Political candidates flock to the Minnesota State Fair like eager 4-H'ers, and this year's crop of statewide candidates obliged on opening day Thursday by showing up to plead for votes — and to take a few swipes at one another.
At 6 a.m., as the first fairgoers streamed through the main entrance, both Democratic Sen. Al Franken and his Republican challenger, Mike McFadden, stood outside the gate, shaking hands. DFL Gov. Mark Dayton had a full first-day schedule of both political and official events that included a dousing of icy water, while Republican opponent Jeff Johnson showed up to challenge the incumbent to more debates.
Dayton called the fair a potent draw for candidates. "You stand in one place and the rest of the state comes passing by," he said shortly before he took a 45-minute shift shaking hands, chatting with supporters and posing for cellphone pictures at the DFL booth.
Just as it's easy to find politicians at the fair, it's not tough to find fairgoers with political opinions.
Joe Alfano, a retired teacher from southwest Minneapolis, stood in a line of about a dozen people waiting to greet the governor.
"I'm pleasantly surprised with how well he's done," said Alfano, a Democrat who said he was initially unhappy four years ago when Dayton become his party's candidate for governor.
"He proved me wrong," Alfano said. "I feel like the state is in a better place now, and I think his leadership has a lot to do with it."
A couple blocks from the DFL booth sits the Johnson for Governor booth: red paint, white trim and corrugated metal that summons the image of a barn. Joe and Judy Konicek, retirees from Maple Plain, stopped to grab a handful of buttons. One read: "Re-elect Dayton? Um … no."