Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) was in New Hampshire for the weekend as he explores a potential 2020 presidential bid while trying to set himself apart with his broad appeal to the working class.
The senator spoke Friday at Winnacunnet High School in Hampton with five other panelists and an audience of about 50 people.
Brown expressed his strong support for paid family medical leave, higher wages, better benefits, better workplace rules and what he called a "pro-family" workplace.
"Since my election to the third term in the Senate, I have continually been noticing Democrats seem to think we either chose to talk to the progressive base or you talk to working families and listen to issues that matter to them. I don't think it's a choice," he said. "I won in states like Ohio because of who I am and what I fight for every day, which is dignity of work."
The event was organized by an activist group known as Campaign for a Family Friendly Economy.
This was Brown's first visit since 2014. He had four other stops in the state Saturday as part of his five-state "Dignity of Work" tour.
Brown has said he and his wife, journalist Connie Schultz, are still deciding whether he should run for president. He said he called former President Barack Obama about a month ago to talk about his potential run for the presidency but stopped short of saying how Obama responded.