WASHINGTON - U.S. Rep. Betty McCollum faces a primary challenge from a first-time candidate calling for generational change in an attempt to topple one of Minnesota's most powerful congressional Democrats.
Democratic operative Amane Badhasso is looking to oust a lawmaker who has served for more than two decades in Congress in a year when their party is seeking to hold narrow majorities in the House and Senate.
"Experience matters," said McCollum. "You want a doctor with experience, you want a car mechanic with experience, you want a plumber who knows what they're doing. And right now, with the way the economy is, and what's happening with women's rights and voting rights, people feel good about the experience that I've had and the work that I do."

The differences between the two are relatively thin on policy, with both backing the Green New Deal and Medicare for All, prized progressive ideals that thrill the liberal base but don't have a path forward in Washington now.
Yet Badhasso is trying to position herself as a bold alternative to McCollum and what she criticizes as "complacent status quo, out-of-touch politics."
"The main reason why we need a new generation of Democrats and folks who are not beholden to special interests is because we've observed time and time again why important legislation that should be supported on behalf of working class families dies," Badhasso said. "It dies because we send folks like Betty McCollum to Congress."
However, the reality in Washington is that Republicans and centrist Democrats to the right of McCollum are the ones who often dash progressive dreams.
Despite the heated campaign, the struggle to turn out voters in what tends to be a sleepy primary for the reliably blue Fourth Congressional District seat presents a challenge.