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  • ♪♪ (music playing) ♪♪

  • David Plouffe: You know, these have always been important

  • moments for Presidents to layout where they think the country is,

  • and where it needs to go.

  • Gene Sperling: That's why it's so important to him,

  • that's why he takes such ownership of the State of the

  • Union, both in terms of the words and the types of policies

  • that he wants us to develop.

  • Cecilia Munoz: It's a pretty great moment in our democracy.

  • This is the, you know, all three branches of government

  • are in the same room.

  • Jon Favreau: We are one week away from the State of the Union.

  • Finished the first draft, first complete draft,

  • last night on Monday night.

  • And now we're going to meet with the President.

  • He read the draft last night.

  • He made a lot of edits because I saw his draft when I went up

  • there this morning.

  • And now we're going to talk to him about it hopefully within

  • the half hour.

  • President: Bandos is not there yet?

  • Jon Favreau: No.

  • David Plouffe: The thing about President Obama in a speech like this is it is

  • simply not an editing exercise.

  • He's involved from conception through kind of the development

  • process and then, you know, he writes a lot

  • of the speech himself.

  • Jon Favreau and I and certainly even the President will spend

  • some time looking through past State of the Unions just to get

  • a sense of those moments.

  • Jon Favreau: He had lots and lots of thoughts.

  • And gave all kinds of edits, comments like this.

  • Cody and you are now rewriting, reordering, reediting.

  • Cody Keenan: You know, in a typical set of remarks we have,

  • you know, a basic message we want to get across.

  • In this, we have a basic message we want to get across that also

  • incorporates every facet of the American economy,

  • our values and our foreign policy.

  • So it's a little more complicated.

  • Gene Sperling: In a sense, you develop a lot of policies that will be in the

  • budget and proposed.

  • And in a sense the ones that make the State of the Union are

  • a little bit like the players that make the all star team.

  • Sarah Bianchi: It's exciting to see all of the ideas that he has chosen to put

  • forward, all sort of in pros and to see how much new stuff

  • and new ideas he has.

  • Gene Sperling: You know, he really wanted us to focus on those types of economic

  • policies that could have a tangible effect over these

  • next few years in getting more Americans back in to

  • the top of high-paying, durable jobs that last.

  • Cecilia Munoz: Part of this is going to be, I think,

  • making real and concrete the vision that the President

  • talked about in his speech in Kansas a few weeks ago,

  • ways that we're going to make this a more fair society.

  • But also make it clear what it means.

  • How it's going to affect people in their daily lives.

  • ♪♪ (music playing) ♪♪

  • The speech writing team is extremely busy this

  • time of year.

  • At the end of the day, their job is to kind of weave it together,

  • according to the President's direction,

  • but then he takes it and makes it his.

  • David Plouffe: Discussions about what he thinks the structure ought to be;

  • the types of policies he's like to be in there,

  • you know, he's driving that process.

  • The President: We're making progress.

  • I think the basic --

  • Cecilia Munoz: It's exciting to see it go from, you know,

  • a hodge-podge of interesting ideas based on a vision that

  • the President has presented to us to something which

  • articulates so clearly direction.

  • Jon Favreau: We'll go to all of the policy folks,

  • the economic team, folks who do energy, foreign policy,

  • national security folks, the research department who they

  • vigorously fact check it.

  • Then new media folks who will do an enhanced version online.

  • People handling who's going to be in the First Lady's box.

  • Laura Dean: We like to highlight the people who are going to be mentioned in

  • the speech to sort of actually put a face to these policies.

  • So the reason they get mentioned in the speech is to give reality

  • and humanity to the policies that we're suggesting.

  • And it's nice to have them there to make a

  • really concrete connection.

  • And they're sort of representative of America.

  • Gene Sperling: The big things that we could get done together

  • as a country are going to be the common sense,

  • bipartisan things you're going to hear the President talk about

  • with the State of the Union on manufacturing, on energy,

  • on building skills.

  • These are common sense, good ideas,

  • that could help create jobs right now.

  • David Plouffe: I would just humbly encourage people to

  • listen to the ideas.

  • Listen to the specific ideas about what we can do to build

  • a more lasting economy, to help the middle class,

  • to solve our deficit problem in a fair way,

  • to rebuild our manufacturing sector,

  • to improve education and skills.

  • Listen to the ideas.

  • And if you like those ideas, if you think they make sense,

  • then lift up your voice!

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