ABC News January 19, 2015

State of the Union Spoilers: What We Already Know About Obama's Speech

WATCH: State of the Union Sneak Peek

At 9 p.m. ET Tuesday, President Obama will deliver his sixth State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress. It will be his first before a Republican majority in both chambers and likely his biggest U.S. television audience all year.

But unlike years past, the content of the speech itself won't be much of a surprise.

In a nod to the new political dynamic, changing media environment and a desire to fight “lame duck” status, Obama has spent the past two weeks rolling out his policy proposals on daily basis. Senior Obama adviser Dan Pfeiffer dubbed it the "SOTU Spoilers" tour.

Here’s a look at what we already know about the speech theme, Obama's proposals and his plan for the days ahead:

The 2015 SOTU Theme

The White House says Obama will declare a full-on economic “resurgence,” even as many Americans say it still hasn’t affected them. “America’s resurgence is real. Don’t let anybody tell you otherwise,” Obama said in Detroit Jan. 7, previewing his SOTU message.

Obama has been buoyed by a wave of recent positive economic data and new poll numbers that show Americans give him some credit. The latest ABC News-Washington Post poll found that the most Americans in eight years say the economy is in "good shape," 41 percent, with approval of the president surging back to the watermark of 50 percent.

The One Line President Obama Should Say At State of the Union

In the lead-up to the speech, Obama has repeatedly said his goal in 2015 is making sure more Americans “feel” the recovery.

The “core theme” of the speech will be “middle-class economics” and “doubling down” on efforts to boost wages and mobility, Pfeiffer said Sunday.

"How we make paychecks go farther right now; how we create more good-paying jobs right now; and how do we give people the skills they need to get those high-paying jobs," Pfeiffer said, teasing Obama's three-leg plan.

5 Goals From Obama's 2014 State of the Union: Yay or Nay?

The Obama SOTU 'Spoilers'

Over the past two weeks, Obama has upended tradition in the lead-up to State of the Union by unveiling proposed legislation and executive actions ahead of the . Here’s a look at what we’ve heard so far:

What Else Might Be in Obama's Speech?

While the State of the Union address is always heavy on domestic policy, the president will likely give a nod to several foreign developments, from the global terror crackdown after the Paris attacks to the end of the U.S. combat mission in Afghanistan. Obama may use the speech as an opportunity to call for a formal end to the U.S. embargo on Cuba, something only Congress can lift. He may praise progress in the fight against Ebola and ISIS, ask for "fast-track" authority for trade deals and warn lawmakers against new sanctions on Iran. The president is expected to press Republicans to pass a bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security without strings attached, and challenge them again to enact immigration overhaul.

What Happens After the Speech?

Obama’s policy proposals are unabashedly Democratic priorities with little chance of passage through a Republican-controlled Congress. They will be followed by an equally political FY 2016 budget when it’s released on time Feb. 2. Reports suggest a 7 percent increase in discretionary spending after years of belt-tightening.

The White House says we should expect more “big, bold, decisive action” in the weeks ahead, in many cases circumventing Congress, as they did last year. “We’re going to run that same play,” spokesman Eric Schultz told ABC News. “Congress is going to take some actions that the president doesn't support, and we're going to take some actions that the Congress doesn't support,” Schultz said.

Obama will hit the road Wednesday to Boise, Idaho, (his first visit to that state as president) and Lawrence, Kansas. He will speak at state universities in both cities.

Meanwhile, spokesman Josh Earnest and White House staff will field questions about the State of the Union on social media all day, an event they are dubbing the “Big Block of Cheese Day.”

Obama will participate Thursday in a live YouTube chat hosted by the platform’s creators. Over the weekend, he heads to New Delhi, India, for previously announced participation in Republic Day and meetings with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.