When the DFL-endorsed candidate running against Republican U.S. Rep. John Kline addressed the party at its annual convention in April, he offered a simple description of his employment situation.
"I'm a small-business man," said Burnsville native Dan Powers.
The reality is not so simple.
His campaign website calls him a "small business owner" and "contractor." Interviews with the campaign, however, show Powers' role in both areas has been limited in recent years.
The statements raise a broader question: How many details should candidates provide to explain the image they project to the public?
Campaign manager Mary Breitenstein said Powers last actively worked on a project as a contractor in 2006 -- while running a roofing and remodeling business. His other small business, which builds systems to heat swimming pools using passive solar energy, has never been contracted for a project, she said. Powers tried unsuccessfully to woo clients for that business in 2009.
He was employed in sales and as a production manager at Sela Roofing until December 2008, when he was laid off due to a slowdown.
His only income in 2009 was $28,000 in unemployment insurance, according to a financial disclosure report filed in Washington.