Nine neighbors gathered in a south Minneapolis living room on a recent stifling weeknight to sip cold drinks, munch cookies and talk politics.
Action, not outrage, was the focus of the two-hour meeting: registering voters, calling U.S. senators about Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, tracking a net neutrality bill.
These residents of Minneapolis' Fulton and Linden Hills neighborhoods are players in a new, hyperlocal political phenomenon. Yearning to make a difference and eager for community connections but not aligned with political parties, they are emerging hubs of clout heading into November's elections, which will determine control of Congress and the fate of President Donald Trump's agenda.
"It's better than cursing at the TV. Working in a small way on the local level is the right fit for me," said Chuck Kantor, 70, explaining the group's appeal. His wife, Carol Greenwald, a 67-year-old retiree, said she joined the group after being part of the Women's March in St. Paul on Jan. 21, 2017.
She got involved because "the only way I could feel better was to be active," Greenwald said. "To be hopeful, I have to do something."
Gregg Peppin, a veteran GOP consultant now advising Jim Hagedorn's First District congressional campaign, is skeptical about the ability of small neighborhood groups to attract independent and swing voters who aren't part of the Democratic base.
Will those voters be swayed by "a visceral dislike of Trump … or are they driven by issues? If it's personality, it could be a better year for Democrats," Peppin said. But if issues matter more, he said, independents and "labor Democrats" are likely to stick with the GOP because of Trump's economic record.
State Rep. Frank Hornstein, DFL-Minneapolis, was surprised when he was asked to visit the Fulton/Linden Hills group. "This is my ninth campaign and I haven't seen anything quite like this," he said.