By Colleen McCain Nelson And Nick Timiraos 

WAYNE, Mich.--President Barack Obama launched a three-day roadshow Wednesday, heralding his economic policies while offering a preview of some of the proposals he will detail in his State of the Union address on Jan. 20.

Declaring that America's resurgence is real and the economy is rebounding, Mr. Obama urged a crowd at a Ford Motor Co. assembly plant here: "Don't let anybody tell you otherwise."

The tour, which started in Michigan and will head to Arizona and Tennessee, is an effort to lay the groundwork for executive actions and legislative policy proposals on issues including housing, manufacturing and higher education. Mr. Obama's pitch on the road is a newly aggressive focus on touting positive economic progress, and it also serves as a counterweight to the Republican legislative agenda as the new GOP-controlled Congress starts work this week.

The push, aimed at building momentum for the White House's economic proposals, began with Wednesday's speech at the plant near Detroit. The president highlighted the success of the government's auto industry bailout and discussed fresh efforts to promote advanced manufacturing and innovation in the country's research base.

"Because of you, manufacturing has a future in this country," Mr. Obama told the crowd at the Ford plant. "And that means, because of you the middle class has a future in this country."

Manufacturing jobs have increased over the past five years after declining for decades, as firms benefit from more competitive energy and labor costs. Factories have added around 700,000 workers since 2010, pushing payrolls to more than 12 million and marking the best stretch of hiring for the sector since the 1990s.

Still, manufacturing employment is down around 11%, or about 1.5 million jobs, since the recession began in late 2007. Mr. Obama is still short of his goal of creating one million manufacturing jobs during his second term, with around 250,000 manufacturing jobs added since 2012.

And while the White House has touted what it calls a resurgence in manufacturing, the administration has faced mixed reviews from industry groups.

Scott Paul, president of the Alliance for American Manufacturing, said the president's trade policies are harmful to auto workers. "The administration fails to mention that we've only recovered one-third of the good-paying manufacturing jobs that were destroyed in the recession, " he said. "We still have a long way to go."

In Michigan, the president visited the Ford assembly plant where the auto maker produces Focus small cars and the C-Max hybrid. Ford has added 1,800 workers since 2011 at the plant, which now has 5,000 workers.

It once made Ford Expedition SUVs but was switched over to fuel-efficient small cars with the aid of a Department of Energy loan.

At the plant, Mr. Obama underscored the effects of the administration's policies and set the stage for his next proposals. The president also recalled his decision to move forward with the auto industry bailout, saying, "I just want everybody to be clear: It was not popular."

"I ran not just to do the easy things--I ran to do the right things," he said. Saving the U.S. auto industry was the right thing to do, he said, adding that the bet has paid off.

Last month, the Treasury Department sold the last of its stakes in auto lender Ally Financial Inc., ending the administration's bailout of the auto industry. The Treasury said it turned a $2.4 billion profit on the $17.2 billion investment in the company.

Losses on rescues of GM and Chrysler Group LLC mean that the auto bailout ultimately cost taxpayers $9.3 billion, lower than earlier estimates. The Center for Automotive Research, an Ann Arbor, Mich., think tank that supported the 2008 bailouts, said those rescues spared 1.2 million jobs in 2009.

At the assembly plant, Mr. Obama called out Ramone Davis, a 30-year-old Iraq and Afghanistan veteran who found work at the plant in 2012 in a surge of hiring by Ford.

"I will never forget this for the rest of my life," said Mr. Davis, who installs rear seats on Focus and C-Max cars.

After touting the auto bailout and the growing economy, Mr. Obama is expected to focus on housing during a speech Thursday in Arizona. There, the president will announce plans to cut the fees home buyers must pay for certain mortgages insured by the Federal Housing Administration -- part of a broader campaign to improve access to credit.

On Friday, in Tennessee, Mr. Obama is expected to offer proposals to help more students go to college.

The president's cross-country promotion of his economic agenda is a departure for this White House, which has closely held the details of each year's State of the Union address until the moment Mr. Obama delivered the speech.

In an opinion piece on Medium.com, Dan Pfeiffer, a senior adviser to the president, dubbed the preview of new policy proposals "SOTU spoilers."

"The president didn't want to wait until the State of the Union to take new steps to help the middle class and lay out his ideas to keep strengthening the economy," he wrote.

The retooled strategy also serves as counterprogramming during the week that Congress returns, sending the message that the president doesn't plan to cede the stage to Republican leaders. The White House has taken an aggressive posture with GOP lawmakers this week, announcing Tuesday that Mr. Obama would veto two Republican priorities: legislation approving the Keystone XL pipeline and a change to the Affordable Care Act that would redefine full-time employment as 40 hours a week.

The veto threats elicited swift rebukes from Republican leaders, with House Speaker John Boehner (R., Ohio) saying the president was siding with "fringe extremists" in the Democratic Party on the pipeline project.

Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus said important bills now will get a vote in the GOP-controlled Congress but added: "Will the president's desk be where common sense legislation goes to die for the next two years?"

Michael Ramsey contributed to this article.

Write to Colleen McCain Nelson at colleen.nelson@wsj.com and Nick Timiraos at nick.timiraos@wsj.com

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