Joy, humor and snark from the newly formed ticket of Vice President Kamala Harris and Gov. Tim Walz has some Democrats feeling more hopeful and optimistic than they have in years.
The Minnesota Star Tribune invited six Minnesota Democrats into the newsroom to talk to reporters after a statewide call for participants to discuss the 2024 presidential race. The newspaper did the same with conservative voters right before the Republican National Convention.
With concerns ranging from the fate of democracy to reproductive rights, gun safety and Gaza, here’s what these Democrats had to say Thursday, on the eve of the Democratic National Convention (DNC).

Omar Adams, 52, Plymouth
Adams was a Biden delegate to the Democratic National Convention and is now pledged to Harris. He feels the same excitement he did as a delegate for President Barack Obama in 2008, a shift after the post-debate doldrums. “I was ‘woe is me,’ wringing my hands, trying to defend President Biden,” Adams said.
A teacher and father of a 10-year-old daughter, Adams is hoping for common sense gun control and full funding of special education by the federal government as well as a cease-fire in Gaza. But he doesn’t require a candidate to check all the boxes on issues he cares about.
“A friend of mine said that voting is a subway ride, it gets you in the vicinity,” he said. “It’s not like an Uber ride where you get exactly to your destination. Your candidate is not going to have every single thing.”

Lea Assenmacher, 58, Chatfield
She’s married to a physician, has two grown children and two dogs and is familiar with Walz as he represented her in Congress for 12 years. She liked his willingness to change positions, notably shifting his support to new gun safety measures as governor. “He doesn’t feel like he needs to hold onto the center,” she said.
She also likes that Walz called the GOP ticket weird. “Oh my gosh it feels so sweet,” she said. Her top priority: Defeating Trump. ”He has to be beaten, God willing, in a landslide,” she said. Assenmacher also said the next administration needs to overhaul health care. “They need to wipe it out and start from the ground up,” she said.