WASHINGTON  President Obama said Wednesday that Republicans were "not necessarily  coldhearted" in their policies but then devoted much of his  speech at the University of Michigan to lampooning GOP opposition  to his views on economic issues, including his proposal to raise  the federal minimum wage.
    As Congress gears up for a debate on his    proposal to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 an hour, Obama    said lawmakers would have to decide between sticking with him    or sticking it to working Americans.  
    "They've got to make a clear choice  talk the talk about    valuing hard work and families, or walk the walk and actually    value hard-working families," Obama said. "You've got a choice.    You can give America the shaft, or you can give it a raise."  
    The address in Ann Arbor featured Obama in a feisty mood, a day    after he announced that 7.1 million people had signed up for    health insurance under the Affordable Care Act, exceeding the    administration's target.  
    Obama said that if Republicans tried to sell their economic    plans at the deli where he had just ordered a Reuben, "they'd    have to call it the Stinkburger or the Meanwich." And he said    opponents to a minimum-wage increase complain it will primarily    help young people, which he suggested was not much different    than yelling, "Get off my lawn!"  
    The edgy message opened a new phase for Obama. With the rollout    of his 2010 health law nearly complete, the president is now    focusing on the congressional elections and on keeping the    Senate in Democratic hands, a task his advisors think depends    in part on his ability to draw a sharp contrast with the GOP's    economic proposals.  
    For starters, Obama is leading off with the fight to raise the    $7.25 minimum wage, an idea that polls have shown is favored by    a strong majority of Americans.  
    But even as Obama used the minimum wage to highlight a    difference with Republicans, Democrats on Capitol Hill are preparing    for the politics of the issue to grow more complicated.  
    Democrats concede that they are unlikely to get enough support    from Republicans to overcome a 60-vote procedural hurdle to    advance the measure. But there is also some concern that an    effort by Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) to support a    smaller increase  perhaps to $9 an hour  could siphon off    some Democratic support. Collins is the only Republican senator    running for reelection this year in a state that Obama won in    2012.  
    A Collins aide said the senator has had discussions over the    last three weeks with a number of Democrats about packaging a    wage increase with other economic measures, including tax    credits for small businesses.  
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Obama, lampooning GOP, calls for hike in minimum wage