Claudia Moses, a Minnesota delegate to the Democratic National Convention, had hoped to cast her first presidential ballot for a candidate promising transformational change. Drawn to calls for Medicare for All, tuition-free college and racial justice, the 17-year-old from Eagan threw her support behind Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.
That puts her at odds with most of the state's DFL delegates, who are bound to support Joe Biden, winner of the state's March 3 primary. That includes her grandfather and political mentor, Jules Goldstein.
Bound by family ties, the two represent different sides of a generational gulf prevalent within the Democratic Party, a divide the Biden campaign hopes to bridge over the four days of the convention this week.
Goldstein, a retired systems analyst from St. Louis Park, sees value in political pragmatism and incremental shifts. Moses, now a Sanders delegate, doesn't want to wait for an overhaul of politics as usual.
"Personally, I think there's a lot of things that don't work," said Moses, who will be 18 in time to vote. "When something doesn't work, you can fix it for a time until it breaks again, or you can replace it."
Much of the programming at this week's convention is designed to unify the traditional and progressive wings of the party, particularly the young activists who flocked to Sanders, who is giving Biden his full backing.
But as Democrats work to motivate young voters who wield growing political power at the polls, they also they work to win over moderates and swing voters essential to a White House win. One of the week's themes is "Steady Leadership," a slogan meant to invoke the 77-year-old nominee's many decades in national politics and pitch for stability in tumultuous times.
It's a balancing act that has Democratic organizers invoking the prospect of political stability while at the same time reaching out to young progressives hungry for social justice and structural change.