On a crisp Saturday morning in late October, Minnesota U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar arrived at Powderhorn Park, Starbucks in hand, to rev up a crowd of supporters for the final stretch of the campaign.
The night before, President Donald Trump had launched a fresh round of attacks in Florida against the congresswoman, a refugee from Somalia and national symbol of the progressive left. Weeks before, he'd employed her name at rallies in Bemidji and Duluth as he sought to mobilize his rural base.
The president's jabs in his bid to flip Minnesota felt fresh as Omar urged supporters to knock on doors across south Minneapolis on her behalf. Their mission, she said, was not only to win her race in the staunchly Democratic Fifth Congressional District, but also to drive votes needed to defeat Trump and deliver victory to Democrats up and down the ballot on Nov. 3.
"I understand that in the next two weeks I have to be determined to make sure that Minnesota and the Fifth has the highest turnout it has ever seen," she said. "That, for me, is a clear translation that the hate, the division, the incitement of white supremacy is something that Minnesota completely rejects."
As an incumbent congresswoman running in one of the nation's most liberal districts — one that hasn't voted for a Republican in nearly 60 years — Omar is all but certain to win another term against GOP challenger Lacy Johnson.
But partly because of Omar's national profile, Johnson, a Black businessman from north Minneapolis, has been able to raise a staggering $9 million for his long-shot campaign, making him easily the most competitive GOP candidate in the district in a generation.
Still, given the district's historic DFL lean, no political handicapper is predicting a close or even remotely competitive race.
And yet as Election Day nears, Omar is running like an underdog, headlining get-out-the-vote events, greeting voters and sending scores of volunteers to knock on tens of thousands of doors.