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Obama warning on stimulus delay | |
(about 6 hours later) | |
US President Barack Obama has made a public pitch for his economic stimulus plan, warning that delaying it further would lead to "deepening disaster". | |
Mr Obama was giving his first public speech on the plan in Indiana, a state hit hard by the economic crisis. | |
The House of Representatives has approved the plan. The Senate is expected to do so by Tuesday, but the proposal has met resistance. | |
Mr Obama is due to give his first presidential news conference later. | |
The president has been pushing hard for the speedy approval of his plan, which is worth more than $800bn (£541bn). | |
The version approved by the House of Representatives now differs from that being discussed in the Senate, and the two chambers will have to agree on a single final version. | |
'Delay and paralysis' | |
At the town hall-style meeting in Elkhart, Indiana, Mr Obama said the stimulus plan could help create jobs and "jump-start" the economy. We can't posture and bicker and resort to the same failed ideas that got us in into this mess in the first place US President Barack Obama | |
"I can't tell you with 100% certainty that every single item in this plan will work exactly as we hoped," he said. | |
"But what I can tell you is... that endless delay and paralysis in Washington, in the face of this crisis, will only bring deepening disaster." | |
"We can't posture and bicker and resort to the same failed ideas that got us in into this mess in the first place." | |
After returning to Washington for a White House primetime press conference, Mr Obama will appear in Fort Myers, Florida, on Tuesday. | |
Jobs push | Jobs push |
Earlier Larry Summers, head of the White House's national economic council, used television interviews to remind politicians of the need for haste. | |
Speaking on ABC's This Week programme, Mr Summers said: "The most important thing is that people come together and create the three to four million jobs." | Speaking on ABC's This Week programme, Mr Summers said: "The most important thing is that people come together and create the three to four million jobs." |
He added that there was "90% overlap" between the two versions of the bill now in Congress, and "we've got to get closure on the last 10%". | He added that there was "90% overlap" between the two versions of the bill now in Congress, and "we've got to get closure on the last 10%". |
"There are certainly good ideas in both versions and we'll have to draw from those ideas in creating an ultimate vehicle," he said. | "There are certainly good ideas in both versions and we'll have to draw from those ideas in creating an ultimate vehicle," he said. |
The House and Senate measures are largely similar, but there are some differences over how to expand the federal medical assistance programme, Medicaid, and over certain tax issues. | The House and Senate measures are largely similar, but there are some differences over how to expand the federal medical assistance programme, Medicaid, and over certain tax issues. |
US lawmakers will have to combine the two bills and have a finished version ready by the president's deadline of 16 February. | US lawmakers will have to combine the two bills and have a finished version ready by the president's deadline of 16 February. |
"There are respects in which both bills can surely be improved," said Mr Summers. | "There are respects in which both bills can surely be improved," said Mr Summers. |
The former Treasury secretary added that a "large, forthright" approach was needed, with more support for education from state and local governments to ward off a potentially downward spiral. | |
New US employment figures were released on Friday showing that nearly 600,000 jobs were lost in January, pushing the unemployment rate to 7.6% - its highest in 17 years. | New US employment figures were released on Friday showing that nearly 600,000 jobs were lost in January, pushing the unemployment rate to 7.6% - its highest in 17 years. |