President Obama will address health care today in a state that has long prided itself on the health of its citizens.
Minnesota has one of the healthiest populations and lowest rates of uninsured in the nation, is home to the world-famous Mayo Clinic and has introduced innovations in the cost, quality and access to health care.
When he arrives for his Minneapolis health care rally, the president also will land in a battleground state that has been friendly to him -- it gave him its 10 electoral votes in last year's election and hosted the rally where he announced he had clinched the Democratic nomination and gave his wife a notorious fist bump.
But Minnesota, which also hosted former President Bill Clinton for a health care rally in 1994 and former President George W. Bush in 2006 during a visit where he signed an executive order on health care, may not offer the nation a perfect model as the health care fight gears up.
Obama is likely to mention what Minnesota does right in his speech, but White House and congressional aides also cautioned against portraying the visit as an endorsement of Minnesota as the nation's reform ideal.
Despite its relatively low level of uninsured and a quality of care that is the envy of many states, Minnesota has struggled with escalating costs and has been forced to scale back its efforts.
The state also features health care debates that are nearly as bitter as those taking place nationwide. In recent years, much of the state's budget fight has centered on a drive, backed by Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty, to trim the state's subsidized health care rolls. Legislative DFLers have largely fought to maintain or increase those rolls, and neither side has declared a truce.
With the president's visit today, the fights have only amplified. Pawlenty, a possible Obama rival in 2012, recently suggested on a GOP conference call that states might invoke the Constitution to sue over Obama's health care plans. Meanwhile, the state Republican Party is airing anti-Obama health care television ads to coincide with the president's visit and legislative Democrats accused Pawlenty's administration of failing to show results in some of the health care reforms in the state.