The President’s Weekly Address post is also an Open News Thread. Feel free to share other news stories in the comments.
From the White House – Weekly Address
In this week’s address, the President recognized Labor Day by highlighting the economic progress our country has made, and underlining what needs to be done to continue that growth. Our businesses have created 13.1 million new jobs over the past five and a half years, the unemployment rate is the lowest it’s been in seven years, and seventeen states across the country have raised the minimum wage. The President stressed that to continue this progress, Congress needs to avoid a government shutdown that would hurt middle-class Americans and pass a responsible budget before the end of September. The President emphasized that Congress should not play games with our economy, and instead pass a budget that invests in our middle-class and helps those who work hard and play by the rules to get ahead.
Transcript: Weekly Address: This Labor Day, Lets Talk About the Budget
Remarks of President Barack Obama
Weekly Address The White House September 5, 2015Hello, everybody. I hope most of you are gearing up for a long weekend with family and friends – maybe some barbeques, road trips, or fantasy drafts. But I wanted to take a moment to talk to you about the real meaning of Labor Day – a day we set aside every year to honor the hardworking men and women who fought for so many of the rights that we take for granted today.
The eight-hour workday, 40-hour workweek, weekends. Overtime and the minimum wage. Safer workplaces. Health insurance, Social Security, Medicare, and retirement plans. All of those gains were fought for and won by the labor movement – folks who were working not just for a bigger paycheck for themselves, but for more security and prosperity for the folks working next to them as well. That’s how we built the great American middle class.
That’s the spirit we’ve been working to restore these past six and a half years. On Friday, we found out that the economy created another 173,000 jobs in August. Over the past five and a half years, our businesses have created 13.1 million new jobs in total – the longest streak of job creation on record. The unemployment rate dropped to 5.1%, the lowest it’s been in seven years. The American auto industry is on track to sell more cars and trucks this year than it has in more than a decade. Sixteen million Americans have gained the security of health insurance. Seventeen states and about 30 cities and counties have raised the minimum wage. And we’ve proposed extending overtime protections to as many as five million Americans. All of that is progress.
This month, Congress has an opportunity to continue that progress. As always, the deadline for Congress to pass a budget is the end of September. Every year. This is not new. And if they don’t, they’ll shut down the government for the second time in two years. At a time when the global economy faces headwinds and America’s economy is a relative bright spot in the world, a shutdown of our government would be wildly irresponsible. It would be an unforced error that saps the momentum we’ve worked so hard to build. Plain and simple, a shutdown would hurt working Americans.
It doesn’t have to happen. If Congress wants to support working Americans and strengthen our middle class, they can pass a budget that invests in, not makes cuts to, the middle class. If they pass a budget with shortsighted sequester cuts that harm our military and our economy, I’ll veto it. If they make smart investments in our military readiness, our infrastructure, our schools, public health, and research, I’ll sign that budget – and they know that.
So let’s get it done. Our economy doesn’t need another round of threats and brinksmanship. Nobody gets to play games with our economy – or the middle class I grew up in, and that you grew up in. So tell Congress to pass a budget that reflects the values we honor on Labor Day. Rewarding hard work. Giving everybody a fair shot. And working together to give all of our kids a better life. Thanks everybody. And enjoy your weekend.
Bolding added.
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The president trolls Congress:
He will veto any budget that continues the incredibly destructive sequesters, a device intended to bring Republican congressional leaders to the table but which instead showed the resolve of the Republicans in Congress to cripple government and shred the safety nets so many people rely on in this fragile economy.
Good. The sequester must go. It was a dangerous gambit that failed.
In the News: No union mines left in Kentucky, where labor wars once raged
In the News: Walls of the world aim to keep unwanted foreigners out, hold prosperity in
These nations/regions all have walls and fences. The article describes each one.
President Obama speaking last year at Laborfest in Milwaukee:
Transcript:
Labor Secretary Tom Perez via USA Today:
On labor and trade agreements:
President Obama to require paid leave for federal contractors:
Excellent!
From the White House: President Obama Delivers Remarks at the Greater Boston Labor Council Labor Day Breakfast, Boston, Massachusetts at 11:00am Eastern
Video:
Transcript: Remarks by the President at Greater Boston Labor Council Labor Day Breakfast
Vice President Joe Biden at the Allegheny County Labor Day Parade, Pittsburgh, PA:
(Audio only)
Joe Biden speaks up for unions:
It was painful watching the Tweets of clueless right-wingers yesterday saying what a wonderful Labor Day it was for workers in right-to-work states because they got to keep more of their money! True that … union dues had to be paid. But you start with a bigger paycheck to pay them from when you have a union to bargain for you. And look what it does for the gender/race gap!
In the News: Money in Politics, Hillary Clinton to announce policy proposal
This paragraph makes no sense.
What do they expect her to do, throw down her “weapons” and then say “your turn”??? Decry the money and lose the election to the Republicans as they are pounding her with ads from their unlimited deep pockets? Duh.
We get elected and then we start draining the swamp. Until then, some of the alligators need to be ours.
Hillary Clinton’s Labor Day: