Economy Back At Center Stage After Parties

Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker waits in line to vote Tuesday, June 5, 2012, in Wauwatosa, Wis. Walker faces Democratic challenger Tom Barrett in a special recall election. / AP
With the ceremonies of Inauguration Day in the rear view mirror, President Barack Obama is quickly shifting focus to the number one priority on his domestic agenda - restoring confidence in a recession-plagued economy that has shed millions of jobs and trillions of dollars in investments.
"The state of the economy calls for action, bold and swift, and we will act - not only to create new jobs, but to lay a new foundation for growth. We will build the roads and bridges, the electric grids and digital lines that feed our commerce and bind us together," Mr. Obama said Tuesdayin his Inaugural Address.
The president is expected to meet with his economic team Wednesday to assess his approach and plot the way forward.
Congress already has given him a second installment of financial-industry bailout money, worth $350 billion, and is fast-tracking a massive economic stimulus bill of $825 billion or more. Even those bold measures, on top of hundreds of billions in other federal spending over recent months, may not be enough to prevent the recession from growing deeper.
President Obama also is hoping to win quick approval of his choice of Timothy Geithner to be Treasury secretary. But first, Geithner has to explain how he missed paying $34,000 in payroll taxes.
The Senate Finance Committee is scheduled to hear from Geithner Wednesday. The tax issue is expected to be among a number of questions that panel members will pursue.
Geithner failed to pay $34,000 in self-employment taxes for money he earned while he worked at the International Monetary Fund. He paid some of the taxes in 2006 after an audit discovered the discrepancy for 2003 and 2004. But it wasn't until last year that Geithner paid back taxes he owed for 2001 and 2002.
Mr. Obama has called Geithner's tax problems an "innocent mistake."
Democrats are hoping the urgency in dealing with the country's worsening economic problems will convince lawmakers to confirm Geithner quickly.
Mr. Obama's team has declared that the economic crisis presents the new administration with an opportunity. To that end, his economic recovery plan embraces key pieces of his broader agenda - affordable universal health care and energy independence.
On health, his speech only addressed one aspect of his reforms - using information technology to modernize health care delivery. And his promise to "harness" the sun and wind and soil as an energy option is more lyrical sentiment than national energy policy, which likely would still rely on fossil fuels and nuclear power.
The markets gave Mr. Obama no relief Tuesday. Financial stocks fell dramatically, leading a steep drop on Wall Street, with the Dow Jones industrials down 332 points.
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report. "The state of the economy calls for action, bold and swift, and we will act - not only to create new jobs, but to lay a new foundation for growth. We will build the roads and bridges, the electric grids and digital lines that feed our commerce and bind us together," Mr. Obama said Tuesday
The president is expected to meet with his economic team Wednesday to assess his approach and plot the way forward.
Congress already has given him a second installment of financial-industry bailout money, worth $350 billion, and is fast-tracking a massive economic stimulus bill of $825 billion or more. Even those bold measures, on top of hundreds of billions in other federal spending over recent months, may not be enough to prevent the recession from growing deeper.
President Obama also is hoping to win quick approval of his choice of Timothy Geithner to be Treasury secretary. But first, Geithner has to explain how he missed paying $34,000 in payroll taxes.
The Senate Finance Committee is scheduled to hear from Geithner Wednesday. The tax issue is expected to be among a number of questions that panel members will pursue.
Geithner failed to pay $34,000 in self-employment taxes for money he earned while he worked at the International Monetary Fund. He paid some of the taxes in 2006 after an audit discovered the discrepancy for 2003 and 2004. But it wasn't until last year that Geithner paid back taxes he owed for 2001 and 2002.
Mr. Obama has called Geithner's tax problems an "innocent mistake."
Democrats are hoping the urgency in dealing with the country's worsening economic problems will convince lawmakers to confirm Geithner quickly.
Mr. Obama's team has declared that the economic crisis presents the new administration with an opportunity. To that end, his economic recovery plan embraces key pieces of his broader agenda - affordable universal health care and energy independence.
On health, his speech only addressed one aspect of his reforms - using information technology to modernize health care delivery. And his promise to "harness" the sun and wind and soil as an energy option is more lyrical sentiment than national energy policy, which likely would still rely on fossil fuels and nuclear power.
The markets gave Mr. Obama no relief Tuesday. Financial stocks fell dramatically, leading a steep drop on Wall Street, with the Dow Jones industrials down 332 points.
Popular on CBSNews.com
- Young victims of deadly Okla. tornado 10 Photos
- Clean-up efforts underway in Okla. 29 Photos
- Forecasters warn: Up to 6 major storms this season
- Tsarnaev friend implicates dead brother, self in murders
- OKC police correct damage estimate to 12K homes
- Boy Scouts to vote on allowing openly gay members 208 Comments
- First funeral held for young Oklahoma tornado victim
- Body of child recovered from deadly Minn. landslide















So long, Wingnuts......
Time will tell who the foolish are and I believe you will be counted among them.
Posted by signtwo at 02:41 PM : Jan 21, 2009
LOL Yep the singing Na, Na, Na, Hey, Hey, Good Bye wasn''t really meant for him either! ROFLMAO
----------------------------------
----------------------------------------
------ Posted by signtwo
Well of course not.. let''s bring back Bush!! ROFLMAO Why do children like you bother the adults on here who have SO much to discuss?
Posted by cusefan21 at 03:09 PM : Jan 21, 2009
You poor simple children believe EVERYTHING the Reich puts out don''t you? LOL You look so foolish doing it too! But then what can we expect? Personally IF the tax payers HAD paid all you claim it was WELL worth it to see George W. Bush fly out of town in the Chopper. I''m willing to bet the ENTIRE World feels the same AND I''m just as willing to bet they would GLADLY have contributed!
Obama Inauguration 2009: Cost $150 Million. Crowd size: approx 1.8 million. Cost per person: $83.33
Bush Inauguration 2005: Cost $40 Million*. Crowd size: approx 400K. Cost per person: $100.00
Without even adding in inflation or the *, Obama Inauguration was cheaper per person than Bush%u2019s Inauguration. Bush would have had 200K more people to attend his second to make the cost per person the same. Where were all his supporters I wonder . . . on their yachts.
* However, the $40 million figure that Hall cited for Bush''s second inauguration reportedly does not include certain costs incurred by the federal government and the District of Columbia such as security and transportation costs; these costs are included in the $150 million estimate that the media are reporting for the Obama inauguration. When the costs incurred by the federal government and the District of Columbia are factored in, the total cost of Bush''s 2005 inauguration was reportedly around $157 million.