President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
Princeton, Indiana
October 4, 2014
Weekly Address
Princeton, Indiana
October 4, 2014
Hi, everybody. I’m at Millennium Steel in Princeton,
Indiana, to have a town hall with workers on National Manufacturing
Day. Because in many ways, manufacturing is the quintessential
middle-class job. And after a decade of losing jobs, American
manufacturing is once again adding them – more than 700,000 over the
past four and a half years.
In fact, it’s been a bright spot as we keep fighting to
recover from the great recession. Last month, our businesses added
236,000 new jobs. The unemployment rate fell to under six percent for
the first time in more than six years. Over the past 55 months, our
businesses have added 10.3 million new jobs. That’s the longest
uninterrupted stretch of private sector job creation in our history.
And we’re on pace to make 2014 the strongest year of job growth since
the 1990s.
This progress has been hard, but it has been steady, and
it is real. It is a direct result of the American people’s drive and
determination, and decisions made by my administration.
During the last decade, people thought the decline in
American manufacturing was inevitable. But we chose to invest in
American auto industry and American workers. And today, an auto industry
that was flatlining six years ago is building and selling new cars at
the fastest pace in eight years. American manufacturing is growing
almost twice as fast as the rest of the economy, with new factories
opening their doors at the fastest pace in decades. That’s progress we
can be proud of.
What’s also true is that too many families still work too
many hours with too little to show for it. And the much longer and
profound erosion of middle-class jobs and incomes isn’t something we’re
going to reverse overnight. But there are ideas we should be putting
into place that would grow jobs and wages faster right now. And one of
the best would be to raise the minimum wage.
We’ve actually begun to see some modest wage growth in
recent months. But most folks still haven’t seen a raise in over a
decade. It’s time to stop punishing some of the hardest-working
Americans. It’s time to raise the minimum wage. It would put more
money in workers’ pockets. It would help 28 million Americans. Recent
surveys show that a majority of small business owners support a gradual
increase to ten dollars and ten cents an hour. The folks who keep
blocking a minimum wage increase are running out of excuses. Let’s give
America a raise.
Let’s do this – because it would make our economy
stronger, and make sure that growth is shared. Rather than just reading
about our recovery in a headline, more people will feel it in their own
lives. And that’s when America does best.
We do better when the
middle class does better, and when more Americans have their way to
climb into the middle class.
And that’s what drives me every single day. Thanks, and have a great weekend.
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