Obama
says will focus on criminal justice reform, cancer research
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[January 15, 2016]
By Roberta Rampton
BATON ROUGE, La. (Reuters) - President
Barack Obama said on Thursday that he will focus his final-year
legislative efforts on criminal justice reform, an expansion of a tax
credit for the working poor, and a push to find medical research
breakthroughs.
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The three areas are relatively rare areas of common ground between
Obama and the Republican-controlled Congress, Obama said during a
town hall, part of a push to promote his priorities as attention
turns to the race to replace him in the November presidential
election.
Obama told a crowd of about 1,000 people at a high school that "I've
got a whole bunch of stuff to do between now and next year" when his
second and final term in office ends.
Obama has tasked his vice president, Joe Biden, with marshalling
scientists to "double down" on research into a cure for cancer.
"It's a good story and it's not as politically controversial as some
issues," Obama said.
"It probably won't be cured in my life time, but it might be cured
in yours," he told a 10-year-old girl at the town hall.
The research push will need a "big investment," he said. Details
could come in his Feb. 9 budget proposal.
Obama also said he would like to expand the earned income tax
credit, a tax break for poor families, to also help single people -
an idea for which Republican Speaker Paul Ryan has expressed
support.
He told the crowd that he thinks there is enough bipartisan support
to reform mandatory minimum sentences for non-violent offenders.
Obama said he will use his authority to take action where he can -
an approach that has enraged Republicans on issues like immigration,
environmental regulations, and gun control.
Giving another example of where he wants to use his executive
authority in the year ahead, Obama talked about the need to
modernize ancient government computer systems.
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"That's what we can do without Congress," he said.
Obama praised Louisiana's newly sworn in Democratic Governor John
Bel Edwards, who made expanding Medicaid coverage for low-income
people his first order of business.
In his Feb. 9 budget, Obama will propose to give the 19 state
governments that passed up an earlier offer to expand Medicaid a
second chance to opt in, with aid from the federal government, the
White House said.
"We're hoping to encourage more states to do the right thing," Obama
said.
Medicaid expansion was part of the Affordable Care Act, Obama's
signature health care reform law better known as Obamacare. But some
Republican governors opposed expansion as costly and unnecessary.
(Additional reporting by Ayesha Rascoe and Susan Heavey; Editing by
Nick Macfie, Bernard Orr)
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