The Twin Cities' southern suburbs and rolling rural communities that stretch toward Mankato have become a key front in the nationwide battle for control of Congress.
A rematch between Democratic U.S. Rep. Angie Craig and Republican challenger Tyler Kistner has ballooned into one of the most expensive congressional clashes in the country. Both candidates estimate interest groups and individuals have poured roughly $30 million into the contest that will determine the political fate of the Second Congressional District, and potentially the U.S. House.
"A handful of districts might end up flipping control of the entire House. And so the stakes aren't just one more seat in Congress. The stakes are potentially control of the House, which makes CD2 a really, really important race to watch," said Chris Chapp, St. Olaf College political science associate professor. "And obviously a lot of people want to try to influence the outcome."
For Craig, it's a fight to defend a record she touts as bipartisan and ensure abortion access following the fall of Roe v. Wade. For Kistner, it's about inflation and providing a check on Democratic President Joe Biden. They are each hoping their message resonates with an unpredictable district that saw its borders shift during redistricting.
"A third Democrats, a third Republicans and a third of my district, they view themselves very independently — they lean libertarian. They didn't like mask mandates, they didn't like vaccine mandates, and they sure as hell don't want a politician to tell them what to do with respect to their reproductive rights," said Craig, 50, a second-term representative from Prior Lake.
She hopes to pass a law codifying the abortion protections in Roe v. Wade. At a debate Thursday, Kistner said he wants to leave the issue to states and is "pro-life, with the exception of rape, incest and life of the mother."
The 35-year-old Republican, who also lives in Prior Lake, narrowly lost to Craig in 2020, and said that year the issues were national. This year, he said, they are local.
"And what are the local issues people are facing? They are facing record-high inflation and cost of living, they feel it every day when they go to the grocery store and gas station, let alone crime is now spreading into the suburbs and then you have parents that are now concerned about the education system," he said at an economic roundtable in Apple Valley last week with Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel.