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Obama to grads: Seek challenges, not party fights

Mark S. Smith

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama has some advice for the class of 2010: Don’t get caught up in the partisan trench warfare that often consumes Washington, and use your talents instead to help America confront its biggest challenges.

Obama’s homily on the imperatives of citizenship was expected to come in a speech last Saturday at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

At the same time, 45 miles away, Sarah Palin was set to denounce the president as a big-government Democrat whose free-spending ways will bankrupt the country.

The former GOP vice presidential hopeful was going to headline a Clarkston, Mich. forum hosted by the anti-tax Americans for Prosperity Foundation. Officials expected more than 1,000 to attend.

Palin’s been on a nationwide speaking tour as she considers a 2012 White House bid and promotes her book.

Obama’s audience was expected to be a bit larger than the former Alaska governor’s: a capacity crowd of 80,000 at Michigan Stadium.

In the speech, White House spokesman Bill Burton said, the president would urge graduates “to participate as citizens in shaping our nation’s destiny. He will offer reflections on the role of government, drawing on our founding fathers and based on his own experiences.’’

“He will ask them to eschew partisan rancor and come together to move the country forward,’’ Burton added.

Among those listening was  Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, who’s on Obama’s list of potential Supreme Court nominees.

Michigan, which was a key battleground in 2008, is likely to reprise the role in both the fall congressional campaign and Obama’s expected re-election bid.

A big reason is the economy. Michigan has the nation’s highest unemployment rate — 14.1 percent — and an angry electorate to match.

In his weekly radio and Internet address, Rep. Pete Hoekstra, R-Mich., said Obama’s visit would present an opportunity “to show the president, firsthand, the painful plight of the people of Michigan.’’

Many of the graduates Obama addressed will soon learn how tough it is to find a job in this economy, the Michigan congressman said, adding that the share of young Americans out of work is the highest it’s been in more than 50 years.

Obama’s speech is the first of four he is giving this commencement season.

On May 9, he’ll speak at Hampton University, a historically black college in Hampton, Va., founded in 1868 on the grounds of a former plantation.

He’s also addressing Army cadets at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., on May 22, continuing a tradition of presidents addressing graduates at the service academies. He announced his Afghanistan troop surge at West Point last December.

Also this year, for the first time, Obama plans to participate in a high school commencement. It’s part of his Race to the Top education initiative, with its goal of boosting the United States’ lagging graduation rate to the world’s best by 2020.

High schools across the country have competed for the honor, submitting essays and videos. A vote on the White House Web site yielded three finalists, and Obama will choose among them this week.

Associated Press writers Kathy Barks Hoffman in Lansing, Mich., and Will Lester in Washington, D.C. contributed to this report.