At a fundraiser at an Applebee’s restaurant in Plymouth last week, Republican congressional candidate Tad Jude mingled with a clutch of orange T-shirted supporters, all hoping he will be the candidate to flip the district.
The Third Congressional District, encompassing inner-ring suburbs and including some of the state’s wealthiest cities in Edina and around Lake Minnetonka, was a Republican stronghold until outgoing Rep. Dean Phillips, a Democrat, won in the 2018 “blue wave” election.
Now, as Jude faces off against former state Sen. Kelly Morrison, who has raised almost seven times what Jude has according to Federal Election Commission filings, some at Jude’s party wondered if Republicans can still win in the district.
“I’m not sure whether it’s changed, or whether we’ve always been more centrist,” said Nancy Miller of Maple Grove. “It’s always been more moderate-leaning.”
Minnesota DFL Chair Ken Martin grew up in Eden Prairie, and remembered the district was once solidly conservative, from city councils all the way up through its representatives in Congress.
“The Third District used to be one of the most red districts in the state,” Martin said. But he said there was more variation among Republicans in the 1980s and 1990s. Republicans who represented parts of the district were fiscally conservative, but tended to be more liberal on social issues, including some who supported abortion rights.
“The composition of those voters is still the same,” Martin said. But he sees today’s Republican Party as increasingly out-of-step with those voters, especially as the state party has focused on voters in greater Minnesota.
David Hann, chair of the Minnesota Republican Party, said the GOP is trying to reach voters in all parts of the state, both in the metro and in greater Minnesota.