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Obama Focuses on Veterans, Fundraising


U.S. President Barack Obama signs a framed portrait of himself for 16-year-old Myra Soukup upon his arrival in Minneapolis, June 1, 2012.
U.S. President Barack Obama signs a framed portrait of himself for 16-year-old Myra Soukup upon his arrival in Minneapolis, June 1, 2012.
U.S. President Barack Obama is visiting the north-central state of Minnesota Friday, where he will urge Congress to take action to boost job opportunities for military veterans and focus on fundraising for his re-election campaign.

As part of his congressional "to-do list," President Obama is calling on lawmakers to pass legislation creating a Veterans Job Corps. The initiative aims to put those who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan back to work as police officers, firefighters and in other roles that use their military skills.

The president is also announcing a new initiative that will help service members with manufacturing skills receive civilian credentials and licenses. The White House says the "We Can't Wait" initiative will help up to 126,000 service members.

Mr. Obama will make his appeal Friday at a facility of Fortune 100 company Honeywell, a diversified technology and manufacturing business that has hired 900 veterans since 2011 as part of an Obama administration initiative.

After his stop at Honeywell, the president will interact with donors at several high-dollar fundraisers, including one event costing $40,000 a person and another set at $50,000 a person. Mr. Obama travels later Friday to his hometown of Chicago for more fundraisers.

Meanwhile, the president's Republican rival for the White House, Mitt Romney, is scheduled to attend his own fundraising event Friday in California. Romney's campaign received a boost Thursday when Nancy Reagan, the widow of former president Ronald Reagan, endorsed him.

Romney and his wife, Ann, visited Mrs. Reagan at her home in Los Angeles on Thursday. In a statement released after the meeting, Reagan said her husband “Ronnie," as she affectionately called him, would have liked Romney's "business background and his strong principles." She said she believes the former Massachusetts governor has the experience and leadership skills that, as she put it, "our country so desperately needs."


Some information for this report was provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.

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