MANKATO – This midterm election, the DFL Party is not just worried about Republicans — it's worried about DFLers.
With less than a week until Election Day, Minnesota DFLers are launching a six-day bus tour across the state in a final sprint to clinch voters who often skip some elections: college students, blacks, Hispanics and new immigrants.
These voters, who tend to vote DFL, often turn out in droves during presidential election years, but tend to sit out midterm elections.
"Drop-off is our biggest enemy," said party chair Ken Martin. "Our enemy this year is not the Republicans; it's really Democrats. If they drop off like they did in 2010, we're going to lose."
A Star Tribune analysis of voter-turnout data found that in more than 30 state House districts, the drop-off rate from the 2008 election cycle to 2010 ranged from 28.5 percent to 42.3 percent. Among those is House District 19B in Mankato, represented by outgoing DFL Rep. Kathy Brynaert.
DFL politicians, party and union activists are crisscrossing Minnesota, hitting party strongholds such as Minneapolis, St. Paul and Duluth in a final push to rally the base and its network of volunteers.
Mankato — with its large student population that includes more than 15,000 enrolled at Minnesota State University, Mankato — was among the first stops of the get-out-the-vote bus tour.
The chartered bus stopped Wednesday outside the union hall of the International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 49, in a largely industrial part of the city.