President
Barack Obama
Send
me a letter
Hi,
everyone --
Yesterday,
I had lunch with a woman named Rebekah at Matt's Bar in Minneapolis.
Rebekah
wrote me a letter earlier this spring telling me about the challenges
facing her family. More and more, she told me, she and her husband
are working harder and harder just to get by.
So I
decided to reply to her letter in person.
Rebekah
and I spent the day together -- we stopped for burgers before holding
a town hall with other members of the community and small business
owners, to hear directly from folks about what's on their mind.
I'll
be doing more of these trips over the course of the summer, visiting
people who have written me, to spend a day in their cities and towns.
Because speaking directly with the folks I'm working for every day is
the best way to help more Americans understand why growing
opportunity in this country is so important.
So if
you've got a story you want to share with me -- about how you're
doing, what challenges you face, and what's working for you -- I want
to hear from you.
When
Rebekah wrote me, she said, "I'm pretty sure this is a silly
thing to do, to write the President."
But
it's not a silly thing at all. It means so much to me to read your
letters. They remind me exactly who we're fighting for every single
day.
Because,
as a nation, we've made it through some tough times. Over the past 51
months, our businesses have created 9.4 million new jobs. But we have
more work to do to open the doors of opportunity for more Americans.
That's part of what makes these visits so important -- I want you to
know that I'm keeping up this fight until everyone who works hard has
the chance to succeed.
You
can send it by mail. You might even know the address already: 1600
Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, D.C. Or go to the White House
website: www.whitehouse.gov.
I'm
looking forward to hearing from you.
Thanks,
President
Barack Obama
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