Obama pitching economic priorities in Minnesota

Published 8:20 am Friday, June 27, 2014

MINNEAPOLIS — President Barack Obama is pitching his ideas to boost the American middle class in Minnesota, a state that already has embraced a key component of the president’s economic agenda by moving to raise its minimum wage.

Obama was closing a two-day trip to the Minneapolis area on Friday with a speech on the economy at a castle-shaped bandshell on picturesque Lake Harriet. He’ll seek to frame his agenda in terms that resonate for Americans still struggling financially despite the recovery, reinforcing a populist “on your side” economic push that Obama and Democrats are making in the run-up to the 2014 midterm elections.

“It must feel kind of discouraging, because it doesn’t feel like what’s being talked about in Washington has anything to do with what’s going on in your lives day today,” Obama said Thursday during a town hall meeting in a Minneapolis park. “And it must feel as if sometimes you’re just forgotten.”

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Minnesota offers Obama a prime opportunity to argue that Democrats have not forgotten the middle class. Although his push to get Congress to raise the federal minimum wage to $10.10 an hour has sputtered, a half-dozen states have responded to Obama’s call to action by raising state wages on their own.