It's hard to look cool milking a cow. But there's Minnesota's speaker of the House in front of a State Fair crowd, wearing Nikes and safety gloves as he works the udder of a very composed Holstein, its milk streaming into a stainless steel bucket.
Speaker Kurt Daudt, whose statewide political ambitions are a topic of much speculation for Minnesota's political class, is in a contest of ag skills at the fair's dairy barn with other local quasi-celebrities, including a University of Minnesota dean, a TV newscaster and some roller derby and women's football players.
The Republican from Isanti County's willingness to publicly milk a cow is one tiny clue in the mystery of whether he'll run for governor in 2018. "It's great fun for us to come out and help support our dairy industry in the state of Minnesota," says Daudt, who spent this recent day at the fair feasting on fried cookie dough, a milk shake and a turkey sandwich.
(Note the Minnesota constituencies: wheat, sugar, dairy, poultry.)
Amid the loop-dee-loop rides, the fried this-and-that, the ag barns, the monarch butterfly and reptile tents, politics is a yearly fixture at the fair, too.
Because it's not an election year, it's a bit more low key this time. And for many Minnesotans, the fair is a respite from the political noise — like construction machinery in perpetual reverse — emanating from the capitols in Washington, D.C., and St. Paul.
The butter sculpture of Princess Kay contestant Samantha Traxler, of Le Sueur County, draws as much or more interest than the politics booths.
"People are sick of arguing with their neighbors about it," says Scott Graham, a DFL activist who volunteers at the party's booth. But he acknowledges he can't be sure; he took a morning shift before fairgoers are "too beveraged," as he politely puts it.