Leaning against a light blue convertible and waiting to take his place in the annual homecoming parade in Marshall, Minn., Collin Peterson recounted a recent 3 a.m. phone call from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
"I told her, 'This whole campaign is about you. They're saying I've become a liberal and I'm doing whatever you tell me,' which is ridiculous," he vented through his face mask. On the call, he proposed to Pelosi a solution: "What we need to do is have you come up here and tell them I'm a completely soulless S.O.B."
Minnesota's Seventh District congressman for three decades, Peterson has developed close working relationships with Pelosi and other House leaders over his long tenure, forming allies in both parties that helped him rise to chair the powerful House Agriculture Committee. But at 76, his increasingly tenuous ties to urban Democrats in his party have been a weight around his neck in his rural, conservative Minnesota district. It's a weight that gets heavier each election cycle.
Four years ago, Donald Trump won Peterson's Seventh District by more than 30 percentage points over Hillary Clinton. Peterson, meanwhile, beat a little-known Republican challenger by 5% of the vote. This year, Republicans see an opening with Trump back on the ballot. They've recruited former lieutenant governor and state senator Michelle Fischbach and are investing millions in what they see as one of their best chances to flip a blue district red this fall.
It's a new twist on an old problem for Peterson, who has held on to his seat through multiple Republican waves while other conservative Democratic allies were defeated or left an increasingly polarized Congress. This cycle, he's more isolated than ever.
He was among 45 Democrats who voted against the 2010 version of the Affordable Care Act that became law. Now, he's one of three left. He was one of two Democrats who voted against impeaching Trump late last year. The other member, Rep. Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey, is now a Republican. He opposes abortion and is the lone Democrat in Congress with an A-rating from the NRA. "If I hear the words 'common sense gun legislation one more time,' " he said last year, "I'll throw up." Many of those left in the Blue Dog caucus might have been considered insufficiently conservative when he originally co-founded the group.
"The Blue Dogs were for conservative Democrats," said Peterson. "I'm the only conservative Democrat left, basically."
His conservative positions have, at times, earned him the ire and befuddlement of more progressive Minnesota Democrats in the metro area, who couldn't understand why a member of their party voted against impeaching Trump. He's tried to distance himself from members of Minnesota's delegation such as Fifth District Rep. Ilhan Omar, a darling of the progressive left. In a recent video filmed on Capitol Hill, a Republican campaign operative followed Peterson and asked why he defends Omar. Peterson replied that he doesn't defend her, with a blunt follow-up: "She doesn't belong in our party."