Sen. Bernie Sanders sought to use a rally in Minneapolis on Sunday to recapture the energy that fueled his landslide victory in the Minnesota DFL presidential caucus four years ago, even as he faces a rising progressive rival in Sen. Elizabeth Warren and a recent health scare.
With early state contests in Iowa and New Hampshire fast approaching and the Minnesota presidential primary on March 3, Sanders broadened his message beyond the economic populism that has been his hallmark for decades.
He drew a tight connection to Rep. Ilhan Omar, who introduced Sanders after endorsing him in October. Sanders cast the election as a contest between a civic religion of love of neighbor — including those not like us — and what he described as the divisive politics of President Donald Trump.
"We understand that we are stronger, healthier and happier as human beings when we reach out to others as human beings and understand that we are all in this together," Sanders said at the rally that filled the lower bowl of the University of Minnesota's Williams Arena.
Even as the 78-year-old Vermont senator worked the crowd with an appeal against bigotry and a wish list of progressive priorities on health care, education, economics and energy, Sanders will likely face a tougher contest than his commanding Minnesota victory in 2016 over eventual nominee Hillary Clinton.
Unlike then, Warren is making a case for the progressive voters who are Sanders' base, and polls show her appeal is working both nationally and in key early states.
Warren and Sanders both support Medicare for All, which would extend America's socialized health insurance for seniors to people of all ages. Both already have paid staff and a crew of volunteers working for them on the ground in Minnesota.
In previous years, the state determined who won its delegates with caucuses, which tend to be populated by hard-core activists.