HILL AIR FORCE BASE, Utah (AP) —
President
Barack Obama made his first
presidential visit to Utah on Thursday, leaving him
one state short of touching down in all 50 while in office.
South
Dakota is the only state he hasn't been to.
Obama
arrived at Hill Air Force Base near Ogden, Utah, ahead of a Friday appearance
at the military base to talk about clean energy and clean-energy jobs. He had
visited Louisville, Kentucky, earlier Thursday.
Upon arrival
at his hotel in Salt Lake City, Obama went straight into a meeting with top
leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Among the Mormon
church leaders he met with were President Henry Eyring, President Dieter
Uchtdorf and Elders Tom Perry and Todd Christofferson, White House spokesman
Eric Schultz said.
Schultz
said Obama was pleased to meet with the church leaders as presidents before him
have done.
They
were expected to discuss the church's record of service, including its work on
disaster relief and other humanitarian issues, and the need to overhaul the
U.S. immigration system, Schultz said.
Obama began the year four states short of
having visited all 50. The White House quickly scheduled trips to Idaho and
South Carolina, two of the four, before the stop in Utah.
It's unclear how soon Obama will visit South
Dakota. But with 21 months left on his term, he has plenty of time to get
there.
Obama's
last visit to Utah was a brief stop in Park City in 2007 when he was a
candidate for president.
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