Hours before President Donald Trump's rally in Bemidji on Friday, Democratic challenger Joe Biden flew to Duluth to meet with union members who could be a bulwark of DFL support in an increasingly Republican swath of northern Minnesota.
While Biden met with a handful of labor leaders at the Jerry Alander Carpenter Training Center in Hermantown, the Trump campaign organized a large airport rally in Bemidji, an area that supported him overwhelmingly in 2016, though he narrowly lost the state to Hillary Clinton.
Biden's carefully choreographed small group encounter required face masks and marked places to sit and stand to ensure social distancing; Trump's boisterous outdoor rally brought together a crowd of several thousand, most of them not wearing masks.
The same-day visits to Minnesota by two major-party presidential candidates marked the start of early voting in a Midwestern battleground state that both campaigns see as potentially decisive in November. Trump's arrival in the afternoon also coincided with the passing of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, an event that could have an unpredictable impact on the race.
"It's time to take the country back folks, and it's going start here, today, with voting in Minnesota," Biden said in remarks before Ginsburg's death was announced. He was making his first appearance in the state as the Democratic nominee.
Biden's tour of the union training center was meant to underscore his plan to promote American-made goods.
While talking to carpenters and receiving a welding demonstration, Biden said, "This is the stuff that's going to put a lot of people to work." He also talked about his "made in America" mandate for federal procurement. "It has to be made in the United States of America," he said."For real."
Trump also emphasized job creation, particularly on the Iron Range. "We're going to win Minnesota because they did nothing for Minnesota except close up that beautiful iron ore territory. … I came along and I opened it up," Trump said.