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"It's an axiom of business that you're going to grow when you have demand," said Johanna Schneider, executive director for external relations at the Business Roundtable. Obama offered some sympathy. "I understand the challenges you face," he said. "I understand that you're under incredible pressure to cut costs and keep your margins up. I understand the significance of your obligations to your shareholders. I get it." Obama and his aides, however, maintain that corporate investments now would have long term benefits and say the government is prepared to step in to make such commitments worthwhile by increasing its own spending in research and education and by easing red tape, including providing a more streamlined patent approval system. The speech was highly anticipated by the business community. Chamber President Thomas Donohue introduced Obama, saying seats at the event were "one of the hottest tickets in town." Donohue said American business had an "absolute commitment to working with you and your administration to advance our shared objectives." He added: "Our focus is finding common ground to ensure America's greatness in the 21st century." Some liberals bristled at Obama's outreach. "While President Obama calls on businesses to invest in America, the only thing the U.S. Chamber's investing in is their own bottom line
-- lining the pockets of corporate CEOs while shipping the jobs of hard-working Americans overseas," said Christy Setzer, spokeswoman for U.S. Chamber Watch, a pro-labor group. Obama cited a recently finalized trade pact with South Korea, which is awaiting ratification by Congress, as an example of the type of agreement he would like to pursue with Panama and Colombia. But the president did not specifically detail what adjustments were still needed in those negotiations to complete a deal. Following Obama's speech, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell pressed for action, saying, "The time for delay on these two agreements is over." "It won't be enough for Republicans and it shouldn't be enough for the business community to allow the administration's trade agenda to start and end with South Korea," he said. "We should be passing all pending trade agreements and inking new ones on a bipartisan basis
-- even when it requires the president bringing his own party along." Schneider, of the Business Roundtable, commended Obama for doing "a very positive thing" with his speech. She said his prescriptions for the business sector "were very broad, but nonetheless they addressed the question of uncertainty." "The next steps are more specific proposals," she said.
[Associated
Press;
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