WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - President Barack Obama is set to speak on Thursday about how
he will target job creation, housing, law enforcement and education in
the poorest U.S. communities, part of his pledge to narrow the gap
between rich and poor in America.
Obama signaled last month that he plans a new focus this year on income
inequality, which he called "the defining challenge of our time",
pushing to raise the minimum wage and find new ways to help poor
children break out of the cycle of poverty.
As part of this
effort, Obama will create "promise zones" in San Antonio, Philadelphia,
Los Angeles, southeastern Kentucky, and the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma,
the White House said on Wednesday.The announcement came on the 50th anniversary of a pledge by former President Lyndon Johnson to wage a "war on poverty" which led to government programs like Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, and Head Start preschool education programs.
Since 1967, poverty rates have fallen from close to 26 percent to 16 percent, the White House said. In 2012, 49.7 million Americans lived in poverty, including 13.4 million children.
"In the richest nation on
Earth, far too many children are still born into poverty, far too few
have a fair shot to escape it, and Americans of all races and
backgrounds experience wages and incomes that aren't rising," Obama said
in a statement marking the anniversary of Johnson's pledge.
Obama will make his formal announcement about the "promise zones" at 2 p.m. EST (1900 GMT) on Thursday.He first spoke about the plan in his 2013 State of the Union speech, almost a year ago, pledging to focus government funding with private-sector programs in 20 communities to create jobs, improve schools, beef up public safety, and create better housing.
The designation is designed to help communities navigate programs that
already exist, said Megan Martin, a policy analyst at the Center for the
Study of Social Policy in Washington.
"A lot of what they're offering is in fact not funding - they're
offering direct contact with the federal government, high-quality
technical assistance, up-to-date tools and resources for sites to use,"
Martin said in an interview.
Obama's creation of a "promise zone" in Kentucky received praise from
Mitch McConnell, the top Republican in the Senate, who represents the
state.
"I wrote a letter last
year supporting this designation because this region has suffered
enormous economic hardship over the last several years," McConnell said
in a statement, citing job losses in the coal industry which he blamed
on White House environmental policies.
The plan also called for tax incentives for businesses that invest in
impoverished neighborhoods and hire local people, and is modeled after a
program run by the city of San Antonio.
Obama has also said he will push to increase the minimum wage to $10.10
per hour, up from $7.25, an effort unlikely to succeed because of
opposition from Republicans in Congress.
Democrats have taken up the cause ahead of the 2014 midterm elections.
Polls show Americans view Republicans as less compassionate toward the
poor.
Obama and Democrats
have also pushed to extend an expiring program that provides benefits to
people out of work -- something Republicans have resisted, arguing that
the cost of extending the benefits should be offset with spending cuts.
But this week, Republican Senator Marco Rubio of Florida and
Representative Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, both potential White House
contenders, plan major events describing their ideas for addressing
poverty.
(Additional reporting by Mark Felsenthal and Susan Heavey; Editing by Doina Chiacu, Rosalind Russell and Jonathan Oatis)
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