Politics | budget Obama Army's New Mission: Pass the Budget Prez calls on legion of campaign supporters, but will they follow? By Jason Farago Posted Mar 18, 2009 8:49 AM CDT Copied President Barack Obama walks with, from left, Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad, D-ND, Budget Director Peter Orszag, and House Budget Committee Chairman John Spratt Jr, D-SC. (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds) Four months after propelling Barack Obama to victory, his millions-strong army of volunteers is being asked to help out again, writes Jeff Zeleny in the New York Times. Anyone who contributed $5 or more to the campaign has been enlisted to support Obama's effort to pass his 2010 budget, which faces an uphill battle in Congress. But it's unclear whether the volunteers who stumped in 2008 will join this new, less glamorous effort. This weekend Obama supporters are being urged to go door-to-door to convince doubters of his plan's merit, a move some former campaign staffers dismissed as a PR stunt. And Democrats on Capitol Hill, who don't unanimously back the Obama budget, wonder if having supporters complain to Congress members contradicts the president's avowals of bipartisanship. "There will be some trial and error," admits Obama campaign manager David Plouffe. Read These Next What we know about Savannah Guthrie's missing mother. Sarah Ferguson said she cut off Epstein. Not quite, emails show. The voice behind 'Joy to the World' has died at 83. Wordle has made a big change, starting today. Report an error