Vice President Mike Pence and new Secretary of Labor Eugene Scalia toured a family-owned Lakeville sign company Thursday afternoon, highlighting what they described as an "extraordinary period" of economic prosperity.
"We didn't get there by accident," Scalia told a crowd of workers at the warehouse rally. "It was the policies and tax cuts our president put forward early on."
Pence, accompanied by his wife, Karen, made a quick campaign stop in the south metro before joining President Donald Trump at a Thursday evening rally in downtown Minneapolis. Former Republican U.S. Rep. Jason Lewis, who recently announced a bid for the U.S. Senate, joined the tour but did not address the crowd.
Standing in front of a backdrop of familiar Minnesota road signs, Pence said that Trump "has never stopped fighting to create more jobs and a more prosperous and more secure America."
He pointed to rally host Safety Signs, owned and operated by Sue and Jay Blanchard, as an American success story benefiting from Trump's tax cuts and economic policies. Safety Signs employs about 130 workers and makes road and pedestrian signs.
"Right out of the gate we cut taxes across the board for working families, small businesses just like this, family farms. We rolled back more federal red tape than any administration in American history already," Pence said. "And as you all see happening in northern Minnesota, we've unleashed American energy."
Echoing a speech he gave in May at a St. Paul steel mill, the vice president urged Congress to put politics aside and pass a new trade agreement to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
He also urged voters to call U.S. Rep Angie Craig, the freshman Democrat in the Second Congressional District who unseated Lewis in 2018, and implore her to support the proposed United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA).