FERGUS FALLS — Republicans from around the region packed into this campaign event at a VFW post here earlier this year as Steve Boyd strode into the banquet hall. Before Boyd took the stage to introduce a Minnesota family facing federal charges related to Jan. 6, he spoke about why he was mounting a primary challenge against a Republican incumbent in Minnesota’s most solidly conservative district — a challenge that has ruffled some establishment feathers in the party.
It wasn’t that Boyd has many major policy disagreements with U.S. Rep. Michelle Fischbach, he said. Fischbach, first elected in 2020 in western Minnesota’s Seventh Congressional district, consistently has had the most conservative voting record in Minnesota’s delegation and is among the most conservative in Congress, voting against former president Donald Trump’s second impeachment and against an independent panel to investigate Jan. 6. She recently garnered Trump’s endorsement.
Instead, Boyd, a 38-year-old small business owner from Kensington, said he’s running for his first political office because he believes the GOP and Congress need more outside voices. Boyd believes Fischbach, who served in the Minnesota Senate for more than two decades before briefly serving as lieutenant governor, is too “legislation-driven,” too much of a political insider, not focused enough on cultural change.
“We have politicians who come and say, ‘Give me your money, your vote; I’m going to take care of it,’” Boyd said. “I don’t know too many politicians, especially on the federal level, that are looking people in the eye and saying there’s no quick fix. That it’s going to take a while, and it’s going to take you doing the work, too. It’s not just me.”
Boyd said he plans to continue running through the August primary, even if he doesn’t get party backing at this weekend’s endorsing convention. Fischbach’s campaign did not respond to multiple requests for comment, though a Fischbach campaign email to convention delegates confirmed she recently rescinded her pledge to abide by the endorsement.
“Despite having every opportunity to respect our party’s process, our traditions, and the opinions of grassroots delegates, Steve Boyd is defying the endorsement and forcing a primary election,” Norann Dillon, executive director of Fischbach for Congress, wrote in the email. “For a contest to be fair, all sides follow the same set of rules.”
Boyd follows in the footsteps of the persistent anti-establishment strain in the Republican Party. That strain slowly gained traction for decades: think Ronald Reagan calling government the problem, or Pat Buchanan challenging George H. W. Bush. Trump’s election in 2016 and takeover of the party solidified the pull of outsider status as a defining trait in today’s GOP.
Steven Schier, political science professor at Carleton College, says Trump created a new path for candidates with little or no political experience, though he questions whether that’s a good thing.