Compared with the maiden run for Congress, Keith Ellison's reelection bid this year is shaping up as a walk in the park.
Ellison was a legislator little known outside north Minneapolis in 2006 when Martin Sabo announced that he wouldn't seek a 15th term representing the city and nearby suburbs in the Fifth Congressional District.
Ellison first had to best 10 other DFLers who wanted to run as the party's standardbearer. Three of them contested his DFL endorsement in a primary.
Then revelations about unpaid parking tickets and late campaign filings dogged him. Independence Party and Republican challengers campaigned vigorously against him, and he was forced to defend himself against charges that he had extremist ties.
He won, but with the smallest share of district votes a DFLer had received in decades.
Now Ellison is running for reelection largely free of the kind of obstacles and missteps that troubled him in 2006. He has challengers from other parties. While they've vigorously criticized his liberal voting record, they haven't raised the money for high-profile challenges.
"He's spending all of his time on other races," said Nikki Carlson, Hennepin County DFL chair.
Barb Davis White, a minister with the Republican endorsement, at last report hadn't raised even one-third of the war chest that her predecessor mustered against Ellison two years ago. Independence Party candidate William McGaughey, a landlord who is a frequent candidate, hadn't raised enough to file federal campaign finance reports.