News: Late Obama push for Dems in Conn., Pa. gov races
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — President
Barack Obama's final campaign swing of the midterm election season
Sunday came down to part nostalgia tour and part test: Did he still have
the chemistry with voters who gave him two terms as president to drive
them to the ballot box one more time?
Seeking to
mobilize his election coalition of young people, African-Americans,
women and Latinos, Obama on Sunday made a last-minute push in
Connecticut seeking to save Democratic Gov. Dannel Malloy from defeat in
a neck-and-neck contest two days before the election.
Obama
also made a case at the Bridgeport rally that many Americans are better
off today than when he came into office and they shouldn't let critics
deter them from voting.
"Despite
all the cynicism, America is making progress," Obama told the crowd of
about 1,900. "Despite unyielding opposition, there are workers who have
jobs today that didn't have it before. There are families who have
health insurance today that didn't have it before. There are kids going
to college today that didn't have the opportunity to go to college
before. There are troops in Afghanistan now here with their families
because of your vote."
Obama
relied on the old rallying cries of hope, of being of fired up and ready
to go, that branded his 2008 and 2012 contests. By his own wistful
account, Sunday's was probably his last ramble down the campaign trail
for an election affecting his presidency.
But
on the weekend it was clear some things had changed. When Obama
campaigned for Malloy in the closing days of the 2010 campaign, he
filled Bridgeport's Arena at Harbor Yard with 9,000, nearly five times
more than his crowd on Sunday.
He closed out the day in
Philadelphia, rallying votes for businessman Tom Wolf, the Democrat who
appears to have the edge over GOP Gov. Tom Corbett, at a rally that drew
about 5,500.
"There's almost
no economic measure where we're not doing better," he told that crowd.
But "we've got so much more work to do." Obama swiped at Corbett as a
governor who has presided over lagging job growth, won't stand up for
pay equity for women and opposes an increase in the minimum wage. "We
need leaders who understand the 21st century," he said.
Obama
switched planes in Philadelphia for his return trip to Washington
because of a mechanical problem with a flap in his earlier aircraft, the
White House said. The White House described the problem as minor.Obama's plane arrived back near Washington after 9 p.m.
In Connecticut, Malloy and Foley are in a rematch of the 2010 race that Malloy narrowly won.
Obama's Bridgeport speech was interrupted at least four times by protesters seeking changes to the nation's immigration laws.
"I am sympathetic to those who are concerned about immigration," Obama said. "It's the other party that's blocked it. Unfortunately, folks get frustrated and they want to yell at everybody."
Obama's appearances highlighted competing pressures on the president as he balances his unpopularity in states where Democrats face tough Republican challenges and the need for Democrats to energize crucial elements of their voting bloc.
Obama has focused this past week's appearances on candidates for governor in states that he carried in both of his presidential runs. On Saturday, he headlined a rally in Detroit for Senate candidate Gary Peters and Mark Schauer, who's running for governor, and earlier in the week he campaigned in Wisconsin, Maine and Rhode Island.
Though any Democratic losses probably would raise questions about the strength of his popularity even among his biggest fans, Democrats said not campaigning carried bigger downsides.
"There is a bigger risk in
not doing everything he can to hold a Senate majority and elect
Democratic governors," said Ben LaBolt, national spokesman for Obama's
2012 campaign. "Republicans are likely to say he didn't perform to 2008
and 2012 levels regardless."
Democrats
outnumber Republicans in Connecticut, so motivating core voters was
essential for Malloy's survival against Foley. First lady Michelle
Obama, who campaigned for Malloy on Thursday, called him an
"instrumental partner" of the president, and she citied Malloy's success
in raising the minimum wage and with the state's rollout of the federal
health law.
Foley got a
boost Sunday when conservative candidate Joe Visconti dropped out of the
race and threw his support behind the Republican.
In
Pennsylvania, Wolf has emerged as the favorite, but Corbett was seizing
on Obama's appearance to portray the Democrat as a virtual Obama
running mate, hoping that antipathy toward the president would drive
more Republican voters to polls.
"Voting for Tom Wolf would be like voting to make Obama Pennsylvania's governor," a new Corbett television ad said.
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