The Democratic president, who had largely avoided weighing in on
the 2016 campaign, basked in a recent set of victories over his
healthcare law, gay marriage and trade, and launched broadsides at
the growing number of Republicans entering the race to succeed him
in office.
"We've got some healthy competition in the Democratic Party, but
I've lost count of how many Republicans are running for this job,"
Obama quipped in a campaign-style event.
"They'll have enough for an actual 'Hunger Games,'" he said,
referring to the popular fight-to-the-death young adult novels.
Though he did not mention Walker by name, Obama clearly had him in
mind. The two men met at the airport where Air Force One landed,
shaking hands and chatting amiably.
But in his speech, Obama panned the tax cuts that Walker pushed
through in Wisconsin. The president praised the neighboring state of
Minnesota, where the jobless rate is lower, and where a Democratic
governor has increased taxes but raised the minimum wage and
expanded early childhood education.
He also criticized Walker's challenge to the collective bargaining
process for most public unions in Wisconsin.
"We have to protect and not attack a worker's right to organize," he
said.
Walker is expected to announce his presidential candidacy on July
13, bringing the number of Republicans in the race to 15.
"Over the next year and a half, you're going to hear a lot of
pitches from a lot of people, they're going to deny that any
progress has been made," Obama said about the candidates.
"They're going to be making a whole bunch of stuff up."
Republicans dismissed the president's remarks.
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“It’s no surprise all President Obama has left are partisan attacks
after spending the last six and a half years presiding over the
weakest economic recovery in modern history and a declining middle
class," said Michael Short, spokesman for the Republican National
Committee.
Obama's visit put some political punch into his push to make nearly
5 million more American workers eligible for overtime pay, a policy
popular with unions.
Early in his tenure as governor in 2011, Walker burnished his
conservative credentials by pushing for a law to limit
collective-bargaining rights of public-sector employees. He survived
a union-backed recall election in 2012.
Labor unions are a traditional ally of Obama, a Democrat, though
that relationship was tested in June in Congress in a struggle over
international trade.
Carrying the overtime-rule fight into Wisconsin gave Obama a chance
to mend fences with unions, which last month unsuccessfully opposed
his quest for "fast-track" power to craft a proposed 12-nation
Pacific Rim trade treaty.
(Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton, Megan Casella and Emily
Stephenson; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh, Tom Brown and David
Gregorio)
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