of economic inequality in the United States
OSAWATOMIE, Kansas -- President Barack Obama took aim at Republicans and delivered a sweeping indictment of economic inequality in the U.S. on Tuesday as he pledged to fight for fairness for the middle class.
Only a month before Republican voters begin choosing a presidential nominee, Obama traveled to small-town Osawatomie, Kansas, where he summoned the memory of a beloved Republican president. Theodore Roosevelt delivered his "New Nationalism" address in 1910, to embrace the progressive reformer's calls for a "square deal" for regular Americans.
Obama warned of the unraveling of the American dream, and called for giving struggling middle-class workers a fair shake and restoring financial security -- themes he's certain to return to throughout the 2012 campaign.
"This isn't just another political debate. This is the defining issue of our time. This is a make-or-break moment for the middle class, and all those who are fighting to get into the middle class," Obama told a crowd in the Osawatomie High School gym, where red, white and blue bunting lined the bleachers.
Of Republicans, Obama said: "Their philosophy is simple: we are better off when everyone is left to fend for themselves and play by their own rules. Well, I'm here to say they are wrong."
Obama's speech delved into the theme of inequality of income and opportunity, which the White House sees as a major force in current politics, but it was short on new ideas for pulling the country out of its economic doldrums.
For Obama, after focusing recently on mostly small-bore executive actions he can take without Congress, and on pressing reluctant lawmakers to pass pieces of his jobs proposal including a payroll tax holiday, Tuesday's speech was a chance to lay out a more sweeping philosophy for his re-election campaign.
Noting that the typical CEO now earns 110 times more than his workers, Obama attempted to sum up the pain and peril for a society where the gap between rich and poor is widening, and the middle class is struggling.
Obama said that the wealthiest should do more -- but that the Republicans have refused to ask them to.
Republicans, meanwhile, noted that Roosevelt had also used the speech Obama cited to denounce broken promises in politics. They said Obama had fallen short of rebuilding the economy, reducing the debt and curtailing special interests.
Republican National Committee spokeswoman Kirsten Kukowski said the president was "desperately trying new slogans and messages to see what sticks because he can't figure out how to sell his last three years of high unemployment and more debt."
Obama also took aim at the big banks that took bailouts from American taxpayers, pointing to "a deficit of trust between Main Street and Wall Street." He said banks that were bailed out had an obligation to work to close that trust deficit and should be doing more to help remedy past mortgage abuses and assist middle-class taxpayers.
Obama said he'd be calling for new legislation imposing tougher penalties for Wall Street firms that repeatedly violate anti-fraud laws.
And the president renewed his call on Congress to extend his payroll tax cut, and called for Senate Republicans to confirm his nominee to head a new consumer protection bureau.
Obama said that transforming the economy and growing the middle class will require everyone to take more responsibility and see that they have a stake in each other's success. And in a challenge to the private sector, he said it will "require American business leaders to understand that their obligations don't just end with their shareholders."