Democrats slam Bush speech
They also accused Bush of pursuing reckless policies abroad that have alienated allies and left the United States to bear most of the costs and casualties of the Iraq war.
"The State of the Union may look rosy from the White House balcony or the suites of George Bush's wealthiest donors. But hard-working Americans will see through this president's effort to wrap his radical agenda with a compassionate ribbon," said former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, who hoped to bounce back from his third place finish in the Iowa caucuses in next week's New Hampshire primary.
Bush in a wide ranging speech defended the war in Iraq, outlined the ongoing threat of global terrorism, promised to promote economic growth and job creation, called for making permanent tax cuts he pushed through Congress and unveiled modest domestic initiatives on improving health and education.
But Democrats said he was ignoring the needs of average Americans while pushing policies that benefit the wealthy.
"I think there's just two different worlds here, the world the president talks about and the world Americans are living in," Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry, who won Monday's Iowa caucuses, said on NBC.
Retired Gen. Wesley Clark, who bypassed Iowa to focus on New Hampshire, said, "The sad fact is that today, two years after he coined the term, we've got a new axis of evil ... of fiscal policies that threaten our future, foreign policies that threaten our security and domestic policies that put families dead last."
Clark said Bush will "spend billions on the war in Iraq, missile defense, and sending a man to Mars. But he's going to spend a grand total of $120 million for job training. That's just $15 for each unemployed American. That's not much more than the cost of bus fare to the training center, lunch, and coffee."
Sen. Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, the most conservative Democratic contender, said Bush "seems to be in a state of denial about the state of our economy, our health care system and our relations with the world."
Democrats in Congress also ripped Bush for pursuing "a go-it-alone foreign policy" and mishandling the economy.
"The president led us into the Iraq war on the basis of unproven assertions without evidence; he embraced a radical doctrine of pre-emptive war unprecedented in our history, and he failed to build a true international coalition," said House of Representatives Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi of California.
"America must be a light to the world, not just a missile," she said.
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