US President Joe Biden’s wife, First lady Dr. Jill Biden has taken charge of Joe Biden’s campaign and is set to make a two-day, four-state blitz next week.
According to the reports, Jill Biden, with Education Secretary Miguel Cardona, a White House official, were scheduled to travel to Colorado, Michigan, Maine and Vermont.
In addition, the official also revealed to the press that Jill will be appearing in Vermont with the state’s Republican Gov. Phil Scott, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis and Maine Gov. Janet Mills, both Democrats.
“President Biden and his administration are creating millions of jobs in infrastructure, clean energy, and manufacturing. These positions pay well. And many of them require associate degrees, certificates, or other hands-on instruction, not four years of college,” the official previewing Jill’s remarks, said in a statement.
It was also revealed to the public that Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, the first lady and other dozen Cabinet officials are expected to visit over 20 states during the three-week “Investing in America” push.
In a statement released by Vanessa Valdivia, the first lady’s press secretary, she claimed that “The First Lady is a key messenger for the administration’s priorities and will continue to highlight the President’s accomplishments across the country through her travel on the Investing in America tour.”
First Lady Jill Biden to visit Maine, Vermont on Wednesday as part of ‘Investing in America Tour’ https://t.co/UR7yii9fz2— The Boston Globe (@BostonGlobe) April 1, 2023
Moreover, the official also revealed that Jill is expected to tell Americans that “Learning that’s connected to careers is the heart of the Biden Education Pathway. It starts with free, high-quality universal preschool and goes through high school. It provides access to two years of affordable community college and connects to great jobs.”
The announcement came a month after Jill traveled three times into Republican-led states for official events and visited a few military families in Ohio.
She also reportedly stopped at a community college in Indiana where she called for more cancer research investments in Louisiana, together with Bill Cassidy.
“It’s the future of our workforce, how we grow the economy from the bottom up and the middle out. And these aren’t red ideas or blue ideas; they’re American ideas. In a time when we sometimes struggle to find common ground, these learning pathways bring us together.” the first lady said at the National League of Cities Congressional City Conference in Washington, DC.










