LITTLE FALLS, Minn. – If there is an epicenter to the most expensive U.S. House race in the country, it may be at a small dairy farm in this community north of the Twin Cities.
At Bartchelle Dairy, where milk from about 70 cows is shipped daily to Land O'Lakes, a group of farmers and ranchers talked last week about how their parents and grandparents were all DFLers. Now this group is struggling to connect with the party of their forebears. They blame politicians for a sluggish economic recovery, higher health care costs and more stringent environmental regulations. While they love working outside, they say they feel like it should be easier to achieve a middle-class life.
In Minnesota's sprawling Eighth Congressional District, Republican Stewart Mills is trying to capitalize on strains in the DFL as he makes a second bid to unseat Democratic U.S. Rep. Rick Nolan. The district is a former DFL stronghold full of blue-collar voters who Republicans have long felt should be receptive to calls for limited government and fewer environmental regulations.
"My dad was a Democrat. This area is Democratic-Farmer-Labor and it doesn't exist anymore. The Democrats, they bailed on us," said Roger Janson, who drove from Buckman to the dairy farm to hear Mills speak. Janson said his health care premiums have jumped from $8,000 a year to $31,000 a year since 2007. "It's just frustrating. All we want to do is pay our bills, to make enough money to pay our bills."
The Eighth District race is emerging as the state's closest congressional fight. Two years ago, Nolan won by fewer than 4,000 votes, also against Mills. And this year, Democrats acknowledge Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump's popularity in the area poses trouble for Nolan. Polls in Minnesota and across the country have shown Trump draws significant support from working-class areas, particularly among white voters with little or no college.
Nolan, a native of Brainerd, says he is grappling with the changes in the southern part of his district, which continues to grow more conservative. He says when he was younger, there was a wider range of jobs available that made middle-class life achievable.
"We had Potlatch Paper Mill here that had 600 to 700 union workers that went out of business. We had Union Pacific Railroad shops here, they were union workers," Nolan said. "We had a big public hospital with several hundred workers and laborers and they're all gone and we had retirees and they're all gone."
Nolan said the steep economic decline has altered residents' worldview.