WASHINGTON – President Obama is coming to the Twin Cities on Thursday and bringing his slumping national approval ratings.
But Minnesota Democrats couldn't be happier.
Even as Democrats up for re-election elsewhere are distancing themselves from Washington, Minnesota DFLers have lobbied hard to get the president to come for a substantive policy trip.
They succeeded. Obama will land in Minnesota, hold a town-hall meeting, attend a fundraiser at a private home for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, stay overnight and then make a speech about the economy.
He comes at a time when the 2014 midterm elections, including the re-election campaigns of Sen. Al Franken and Gov. Mark Dayton, are beginning to pick up steam. But Obama has some of the lowest poll numbers of his presidency. According to a CBS/New York Times poll released earlier this week, Obama's job approval rating is 40 percent, with 54 percent registering disapproval of the job he's doing. Elected Democrats in vulnerable districts are less than eager to be seen linking arms with the president.
Not here.
"There is no one in the country right now that has the ability to excite young people and communities of color," Minnesota DFL Party Chair Ken Martin said. "We're very excited to have him come in and not only help our candidates but raise some money. Any appearance by the president in a state like Minnesota is a good thing."
'Extraordinarily supportive'
Obama will use his time here to launch a series of conversations in middle America about what regular people are up against. He will spend part of Thursday with a Minneapolis mother who wrote him a poignant letter about her struggles working and trying to keep pace with rising living costs, White House officials said.