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"Clearly as time goes on and a presidency matures you get less and less of it and the State of the Union becomes an aspiration for what you want to do as opposed to a road map for what you can accomplish," said Princeton University historian Julian Zelizer. As voters' enthusiasm fades and opposition deepens, Zelizer said, "You lose some of your power and you get closer to the next election and no one wants to work with you." Last year's address already contained more modest goals than the speech Obama gave to a joint session of Congress a month after his inauguration, which although not technically a State of the Union report had the feel of one. At the time Obama called for overhauling health care and ending the war in Iraq
-- promises he kept -- but also for closing the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba and imposing caps on carbon pollution
-- promises unmet. Some of his goals, such as immigration and education reform, have resurfaced in multiple addresses, but still without being accomplished. And rarely has Obama's rhetoric as president reached as high as the lofty promises of his campaign, when he pledged to change the very way Washington does business and remake politics itself. It's a far cry from those promises of change to the ambition of meeting monthly with Democratic and Republican congressional leaders
-- but even that relatively modest goal, from Obama's 2010 State of the Union, went unfulfilled.
[Associated
Press;
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