Political Hotsheet
By

Brian Montopoli /

CBS News/ January 24, 2011, 5:20 PM

Obama Speech Will Set Tone for 2012 Run

President Obama delivers his first State of the Union address on January 27, 2010.

/ MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images


President Obama's State of the Union speech Tuesday will be in part driven by events - chief among them the "shellacking" he took in the midterm elections and the assassination attempt on Democratic Rep. Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona.

But it will also, inevitably, be driven by politics - and, along with the tax cut compromise worked out in December, set the groundwork for Mr. Obama's argument to voters that he deserves to be reelected in 2012.

When Republicans took control of the House in November, it was an obvious setback for Democrats. But it also came with an opportunity. After two years of casting stones from the sidelines, Republicans had to take some ownership of the business of governing. The result was the unexpectedly productive lame duck session punctuated by the tax cut compromise, which provided Americans with a glimpse - however brief - of a Washington that seemed to work.

And much of the credit for that went to Mr. Obama, who had promised to change the tone in Washington but had until that moment, in even the eyes of many of his supporters, failed to deliver. Polls in the wake of the compromise suggest that his standing has increased since the midterms, particularly among independents, who may be giving the president a second look as someone who ultimately can function as, in the words of his predecessor, "a uniter, not a divider."

Indeed, the tax cut deal allowed Mr. Obama to present himself as someone capable of overseeing a more effective Washington. Then came the tragic attack on Giffords and others in Tucson, which gave him the opportunity (however unwanted, in light of the circumstances) to present himself as capable of changing the tone as well.

The tax cut deal and Mr. Obama's reaction to the Tucson tragedy - which included a moving speech memorializing the victims and calling on Americans to aspire to their better selves - allowed the president to reclaim his original argument: That he can rise above the ugliness of Washington rhetoric and cut through the divisiveness that rose to a fever pitch under President George W. Bush.

The speech Mr. Obama delivers Tuesday will be designed in large part to drive that notion home. The president has little reason to call for the sort of aggressive policy moves of his first two years - political reality means that anything as ambitions as health care reform is off the table. Instead, he will stress how lawmakers can come together both legislatively and personally - a notion that will be reinforced by the decision of many lawmakers to break with tradition and watch the speech alongside a member of the opposition party.

The Barack Obama of the 2011 State of the Union address will strive to project moderation. He will likely point to his recent efforts to reach out to the business community to make the case that acrimony can't be overcome -- and drive that point home by stressing his desire to improve the playing field for American business to be competitive around the globe.

That doesn't mean there won't be fault lines, of course. Republicans are aggressively pushing the notion that Mr. Obama has been a reckless spender in his first two years, an argument they will come back to over and over in the run-up to election day 2012. They plan a vote for Tuesday on returning discretionary, non-security spending to 2008 levels to drive the point home.

And while Mr. Obama is stressing that he wants to lower deficits responsibly, he will call in the speech for continued spending on infrastructure, education and research and development to help the economy continue to recover - and caution that deep spending cuts could hamper that recovery. In a preview speech released over the weekend, the president cast such costs not as spending but investment, prompting derision from Republicans.

Yet don't expect that conflict to yield anything like the "You Lie" moment provided by Rep. Joe Wilson in 2009. The speech, coming just weeks after a national tragedy, will be about unity: The president will favor soaring rhetoric and generalities over potentially divisive policy proposals, and members of both parties in the audience will look for opportunities to showcase their willingness to disagree without being disagreeable.

Republicans realize that the credit for that environment is likely to go disproportionately to Mr. Obama, just as it did following the tax cut deal. But there isn't much they can do about it. For the president, the speech offers the opportunity to set the tone for a reelection campaign highly dependent on winning back the independent voters who respond well to efforts to rise above the typical Washington noise. And that's not an opportunity he's going to pass up.

Obama Foreshadowed State of the Union Theme Last Month in N.C. Speech

Obama, GOP Prepare to Clash over Spending

Will Obama Back Social Security Changes in State of the Union?

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
43 Comments Add a Comment
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skyk2012 says:
Tag line for 2012 "Together we Thrive" and he kicked it off in Tucson!

What a guy.
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tsigili says:
It will be a campaign speech, and nothing more. No substance, just rhetoric.

Come election time, the lack of substance, will be very obvious to voters.
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cloopy replies:
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obama slam dunk 2012??thats funny!!!didnt the trouncing the dems took in nov,give ya some idea of whats to come in 2012, the midterms were a referendum on one thing oabamas presidency!!!!!!!giuliani ran a bad 08 campaign,but rudy turned nyc upside down,cleaned crime,created jobs,once the frontrunner,will be again,watch out for jeb bush,wifes cubam,florida obamas done!!!!
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san850 says:
According to recent polls, President Obama is very well respected and admired by many. He is certainly in a great position for 2012:

"A remarkable 78 percent in a new ABC News/Washington Post poll approve of the way Obama has responded to the shootings, which he addressed in a speech in Tucson last week; that includes 71 percent of Republicans and conservatives alike. By contrast, far fewer, 30 percent overall, approve of the response by his political rival, Sarah Palin."

"In the ABC News/Washington Post poll, released Jan. 18, Obama came in with a 54 percent job approval, and 43 percent disapproval. An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll released Thursday showed Obama at 53 percent approval, up 8 percentage points from last month. Disapproval was 41 percent, down from 48 percent in December.

The NBC/WSJ poll also showed Obama gaining ground among independents, from 35 percent approval to 46 percent."
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san850 replies:
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Sure Weezer...and the moon is made of cheese.
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ur_shadow says:
The slogan for the GOP should be straight out of Watchmen: "Americans will look up and say 'Save Us!, to which the GOP will answer 'NO'"

It's time for the tax & spend liberals to be the bad guys for a change.

You people want limited government? Fine - let the Liberals spend us right into bankruptcy and you'll surely get it!
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mick7744 says:
ho cares about a speech by the President of the United States?

What time has FauxNews scheduled for Sarah Palin's rebuttal from the Wasilla White House?

I really hope she displays the American flag on the proper side this time.

Perhaps that would help to make her look a bit more 'presidential' than she appeared to be in her two most recent 'performances'

Perpetual victim-hood can really take a lot out of a girl...especially when she feels compelled to be doggedly pursuing it on a 24/7 basis.
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towler10 replies:
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Forget about Palin. She is a nobody. Move on to another rant. This one is old.
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stn_sage says:
OH! So, he thinks he can 'con' the independents, huh?
He's living in a fantasy world! Many, if not most of them,
don't care what he's got to say at this point...
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towler10 replies:
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Agreed. The "community organizer" gives two good speeches and he is up in the polls again. When will people realize this POS POTUS is nothing more than a talking head?
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thanksgreed says:
Which ticket?
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cbs3200 says:
by cloopy January 24, 2011 7:54 PM EST
as for your fox news bashing???fox has triple the viewers of msnbc,msnbc has been spewing the vitriolic rhetoric ....................
==============================================================
You Stupid Tea-Bagging-Bozo.
Popular does NOT mean good.
American Idol draws more viewers than Faux Noise ... does that
mean it is better?
Glen Beck is a complete moron.
A better measure of value is the demographics of the audience
watching. Glen Beck / Shawn Hannity are watched by the same
crowd that makes up the Tea-Bagging-Bozos - uneducated to say
the least.
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retm-w replies:
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What had to change your screen name again?
towler10 replies:
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Calm down my friend. You are hysterical. I know black, latino, white tea party members. If you assume all tea party members are uneducated, you are mistaken. Popular does not make it good,you are right. But it does make it the majority. Now go on back to your leader and find out what you are supposed to say next. Good boy.
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discussthis says:
No matter what he says in this speech, it is obvious that for the next two years obamao will focus on his campaign. If he says, like he has so many times before, that he will focus on jobs and the economy, I hope some REPUB sitting right next to a DEM yells out, "YOU LIE".
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catmomtx replies:
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Right and despite Republicans telling you people they would create jobs and fix the economy they are planning to screw the country once again, just like they did before. My bet is on President Obama because right now Republicans look like a bunch of cowards who don't have a clue but are trying to show someone they are boss.
san850 replies:
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You are correct, catmomtx. All I've seen from the GOP so far is theatrics. It seems they want more symbolism than progress. They have done nothing but waste precious time and money with their symbolic but useless votes on repealing Healthcare Reform, knowing that it won't go anywhere in the Senate, and would be vetoed if it did. Why not stop the political theater and get to work in a bipartisan way to bring about healthcare reform that is so desperately needed? Is that too much to ask?
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kevjustice says:
ha ha! obama's approval ratings are going up. he will be re-elected and will appoint michael moore and sean penn to the supreme court! They will replace uncle tom thomas and scalia! extra large robe for moore. lol!
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retm-w replies:
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That would figure everybody else he has appointed has been totally unqualified for the job.
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