President Barack Obama shakes hands as he is introduced at Abraham Lincoln High School in Denver, Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2011.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Associated Press
DENVER — Capping a campaign trip for his economic plan and his re-election, President Barack Obama on Tuesday tried to keep pressure on Congress to consider his nearly $450 billion jobs bill, saying it had been two weeks since he sent the bill to Capitol Hill "and now I want it back."
"I want it back, passed, so I can sign this bill and start putting people back to work," Obama said from Abraham Lincoln Hill School, a site chosen to emphasize the education elements of his bill.
The president tailored his comments to his audience, saying the school's science labs were built decades ago and schools around the country need updated facilities. Yet his broader speech was nearly identical to ones he has given around the country.
There has been no clear sign that his campaign for his bill is winning over Republicans in Congress whose support he needs.
Obama's spokesman, Jay Carney, told reporters the White House hopes members of Congress are hearing from their constituents about the need to act. Obama made that pitch himself to the audience of several thousand people, saying: "Every one of you can help make it happen by sending a message to Congress, a simple message: 'Pass this jobs bill.'
Obama's bill would spend about $25 billion to modernize public schools. The White House said Colorado's share could support up to 3,400 jobs.
Overall, his jobs plan is a mix of payroll tax cuts and spending that he says could be paid for by requiring wealthier individuals, families and companies to pay more.
The president's three-day trip out West included seven fundraisers in Washington state and California in advance of an important fundraising deadline.
With the economy stuck and unemployment high as the 2012 campaign heats up, Obama has been reminding supporters that he never told them governing would be easy.
His own chief political adviser, David Axelrod, underscored that reality Tuesday, when he cast the president's re-election bid as "a titanic struggle."
With the tough political landscape in mind, Obama has used his West Coast swing to get in some shots at the GOP presidential field.
"I urge all of you to watch some of these Republican debates. It's a different vision about who we are, who we stand for," Obama told a Hollywood fundraiser on Monday.
Republicans have panned Obama's West Coast swing, saying he has been more interested in saving his own job than creating new jobs for Americans. And Republican National Committee spokeswoman Kirsten Kukowski said Obama was "treating the West Coast as an ATM for his campaign coffers as he makes his way toward the first billion-dollar campaign."
Obama was flying back to Washington Tuesday night.
- Gallup poll shows shift in views on morality...
- Defending the Faith: A case for the...
- Boy Scouts open membership to all boys,...
- Wash. I-5 bridge collapse caused by oversize...
- Affordable Care Act could bring 'skinny'...
- Mistake or miracle: New evidence on the...
- Mothers on meth: New book highlights family...
- One third of millenials regret going to college
- Defending the Faith: A case for the...
63 - Boy Scouts open membership to all boys,...
44 - Journalists criticize Obama...
38 - IRS official Lerner invokes Fifth...
22 - Former IRS chief to Congress: Can't say...
21 - More Obama aides knew IRS targeted...
19 - US companies challenging contraception...
19 - Gallup poll shows shift in views on...
18



The "jobs" bill is not designed to create jobs, its designed for political gain. Governnment can make, or break, the conditions that encourage job creation, but can't create jobs. Money taken to make government jobs takes away from money More..