VIRGINA, Minn. -- DFL Gov. Mark Dayton urged iron miners to step up the fight against foreign countries illegally dumping steel in the U.S. and threatening the local mining industry.
"The story of the Iron Range is one of standing strong against exploitation and oppression, and too often of a government that will not stand with them," Dayton said to a cheering crowd of 1,500 iron miners. "Today's enemies are not the companies, but the countries that dump their steel in the U.S. market, depress the prices and take away your jobs."
The Iron Range miners were rallying against alleged illegal steel dumping from Asian countries, and pressed for the federal government to impose tariffs on steel from those counties. The issue is particularly raw on the Iron Range, where the steel mining industry has been socked with more than a decade of mine closures and bankruptcies, in part due to pressure from low-cost foreign competitors.
Standing with blaze orange hard hats, the crowd chanted, "Mine it here, make it here!" and "Stand up, fight back! Stand up, fight back!"
Click the photo above to see it in 360 degrees.
In advance of President Obama's visit to Minnesota later this week, Sen. Tom Bakk, DFL-Cook, urged the president to return to Washington with a renewed commitment to ending the dumping of low-cost foreign steel.
"Iron mining has been the lifeblood of the Iron Range for four generations, and it can be the lifeblood for four more," said Bakk, who is the Senate majority leader.
The event took broader election-year implications as Republican candidates have tried to make inroads in an area that has been a stronghold for Dayton and other Democrats.