ROCHESTER – A punishing 10-ballot contest spanning two days ended Saturday with businessman Mike McFadden sweeping his opposition to capture the Republican Party endorsement for a U.S. Senate seat, setting up the political newcomer to take on Democratic Sen. Al Franken in November.
The investment banker won the endorsement in a contest that started Friday, deadlocked at 2 a.m., then resumed midmorning. McFadden outmaneuvered more seasoned political veterans and overcame an unexpected surge by Republican Chris Dahlberg, a St. Louis County commissioner who made a surprisingly strong showing.
Hoarse, with his shirtsleeves rolled up, the newly endorsed McFadden told delegates: "We will fight and we will win, and in November we will beat Al Franken. We will turn this back into a red state."
In the end, McFadden's superior fundraising and extensive campaign organization trumped Dahlberg's outsider appeal and claims of electability in DFL-leaning northern Minnesota.
McFadden initially suffered with delegates for his refusal to abide by the party endorsement, which Dahlberg promised to honor. But the dynamic shifted in the light of morning, as legions of white- and orange-shirted McFadden volunteers swarmed the convention floor to lobby delegates.
McFadden also scored a coup in landing the endorsement of retiring U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, who remains an influential force among Republican activists. She called McFadden the only contender with a viable shot at unseating Franken.
'Reality set in'
"Dahlberg was the underdog and the novelty," said Ken Cobb, a delegate and insurance agent from Bemidji who supported McFadden. "But after people slept on it, they started thinking about it in terms of reality and not novelty. Reality set in and I think delegates wanted a candidate who was better organized and better able to mount a statewide effort."
Keith Kiefer, a Sherburne County delegate and a retired engineer, was still supporting Dahlberg on Saturday morning but said the lobbying from McFadden staffers was "intense."