ROCHESTER - Phillip Hilleshiem is a strong supporter of Donald Trump, but that doesn't mean he likes everything the president does and says.
Among the things that make him uneasy are Trump's attacks on U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., and three other House freshmen who are women of color.
The president "can be kind of crude and sometimes racist and rude," Hilleshiem said. But he doesn't think Trump "intends to be racist. I think it's the situations he's put in, and things don't always relay as well as they should."
Hilleshiem, a 26-year-old hotel desk clerk from Elgin, Minn., was at the Olmsted County Fair, a popular crossroads in a county that Trump barely lost in 2016 and would likely need to win in 2020 if he hopes to flip Minnesota.
Interviews with fairgoers last week revealed a partisan split over the Omar feud, which began with a July 14 Trump tweet urging the women to "go back" to the countries they came from and stop "viciously" vilifying him.
Democrats are appalled. "I feel insulted because no one deserves to be treated that way," said Sigrid Trimble, 70, who was demonstrating how to spin wool into yarn.
There were qualms among Republicans, too. Some said the president's rhetoric can make them wince and lamented the political divisiveness he generates. Others said Trump's fight with Omar could help him win Minnesota; still others doubt it will be an issue by next fall.
Democrat Hillary Clinton carried Minnesota in 2016 by just 1.5 percentage points. Trump predicts he'll win the state in 2020 because of Omar and "the fact that Minnesota is having its best economic year ever," he tweeted last week. The last Republican to prevail in a presidential election statewide was Richard Nixon in 1972. The state's 10 electoral votes would help Trump collect the 270 he needs to win.
His chances hinge on counties like this one, which Clinton won by 600 votes. Rochester, the largest city, is trending Democratic. The rest of the county leans Republican.
Olmsted County GOP Chairman Greg Gallas said Trump's criticism of Omar is awakening a "silent majority" of supporters. "I love it. It's called winning," he said.
Trump held a rally in Rochester last October, but Democrats won every statewide race Nov. 6. Republican Jim Hagedorn was elected to the First District U.S. House seat but didn't carry the county.