U.S. Rep. Erik Paulsen has tried to convince voters in his suburban battleground district that he is a solid Republican — just not a Donald Trump Republican.
Interviews with nearly two dozen voters around the district last week suggest that the four-term Republican from Eden Prairie may be succeeding at distancing himself from the controversial presidential nominee whose support among voters appears weaker in affluent suburbs like Paulsen's district.
Trump and Paulsen "have nothing to do with each other," said John Watters, 64, a retired finance manager from Minnetonka and a registered Republican. "Their records have nothing to do with each other. There's no linkage."
Democratic challenger state Sen. Terri Bonoff of Minnetonka and Democratic groups from Washington have worked relentlessly to tie Paulsen to Trump in a bid to flip a Republican-leaning district that stretches from Bloomington and Eden Prairie in the south to Maple Grove and Rogers in the north.
Along with hammering him over Trump, they say Paulsen's conservative stances on social issues are out of sync with voters here.
DFL Party officials believe this year is their strongest chance yet at defeating Paulsen, encouraged by the district's changing demographics and voters who preferred President Obama in the last election.
"Given the strength of Terri and her campaign, I feel like this is certainly the best opportunity we've had since Paulsen was first elected," said DFL Party Chairman Ken Martin, adding that higher turnout for Democrats in presidential election years and Trump's poor poll standings have made the race highly competitive.
Still, Martin concedes that Bonoff faces a big challenge.