Obama vows to act alone if Congress gridlocks, taunts Republicans: 'So sue me'
Obama vows to act alone if Congress gridlocks, taunts Republicans: ‘So sue me’
President Barack Obama speaks about transportation and the economy, Tuesday, July 1, 2014
President
 Barack Obama defiantly dared congressional Republicans on Tuesday to 
try to block his efforts to act on his own and bypass a divided Congress
 that has thwarted his policy initiatives.
'So sue me,' he taunted
 on a sweltering day, as he pushed lawmakers to pay for road and bridge 
repairs. 'I'm not going to apologize for trying to do something.'
Obama
 struck an aggressive tone in the face of a lawsuit threat from House 
Speaker John Boehner and in the wake of two defeats before the Supreme 
Court, including a unanimous decision from the court that he overreached
 when he appointed members of the National Labor Relations Board while 
the Senate was in recess.
His remarks came a day after Obama 
declared that he would act on his own to address weaknesses in the 
nation's immigration system after Boehner informed him that the House 
would not take up an immigration overhaul this year.
He has 
already taken a series of executive actions, including an order 
requiring federal contractors to pay a higher minimum wage and 
initiating steps to to lower carbon emissions in coal-fired power 
plants.
'So far this year, Republicans in Congress have blocked or
 voted down every serious idea to strengthen the middle class  not ideas
 that are unique to me,' he said. 'But the Republicans have said no to 
raising the minimum wage, have said no to fair pay. They've said no to 
extending unemployment insurance for over 3 million Americans looking 
for a new job.'
Earlier Tuesday, Obama met with his Cabinet 
secretaries and urged them to 'be creative about how we can make real 
progress' on issues where Congress won't act.
Obama said he would 
prefer that Congress act on issues such as immigration and 
infrastructure because laws are more sweeping than his own 
administrative actions.
'We're not always going to be able to get 
things through Congress, at least not this Congress,' Obama said. 'I 
want to make sure we emphasize not what we can't do, but what we can do 
in the coming months.'
Speaking at Washington's Key Bridge, Obama 
in shirt sleeves and his tie undone made a pitch to fix the nation's 
bridges and highways.
He called on Congress to close tax loopholes
 and use the money on infrastructure projects, a long shot idea that has
 little if any support among congressional Republicans.
'It's not 
crazy. It's not socialism,' he said, mocking the criticism from some 
conservative quarters. 'You know, it's not, you know, the imperial 
presidency or no laws are broken.'
 
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