President Obama signed two more executive memorandums today, saying they will help employment at a time when congressional Republicans are blocking his $447 billion jobs bill.

"With too many families struggling and too many businesses fighting to keep their doors open, we can't wait for Congress to take action," Obama said in a statement, echoing a political point he has made throughout this week.

One of the new Obama orders is designed to "take steps to speed up the transfer of federal research and development from the laboratory to the marketplace," said a White House statement.

The other will create BusinessUSA,which the White House describe as "a one-stop, central online platform where small businesses and businesses of all sizes that want to begin or increase exporting can access information about available federal programs without having to waste time navigating the federal bureaucracy."

White House officials could not provide estimates as to how many jobs these actions might create.

These memos follow similar executive actions that Obama took this week on mortgage re-financing, job opportunities for veterans, and student loans, while bashing congressional Republicans along the way.

In its statement today, the White House said: "These announcements are part of a series of executive actions to put Americans back to work and strengthen the economy because we can't wait for Congressional Republicans to act."

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and other Republicans say the Obama jobs is too expensive, and they question how effective it will be in the face of a 9.1% unemployment rate.

McConnell spokesman Don Stewart pointed to a Washington Post story on problems with an existing Obama administration jobs website, USAJobs; the article said that, "within hours of its debut, the federal government's ballyhooed new jobs board was on the fritz: USAJobs crashed repeatedly, error messages popped up over and over, résumés disappeared, passwords were obliterated."

Mocking the Obama's team new anti-Congress slogan "We Can't Wait," Stewart said: "Job seekers, though, did have to wait."

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said the Republican-run House is preparing to pass bills to ease regulations in order to help business people raise capital and hire more people.

"If the President wants to do something meaningful to create jobs, he can start by working with Republicans and actually engaging in the legislative process," said Boehner spokesman Brendan Buck.