MOOSE LAKE, MINN. – Greg Olson is disappointed in Sen. Al Franken and might not vote for him again. Cindy Geary says he can earn her confidence back. Dan Holte says he should resign. Barb Lindorff's trust in him hasn't wavered.
Sexual misconduct allegations surrounding the two-term Democratic senator from Minnesota have startled residents of this DFL-friendly area, and provoked an emotional stew of reactions in interviews with nearly two dozen of them, half of whom are women, this past week.
Most said they believe the women accusing Franken of touching them inappropriately, but even some who didn't vote for him said they like the job he's doing and don't think he should step down.
Several people said they were shocked by the speed and ferocity of what Megan Stadin, 34, called a "frenzy" of sexual harassment claims that have ended the careers of high-profile business and entertainment figures. Some wondered why similar charges against President Donald Trump haven't gotten renewed attention. And some said they hope this moment of reckoning will lead to permanent changes in workplace behavior.
"I still support him. Really, how serious was it?" said Ann-Marie Vossler, 47, as people gathered for a chili cook-off at the Moose Lake Brewing Co. on the edge of Moosehead Lake. She liked Franken's incisive questioning of witnesses during Senate hearings, and she thinks he's smart.
Vossler believes the accusations will "of course" make it harder for Franken to do his job, but she added, "We learn from our mistakes."
State Rep. Mike Sundin, DFL-Esko, who represents Carlton County, said many of his constituents feel the same way. "If he's not actually guilty of any assault or anything like that, I think people [will] understand what happened. He's manning up and willing to face whatever happens" with a Senate Ethics Committee inquiry, Sundin said.
Moose Lake is at the southern edge of Carlton County, which Franken carried by a 19-point margin in the tight 2008 election. He won the county again in 2014 by even bigger numbers. He also carried neighboring Pine and St. Louis counties both times. Democrat Hillary Clinton beat Trump by a scant 300 votes in Carlton County last year, and by a bigger margin in St. Louis County, but Trump tallied a big win in Pine County.