WASHINGTON - Barack Obama's virtual campaign is back in Minnesota.
Building on the massive Internet apparatus that helped him win the presidency, Obama is launching a full-tilt grass-roots campaign to drum up support for his controversial $3.5 trillion budget in politically competitive states and districts where he might be able to sway critical congressional votes.
The centerpiece of the campaign, an e-mail list of more than 13 million supporters nationwide, draws heavily on voters and activists in swing states like Minnesota that were in play at different points in the 2008 presidential election.
Among the supporters is Katie McGee, a St. Paul paralegal who volunteered for the Obama for America campaign last fall. Now it's morphed into Organizing for America -- and she spent Saturday going door-to-door in St. Paul talking about the Obama budget's remaking of the American social contract on health care, education and renewable energy.
"It's challenging," said McGee, noting that on the campaign trail Obama could easily galvanize large enthusiastic crowds. "It's a little less sexy with just the issues. It's 'Why do I have to spend my Saturdays doing this? Didn't we just elect this guy?'"
Arrayed against the campaign are most congressional Republicans, along with some Democrats, who are criticizing the budget as the largest expansion of government spending in history. The looming budget battle will be the first major test of the Obama campaign's continuing grass-roots reach and also may be a defining moment of his presidency.
Obama's budget campaign is relying on a network of groups -- including more than 40 labor, environmental and social justice organizations in Minnesota -- that can be counted on to rev up a $5 million to $7 million ground campaign of phone banks, e-mail blasts and door-knocking on behalf of the White House's new budget.
"This is the biggest, baddest coalition campaign I've ever worked on," said Jeremy Funk of the Democrat-aligned Americans United for Change.