Sen. Amy Klobuchar returned to Minnesota on Sunday hoping to pivot to Super Tuesday after a distant sixth-place finish in the South Carolina primary.
But while hundreds of supporters gathered for her homecoming in a St. Louis Park High School gymnasium, dozens of protesters streamed in, chanting for her to exit the race over her handling of the case against Myon Burrell, a black teenager convicted in a 2002 child slaying when Klobuchar was Hennepin County attorney.
As protesters took over the stage shouting "Myon!" Klobuchar supporters shouted "Amy!" back. Klobuchar was not in the gymnasium as the protest unfolded, disrupting the start of a program of campaign speeches. The ongoing protest eventually forced the campaign to cancel the rally. "The campaign offered a meeting with the senator if they would leave the stage after being on stage for more than an hour," a campaign spokesman said. "After the group initially agreed, they backed out of the agreement and we are canceling the event."
Protest leaders said the campaign would not meet their demand to publicly acknowledge Burrell during the rally.
The event was planned as Klobuchar seeks to salvage momentum for a long-shot campaign low on cash and in a downward trajectory since a surprising third-place result in New Hampshire on Feb. 11.
With Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Vice President Joe Biden now leading in the delegate count for the Democratic nomination, Klobuchar and some of the other trailing rivals face new questions about staying in the race. As she headed back to Minnesota, the news broke that former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg, a top Midwestern rival, was dropping out.
At the rally, Jeff Peterson, a 73-year-old Klobuchar supporter from southwest Minneapolis, said he hopes Buttigieg's exit marks a "tipping point" for the Minnesota Democrat. He said he's holding out hope that Klobuchar, whom he described as "Trump's worst nightmare," will emerge as the nominee.
"I'm an optimist," he said. "When you really feel strongly about somebody, you take your best shot and hope for the best."