ALLENTOWN, Pa.: Even as he trumpeted a slowdown in the nation's job losses Friday, President Barack Obama put finishing touches on a proposal he'll unveil next week to "jump-start" business hiring across America.
![]() President Obama speaks on the jobs report at Lehigh Carbon Community College in Allentown, Pa., Friday, Dec. 4, 2009.[Agencies]
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"We need to grow jobs and get America back to work as quickly as we can," Obama said Friday at a metal works plant in Allentown, where he visited with hard-hat workers. "On Tuesday, I'm going to speak in greater detail about the ideas I'll be sending to Congress to help jump-start private sector hiring and get Americans back to work."
Job losses in the US have been the worst since the 1930s, but new statistics out Friday showed a relatively moderate shedding of 11,000 jobs last month. The unemployment rate dipped from 10.2 percent in October to 10 percent in November.
The Labor Department report showed November job losses were at the smallest monthly number since the recession began.
"As we come to the end of this very tough year, I want to do something I haven't had a chance to do that often during my first year in office and that is to share some modestly encouraging news on our economy," Obama said before detailing the report.
Channeling a campaign style and an upbeat tone, Obama called it "good news just in time for the season of hope" and said it is a sign his plans are starting to improve a battered economy.
But, even with the best jobs report the country has had since 2007, Obama said the situation is still dire and in need of urgent attention. Unemployment is expected to remain high for months.
"I still consider one job lost one job too many," he said. "Good trends don't pay the rent."
There is growing concern in the White House that unemployment problems could dwarf all others. Obama hosted a jobs summit at the White House Thursday, scheduled the trip to Pennsylvania for Friday and set the jobs-bill speech for Tuesday.
At Allentown Metal Works, the president adopted a campaign tone, casually chatting with the kind of working-class voters who will be crucial to his plan making its way to Congress and, more daunting, Democrats' chances in the 2010 midterm elections and his own in 2012. Obama has seen his approval rating slide as his promises of change have slammed into governing reality.
In a nod to growing anxiety about federal deficits, Obama is also stressing a need not to increase federal spending too much. During Thursday's jobs discussion with CEOs and academics at the White House, he said it is primarily up to the private sector to create large numbers of new jobs, because "we also, though, have to face the fact that our resources are limited."
The appetite for debt-financed jobs legislation is far higher on Capitol Hill, where House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Congress will extend several items in February's $787 billion economic stimulus measure.
After talks with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and other administration officials, congressional Democrats are eying up to $70 billion in unused borrowing authority from last year's $700 billion Wall Street bailout for jobs-related legislation, House Democratic aides said.
Democrats say the Troubled Assets Relief Program money would pay for any jobs bill. But the move is largely cosmetic since tapping the bailout money would require issuing billions of dollars in new federal debt. The White House had hoped to lower deficit projections by not using the full $700 billion in TARP authority approved during last year's economic meltdown.