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The State of the Union speech is Jan. 24, followed closely by the release of his White House budget proposal in early February. The chief-of-staff transition is expected by the end of the month, with Lew staying on at the Office of Management and Budget until the budget plan is released. It is unclear who will lead the agency after that. Lew and Daley stood with the president on Wednesday but did not speak. The White House said neither man was giving interviews. Lew's private-sector experience includes a stint as managing director and chief operating officer of Citigroup's global wealth management division. Daley, meanwhile, will serve as a co-chair of Obama's Chicago-based re-election efforts, said a campaign official, who requested anonymity ahead of the official announcement. Unlike Daley, Lew comes with deep connections to Congress, where Obama's relationship with lawmakers is a source of constant debate. Coming after Emanuel, a former congressman and a leader of his caucus, Daley's relationship with congressional Democrats was hardly smooth. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., after being accustomed to speaking with Emanuel up to a dozen times a day, was in contact with Daley only rarely, according to a former senior Senate Democratic leadership aide who talked on condition of anonymity to speak about private relationships. Reid sent out an upbeat statement on Lew ("a consummate professional with intimate knowledge of Congress) and Daley (for "handling crises few chiefs of staff have had to face.") Daley also was blamed by congressional Democrats for an embarrassing incident last fall when Obama was forced to reschedule his plans to deliver a jobs speech to Congress after House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, rejected the date Obama first proposed. Matters hit a new low when Daley complained in an interview with Politico in October that both congressional Republicans and Democrats were making life difficult for the president. Reid objected strongly to Daley's mention of problems with Democrats, considering his efforts to advance Obama's agenda, the aide said.
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