Working the phones, banging on doors, even pressing her fiancé, 22-year-old Claudia Zavala is determined to get as many Bernie Sanders voters as she can around St. Cloud in Minnesota's Tuesday primary.
Adeline Wright, a Sanders "early adopter," plies customers at her Duluth hair salon with Sanders campaign material to "shine my little light a little brighter" for the left's populist candidate.
Kevin Chavis, in Minneapolis, has spent the past year rounding up volunteers. "The momentum and movement is toward Sanders," the 38-year-old Sanders devotee said confidently.
In a show of force, Sanders will rally his die-hard supporters Monday at a concert at the 18,000-seat St. Paul RiverCentre. That will come on the eve of a primary that could be a key test of the momentum he has built up in the race for the Democratic nomination. Although he won the state's Democratic caucuses four years ago, he faces popular home-state senator Amy Klobuchar and a growing chorus of Democrats alarmed at the prospect of nominating an aging democratic socialist with uncertain prospects of beating President Donald Trump in November.
The 78-year-old senator from Vermont isn't the only candidate courting voters here ahead of the Super Tuesday primary. Campaigns are deploying surrogates and volunteers, holding events and running TV ads through the weekend. But Sanders appears to be making one of the biggest and most aggressive plays to win Minnesota, a state he carried with 60% support in the 2016 caucus.
While the Sanders movement appears to have hung on in Minnesota, the state's new primary system is expected to bring out more mainstream voters than the sort of party activists who flocked to Sanders' side in the caucuses. Many felt cheated when Hillary Clinton won the nomination. Now they smell redemption.
"I think that in 2016, I just remember feeling like this is so amazing … but how could this ever happen? There is so much work to do," said Naomi Hornstein, who spent Friday afternoon texting voters from the TakeAction Minnesota office in St. Paul. "And now I'm seeing it's really, really possible."
Organizers with the Sanders campaign, which has 12 paid Minnesota staff members and field offices in Mankato, Minneapolis and St. Paul, have knocked on 52,000 doors and hosted 500 voter events in recent months. Independent groups supporting Sanders' bid, including the 50,000-member TakeAction Minnesota and local chapters of Democratic Socialists of America, have staged outreach of their own.