REDWOOD FALLS, MINN. – As Republican gubernatorial candidate Marty Seifert toured tiny RVI Inc., a handful of longtime employees recalled sadly when the plant that refurbishes electronic goods was a major employer in this small southwestern Minnesota city.
"There were 850 employees here once," Doug Gould, RVI's chief engineer, told Seifert, who had a handful of campaign staffers and two local state lawmakers in tow during a late June tour. Seifert, who grew up in nearby Marshall, bumped into more than one employee he knew personally — including a fourth cousin he hadn't seen for nearly two decades. Seifert learned from workers that their ranks had dwindled to 35.
It is the kind of story the former House minority leader knows well: the economic uncertainty and anguish that ripple across Minnesota's less populated environs as good-paying jobs gravitate to the Twin Cities and other regional centers. A lifelong resident of what he calls "rural Minnesota," Seifert is trying to harness that anxiety into a political force he hopes can drive him past three fellow Republicans in the Aug. 12 primary — and to a win in November against DFL Gov. Mark Dayton.
"If you're a farmer, a small businessperson, a resident particularly of rural Minnesota, I think people are like, you know, 'Marty Seifert's like the quintessential Minnesotan,' " Seifert said at the Pizza Ranch in this city of about 5,000 people.
Seifert, who made a failed attempt at the governor's seat in 2010, is playing up his small-town roots big, looking to turn his lack of polish to his advantage: "I have the ding of, 'That's the guy with the Minnesota accent,' " he said. "Like it's some sort of bad thing, you know? I think it's a good thing."
The other leading GOP contenders are all from the metro area: investment banker Scott Honour of Wayzata, Hennepin County Commissioner Jeff Johnson of Plymouth and Rep. Kurt Zellers of Maple Grove.
'A different mind-set'
In recent years, a Twin Cities base has helped propel most candidates to governor. Minnesota has not selected a governor from outstate since Rudy Perpich, an Iron Range DFLer who served through 1990.
"There is certainly a tremendous desire among rural Minnesotans to have that statewide representation that we've been looking for and longing for, for a very long time," said Justin Krych, a party activist and Seifert backer from northeastern Minnesota's St. Louis County. "There are a lot of people, Republicans and Democrats alike, looking for someone who understands rural Minnesotans — where our jobs come from, what our schools need. It's a different mind-set."