Even the cars were socially distanced in a Woodbury parking lot on Tuesday night as Democrats filed into every other parking spot for a pandemic-era drive-in debate watch party. Instead of cheers, they laid on their horns when Joe Biden turned to President Donald Trump and asked: "Will you shut up, man?"
"As a Minnesotan, honking makes me really nervous, but I'm into it," DFL Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan said to scores of windshields, pivoting to a plea for volunteers. "We're not knocking on a lot of doors, but you have to call people. You have to have conversations with your neighbors about what's at stake."
Two days later, Eric Trump asked a crowd gathered in person outside a Becker, Minn., trucking facility how they'd rate his dad's performance in the debate. Hundreds wearing MAGA swag — but few face masks — raised their hands and cheered. "We lost this state by 1% in 2016, I'm very mad at all of you," Trump's son told the crowd. "But I'm telling you, we're going to win it this time."
With just four weeks until the Nov. 3 election, two dramatically different mobilization efforts are ramping up in Minnesota, a state that's emerged as a Midwestern battleground in the 2020 race for the White House.
Republicans are vowing to turn Minnesota red for the first time since Richard Nixon won the state in 1972. Trump was in Duluth on Wednesday for a rally, his third visit to the state in two months and seventh since coming within 44,000 votes of winning Minnesota four years ago.
But mobilization is precarious during a global pandemic. That was underscored Friday by Trump's own COVID-19 diagnosis, which has sidelined him and several Minnesota Republicans who greeted him during his visit.
When COVID-19 hit, Democrats switched almost entirely to virtual roundtables, phone banking and texting, a strategy frequently mocked by conservatives as ineffective.
But Biden's team has said it's not taking Minnesota for granted, dispatching resources and surrogates to a state where Hillary Clinton never set foot after winning the Democratic nomination four years ago. Biden visited Duluth to kick off early voting on Sept. 18. His wife, Jill, made her second in-person visit to Minnesota on Saturday, touring Black-owned businesses in St. Paul, meeting with volunteers providing food for families during the pandemic and kicking off an event to mobilize women voters. In swing states, Biden's campaign said last week it will begin in-person door knocking but will respect social distancing.