Ever since President Obama held them up as a model of American strength and perseverance, Rebekah and Ben Erler have felt a predictable backlash.
A Google news search for "Rebekah Erler" on Friday yielded about 9,000 results, many of them pointing out Erler's work for a Democratic senator more than a decade ago.
Talk radio giant Rush Limbaugh called Erler a "Democratic campaign operative," and a "fake." On Thursday, she scrolled through dozens of Facebook and Twitter messages from strangers repeating those charges, telling her she should be ashamed of herself.
"Between the two of us looking at our phones, all we're seeing is that she's a political operative and a person that is not real, as if our life is somehow made up just to participate in this thing," Ben Erler said on Thursday night, not long after the family returned from Washington and what Ben called a "once in a multiple generation" visit to the White House.
Obama spotlighted the couple in his State of the Union address as a typical American family, struggling in a difficult economy and just starting to find their footing. Ben, who drives a 1999 Ford F-150 pickup, just celebrated one year back in the construction business and Rebekah works as an accountant. They live in a one-story house in St. Anthony with sons Jack, 5, and Henry, 3.
Yes, Erler said in an interview with the Star Tribune. Just after she graduated from the University of Washington with a degree in political science, she knocked on doors for Washington Democrat Patty Murray's Senate campaign. But she said that was a long time ago, and Sen. Murray likely couldn't pick her out in a lineup.
"I was, like, basically a paid intern for five months, 11 years ago," Erler said. "The idea that I was some sort of political operative is like calling the mail sorter at Microsoft a chief strategic officer. I mean it's ridiculous."
A lot has happened in those 11 years. The Erlers met in San Francisco, moved to Seattle, married in 2008 and then came to Ben's native Minnesota in desperation after the economy soured. They still flinch every time they write a check for child care, which is what prompted Erler to write a letter to Obama in March 2014.