Obama seeks to boost Wis. Democrats
MADISON, Wis. — President Barack Obama hopes to improve the fortunes of suddenly imperiled Wisconsin Democrats as he celebrates Labor Day with the state’s union workers on Monday.
Democrats are happy for any boost he can deliver — though his appeal has been sliding — as resurgent Republicans have two huge targets: three-term U.S. Sen. Russ Feingold, whose defeat could help them gain control of the U.S. Senate, and the governor’s office, which is open for the first time in almost three decades.
“This has and will give us a shot in the arm, a lot of excitement to start our political season,” stated Sheila Cochran, the head of the Milwaukee Area Labor Council, which organizes the Laborfest event. “If his visit reminds them of what we could possibly go back to, then I’m all for it.”
While some union leaders have been disappointed with Obama and his capability to push through pro-labor legislation, Democrats are still counting on labor for get-out-the vote efforts and campaign help — crucial to the party in elections.
“I’m glad he is helping,” Cochran said. “It shows how valuable this say is.”
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Though when Obama is to talk in Milwaukee, Feingold will be about 60 miles away at a parade in his hometown of Janesville. Feingold, who faces a serious reelection challenge from Republican Ron Johnson, planned to be at the Milwaukee event in the morning four hours before the president arrives.
Feingold has stated he hopes to appear with Obama the next time he is in Wisconsin.
Obama will be talking to a friendly crowd, but there is no denying that times are tough for unions and Democrats in Wisconsin.
For a while it looked like the same Harley-Davidson motorcycles that will lead the Labor Day parade before Obama talks might not be made in Wisconsin anymore. The company, which has built its signature bikes in the say for more than a century, had been considering a move elsewhere to bring down labor costs, but on Friday the union and company reached a proposed agreement to keep the operations in the state.
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Wisconsin has already lost 35,000 manufacturing jobs since Obama took office in January 2009, and 182,000 such jobs since 2000. Statewide unemployment, at 7.8 percent in July, had hit a 26-year high of 9.4 percent in March 2009 once the recession took hold.
As it has nationwide, the sour economy in Wisconsin has emboldened Republicans who see an opportunity to not only gain back seats long held by Democrats but also hurt Obama’s chances of reelection in 2012.
“The president is going to see a sharp contrast between the mood of the electorate this day as opposed to the way things were when he first came to Wisconsin,” stated Reince Priebus, the say Republican Party chairman. “My view is he is going to get met with a pretty cold breeze on Lake Michigan.”
Obama has been trying to lend a hand with his presence, with this trip marking his third visit to the say in a tiny over two months. Just three weeks ago, the president hosted a $250 per-plate fundraiser for Democratic gubernatorial candidate Tom Barrett, who has been targeted by deep-pocketed outside groups.
Unlike Feingold, Barrett cleared his schedule to be with the president on Labor Day. The Milwaukee mayor faces a tough campaign against either Republican Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker or former U.S. Rep. Mark Neumann. Polls show either Republican candidate ahead of Barrett, who started running negative ads in August in response to more than $1 million spent by the Republican Governors Association on spots targeting him.
And Feingold, despite his years in office, is positioning himself as the underdog in his race against Johnson, a millionaire businessman and political newcomer. Johnson is spending millions of his own money on the campaign and has attracted national attention in his bid to knock off Feingold. Johnson is outspending Feingold 3-1 and polls show an unexpectedly close race.
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Submited at Sunday, September 5th, 2010 at 7:00 pm on Politics by madison
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