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President Obama rides into Buffalo with economic hope
Updated: August 21, 2010, 10:11 AM
An ebullient President Obama swung through Buffalo on Thursday, telling workers at a local factory — and Americans across the country — that the economy is turning around and likely to get better still in the months and years ahead.
Obama's appearance at Industrial Support Inc., a manufacturer that employs about 70, capped a 3-hour, 15-minute presidential jaunt from the airport to the East Side and back.
Related: Lunch at Duff's Industrial Support employees impressed 3407 families share story Handshakes excite Obama fans Donn Esmonde's column
BuffaloNews.com Live: Minute-by-minute review of Obama's visit
Photo galleries: Arrival at airport Lunch at Duff's Industrial Support stop Bystanders awaiting motorcade
Video: Waiting for Obama Air Force One lands Meeting the president
Obama's visit included a factory tour, a somber meeting with the Flight 3407 families and an
unscheduled stop at Duff's Famous Chicken Wings in Cheektowaga — where a Chaffee woman
dubbed the president "a hottie with a smokin' little body."
Through it all, the president appeared to be in an extraordinarily good mood —
buoyed, perhaps, by the news that the nation gained 290,000 jobs in April, the most in four
years.
At a 40-minute meeting with Industrial Support employees and invited guests, Obama said the
steps he took soon after taking office — which include a controversial $787 billion
stimulus bill — are paying off.
"I want to just say to Buffalo — I want to say to all of you and I want to say to
America — we can say beyond a shadow of a doubt, today we are headed in the right
direction," he said.
In terms of jobs growth, "this month was better than last month," he said. "Next month is
going to be stronger than this month. And next year is going to be better than this year."
He noted, though, that Republicans refused to work with Democrats as they acted to counter
an economic crisis that threatened to slide the nation into a depression.
"Frankly, I had one side of the aisle just sit on the sidelines as the crisis unfolded," he
said. "And if we had taken that position, just thinking about what was good for my politics,
millions more Americans would have lost their jobs and their businesses and their homes."
While things are better now, Obama portrayed the recovery from the deep recession as a work
in progress.
Speaking in a city were a billboard proclaims "Mr. President, I need a freakin job," Obama
said he often reads letters from Americans who are out of work.
And that, he said, is proof that the government must do even more to create jobs. His
proposal to create a $30 billion fund to help small businesses get financing would help, said
the president — who prodded Republicans to support him in that effort.
"I'm hopeful that our small business agenda doesn't fall victim to the same partisanship
that we've seen over the last year," he said. "Helping businesses to create jobs should be
something that both parties can agree to."
Yet there are hints that the partisanship will continue.
Tweaking the president over the Buffalo visit, Republicans chose Rep. Chris Lee,
R-Clarence, to give the GOP response to Obama's weekly radio/Internet address this Saturday.
Among attendees of the event at Industrial Support, there were signs that many feel some
discomfort with the president's view of the economy.
"We're at the beginning of the recovery; it's premature to say it's a strong recovery,"
said Thomas J. Hook, president and chief executive officer of Greatbatch, a local medical
technology company.
Hook said it's important for government not to add burdens onto small business just as the
economy is starting to grow.
And during the brief question-and-answer session at Industrial Support, one of the
questioners echoed Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, R-Utah, who recently said the Obama-backed health care
plan represented "the Europeanization of America" — which wasn't meant as a compliment.
In response, Obama launched into a detailed explanation of the health bill, capping it by
saying: "If you don't have health insurance, we're building off the free market, off the
existing system of private employer-based insurance, and we're saying this is going to give
you a chance to get health insurance that's a little bit cheaper.
"I don't know what that's called; I just think it's a good idea."
Another attendee asked Obama about replacing the American system of progressive tax rates
with "a flat tax that's equitable for everyone."
In response, the president said: "In order to have a flat tax that was revenue-neutral,
that didn't add to the deficit, it'd have to be a pretty substantial tax, but it would mean a
huge tax break for Warren Buffett," the legendary investor who founded Berkshire Hathaway
Inc., which owns The Buffalo News.
Obama took only four questions from the audience at Industrial Support, giving wordy and
wonky answers to each.
The event started 37 minutes late, partly because Obama's plane landed at 12:35 p.m. rather
than at the 12:25 as scheduled, partly because of the unscheduled stop at Duff's, and partly
because Obama seemed to so enjoy his tour of the Industrial Support factory floor.
He spent several minutes at each of several stops along the way, and seemed fascinated with
the company's gadgets.
As workers demonstrated a bottle rocket that shot empty Pepsi bottles across the factory
floor, the president said: "I never had this stuff in science class."
When other workers showed him a series of ball bearings moving deftly along a track for
reasons that could not be determined, a worker said: "That's like your jump shot, right?" To
which the basketball-loving president said with a grin: "It goes in every time."
Most notably of all, Obama had some fun at the expense of Sheryl Gay Stolberg of the New
York Times.
Obama urged the diminutive reporter to board a mysterious circular hovercraft-like device
the company makes for some mysterious purpose. And he seemed to greatly enjoy watching
Stolberg slide across the factory floor.
"It's a levitator. It's a hovercraft. It's for fun!" Obama said as the cameras rolled.
Stolberg didn't seem to enjoy her moment in the spotlight, but Obama consoled her by saying
that her kids would enjoy it.
"It's better than covering the Supreme Court," he said.
The president's jocular mood seemed apparent throughout the day, from the moment he jogged
down the steps of Air Force One with a broad smile on his face till the time he bounded back
up the airplane steps on his way to a Democratic fundraiser in New York City.
But there was one moment where a much more serious mood dominated: during a brief but
emotional meeting between the president and 10 people who lost loved ones in the crash of
Continental Connection Flight 3407 in Clarence Center in February 2009.
At the meeting, Kathy Johnston, who lost her husband, Kevin, in the crash, presented the
president with a red bracelet honoring the Flight 3407 victims. The president wore it through
the rest of the day.
Not long after the meeting with the families, though, Obama's mood lifted as he surprised a
crowd of about 100 at Duff's.
Like a politician running for re-election, Obama stopped at every table and shook every had
and held a picture-perfect baby for long enough for every photographer to get a shot.
Brian Meyer's audio report on President Obama's visit to Duff's:
Click here to download the audio report and take it with you
Video: Duff's server on president's order
And when Luann Haley of Chaffee proclaimed the fit, youthful president to be "a hottie with
a smokin' little body," Obama laughed and hugged her.
Patrons at Duff's and attendees at the Industrial Support event likewise greeted the
president with wide-eyed amazement.
Meanwhile, hundreds of people lined the streets along the motorcade route to try to get a
glimpse of the president.
Perhaps because of the rain, a pro-Obama rally near the factory site drew far fewer people
than expected, and protests by "tea party" supporters, the Seneca Nation of Indians and other
groups were generally small in number.
What wasn't small, though, was the enthusiasm of those who got to see the president —
and the enthusiasm of the president himself.
"It was like I was speaking to a good friend I hadn't seen in a long time," said Michael
Massucci of Orchard Park, describing his interactions with Obama at Industrial Support, where
Massucci is manager of machinery. "He told me that I really care about my work."
And so does the president.
"This company makes me want to double down and work even harder, because I'm absolutely
confident that if we continue to take responsibility to invest in our future that our
brightest days are still ahead of us," Obama said.
News Staff Reporters Jay Tokasz, Matthew Spina, Stephen T. Watson, Robert J. McCarthy
and Deidre Williams contributed to this report.
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