President Obama to deliver seventh and final State of the Union address Tuesday night...America's first Black president, Obama is expected to highlight his tenure as president, including signature policy legislation such as Obamacare, and gun control....By www.clevelandurbannews.com Editor-in-Chief Kathy Wray Coleman
By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief, Cleveland Urban News.Com, and the Kathy Wray Coleman Online News Blog.com, Ohio's most read digital Black newspaper and newspaper blog. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. Kathy Wray Coleman is a community activist, educator and 23-year investigative journalist who trained at the Call and Post Newspaper in Cleveland, Ohio for 17 years. (www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)
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CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM-WASHINGTON, D.C.-President Barack Obama, the nation's first Black president whose second four -year term will come to an end in a matter of months, will deliver his seventh and final State of the Union address Tuesday night, and is expected to highlight his presidential tenure, and his signature policy legislation, including ObamaCare.
His push for gun control legislation is also expected to be a focus of the president's speech before a joint chamber of Congress.
Voting rights, educational policy, equal pay for women, and immigration reform are sure to be among a litany of other topics, say political pundits, also among them being the Iran Nuclear Deal, and the
landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling issued last year that made same sex marriage legal nationwide.
During his sixth State of the Union address last year, and for the first time before a Republican controlled Congress, Obama called for congressional implementation of a host of domestic and foreign policy initiatives, including immigration reform, free tuition for community college, and tax cuts for the middle class. He also decried racism, sexism, and religious and gay persecution, and spoke on nationwide police killings that have America's Black community on edge.
The president's 60-minute State of the Union speech in 2015 was the second shortest of his presidency.
How long Obama will talk on Tuesday in delivering his last constitutionally required adress remains to be seen, though he will no doubt push for bipartisan cooperation in Congress, continual diplomacy abroad, universal peace, and for Congress to pass a resolution to authorize force against the terrorists group ISIS. He also made his request for military aggression against ISIS during his State of the Union last year, but it fell on deaf ears among opposing Congressional Republicans.
And Obama, a Democrat who was swept into office in 2008 as a then junior senator representing the state of Illinois in Congress, still wants an increase in the minimum wage, and a tax hike for the rich. He wants a safer America, a better educated populace, and peace in the Middle East.
Polls show that the president's approval rating had jumped nine points to an average of 47 percent between the time that the Democrats lost control of the Senate in November 2014 and his sixth State of the Union. And a week after the speech it shot up to 50 percent, a Gallup poll revealed.
Obama's job rating is currently at 43 percent, down four points from this time last year, and the lowest level since before the 2014 midterm elections. But he is nowhere near his predecessor, former president George W. Bush, a Republican whose declining approval ratings tumbled to a strikingly low 22 percent in his final year in office. (www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)
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