Jobs plan unlikely to pay immediate dividends The Wenatchee World Tue, 27 Sep 2011 09:13 AM PDT WASHINGTON â" Even if Congress heeds President Barack Obamaâs demands to âpass this bill right awayâ and enacts his jobs and tax plan in its entirety, the unemployment rate probably still would hover in nosebleed territory for at least three more years. Why? Because the 1.9 million new jobs the White House says the bill would produce in 2012 falls short of whatâs needed to put the economy back on ... | Swansboro's Feutz plays for president Tideland News Tue, 27 Sep 2011 09:13 AM PDT Tideland News Writer A Swansboro High School graduate was among those who got to horn in when President Barack Obama trumpeted his jobs legislation to a standing-room-only crowd in Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh on Sept. 14. | Obama defends push to raise taxes on rich The Desert Sun Tue, 27 Sep 2011 09:12 AM PDT President Obama gestures during a LinkedIn Town Hall Meeting at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View on Monday. PAUL SAKUMA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | Obama Campaign Wades Into Ohio Election Law Fight WCMH Columbus Tue, 27 Sep 2011 09:10 AM PDT President Barack Obama's re-election campaign is helping activists in the battleground state of Ohio challenge an election law that would shorten the time for early voting, which helped Obama in his first run for the White House. | Judge refuses to extend sale timeline for Solyndra WRCB Chattanooga Tue, 27 Sep 2011 09:08 AM PDT A Delaware bankruptcy judge has refused to extend the sale timeline of failed solar-panel manufacturer Solyndra LLC, which received a half-billion-dollar federal loan and was once touted by President Barack Obama in support... | AP Enterprise: Appalachia faces steep coal decline The San Francisco Examiner Tue, 27 Sep 2011 09:07 AM PDT DYLAN LOVAN Associated Press GARRETT, Ky. Coal production has been dropping in the mining-rich regions of southern West Virginia and eastern Kentucky, prompting many business owners, politicians and miners to blame it on tougher regulation from the Obama administration. But there's another factor at work in the region known as Central Appalachia. Its thick, easy-to-reach seams of coal are ... | | |
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