ap

Skip to content

Breaking News

President Barack Obama shakes hands in Minneapolis on Saturday at the end of a four-day swing that also took him to Oregon, Washington state, California and Nevada to spur Democrats to vote.
President Barack Obama shakes hands in Minneapolis on Saturday at the end of a four-day swing that also took him to Oregon, Washington state, California and Nevada to spur Democrats to vote.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

MINNEAPOLIS — Why go backward, President Barack Obama challenged voters Saturday. He said Republicans hope Americans forget which party brought them a “lost decade.”

Obama closed a four-day campaign swing ahead of the Nov. 2 elections with a spirited rally imploring supporters to defeat the conventional wisdom that Democrats face steep losses. He cast the choice as one between the economic policies “that got us into this mess” and the policies leading the nation out.

“All they’ve got is the same old stuff that they were peddling over the last decade,” he said of Republicans. “I just don’t want to relive the past.”

He said: “The other side is betting on amnesia. It is up to you to show them that you have not forgotten.”

Obama rallied in Minneapolis to help former Sen. Mark Dayton in his race for governor against Republican state legislator Tom Emmer and the Independence Party’s Tom Horner, a public-relations executive and political pundit. Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty’s second term runs out in January.

It’s been a grueling four days of campaigning and fundraising by the president, who since Wednesday had touched down in Oregon, Washington state, California and Nevada.

Cheered at large rallies at every stop, Obama begins his basic speech with some flattering talk about the local candidate. Then he launches into his message that voting Republican would be a mistake for the country.

Voters are angry about the economy, unemployment and other issues and, according to polls, seem intent on taking out their frustrations on Democrats, the party in power at both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue.

But Obama is trying to remind the broad coalition that helped elect him in 2008 — women, Latinos, minorities and young voters — that change has always been slow to come but is coming, so they should not give up.

“Don’t let them tell you that change isn’t possible,” Obama said. “It’s just hard, that’s all.”

Before leaving Minneapolis, Obama also was helping to raise about $600,000 for House Democrats at a fundraiser attended by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi; Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., chairman of the House Democratic campaign effort; and others.

He’ll be in Rhode Island on Monday to raise more money for House Democrats. He is slated to spend the rest of the week in Washington, including an appearance Wednesday on “The Daily Show” with Jon Stewart, with more campaigning next weekend.

RevContent Feed

More in News