CLEAR LAKE, Iowa – U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar followed the well-worn political trail to Iowa Friday, firing up Democrats feasting on chicken wings and anti-GOP rhetoric and waving off presidential aspirations with a smile and a nod to Hillary Clinton.
"I love my job now, I love being senator from Minnesota, that's what I'm focused on right now," Klobuchar said during a sojourn south, where she gave the keynote address to the North Iowa Democrats Wing Ding at the Surf Ballroom. It's a venue credited with launching then-Sen. Barack Obama in 2007.
"It's nice to be on the list," she said of her name occasionally appearing among names of Democrats to succeed Obama. She also added that she believes she has shown her ability to appeal to independent voters in her two Senate elections, including a 34-point margin of victory in November. But she said she would welcome the candidacy of Clinton, who is seen by many Democrats here as a clear 2016 front-runner — if she runs.
"I like Hillary Clinton a lot — she'd be great," Klobuchar said. "I know there are others who are interested as well, so we'll have to see who runs."
The 400-some Democratic activists from northern Iowa heard the second-term senator quote Minnesota icon Hubert Humphrey, saying "If we are unwilling to make history, others will make it for us."
She introduced herself to the state whose precinct caucuses — two years and five months from now — will kick off the presidential season as someone who is still inspired by her iron-miner grandfather. She said she was initially motivated to political activity to keep new mothers from being forced to leave the hospital after a short stay, and that she has tried in six-plus years in the Senate to work with Republicans when she can.
But she blamed the Republican-controlled House for blocking action on a new farm bill, immigration reform and other important issues and burying them in their desk drawer. "The people of this country want the keys to that desk drawer," she said. "Obstructionism and extremism are holding us back."
She laid out an "innovation agenda" in which the nation would regain its manufacturing and brainpower edge, and offered a few mild Iowa and Minnesota jokes — how Iowans consider Clear Lake to be an example of "surf," and how Minnesota mothers strive for their children to grow up to be vice president.