MESQUITE, Texas — President Barack Obama is naming names.

First he singled out House Speaker John Boehner and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell.

Today, House Republican leader Eric Cantor came in for a presidential scolding as Obama used an economic sales pitch in Texas to criticize the House majority leader for refusing to take up the president’s jobs bill.

“Eric Cantor said that right now, he won’t even let this jobs bill have a vote in the House of Representatives. That’s what he said. Won’t even let it be debated,” Obama said in a speech at a community college in Mesquite, a Dallas suburb. “Think about that. What’s the problem? Do they not have the time? They just had a week off. Is it inconvenient?”

“At least put this jobs bill up for a vote so that the entire country knows exactly where members of Congress stand,” the president said. “Put your cards on the table.”

Even as Obama spoke, McConnell was attempting to call his bluff by pushing for a quick Senate vote on the jobs bill, which Senate Democrats have acknowledged doesn’t have the support to pass. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid objected so he could delay action until Democrats can corral more support.

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It underscored Obama’s dilemma as he travels the country seeking to isolate Republicans to take the blame if his jobs bill doesn’t pass — without a clear strategy for ensuring it does.

The approach puts the Obama administration at risk of appearing to use the president’s $447 billion jobs bill as a political weapon rather than as a means of fixing the nation’s economic woes and putting Americans back to work.

And it relies heavily on the assumption that the public won’t also hold Obama accountable if he can’t get Congress to act.

Obama spoke a day after Cantor, R-Va., said that while the plan contained elements that Republicans could support, “this all or nothing approach is unreasonable.”

Cantor’s spokesman, Brad Dayspring, disputed Obama’s criticism.

“If House Republicans sent our plan for America’s job creators to the president, would he promise not to veto it in its entirety? Would he travel district to district and explain why he’d block such common-sense ideas to create jobs?” Dayspring asked. “House Republicans have different ideas on how to grow the economy and create jobs, but that shouldn’t prevent us from trying to find areas of common ground with the president.”


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