From Faribault to Duluth Saturday, the question confronting DFL Senate candidates Al Franken and Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer remained the same as it has been for months: Which man has the best chance of unseating GOP incumbent Norm Coleman?
With a month to go before the state party convention, DFLers are closely scrutinizing the electability factor for Nelson-Pallmeyer, the lanky college professor whose popularity exceeds his resources, and Franken, the comedian/author who has the money and name power but has been nicked by stories about insurance and tax mistakes involving his business interests.
"I just want to get rid of Coleman," said Gary LePage, a delegate from Woodbury attending the Second District convention in Faribault. "All of us take our taxes to tax preparers and expect them to do it right. He wasn't trying to avoid paying his taxes."
Many delegates to the Eighth District convention in Duluth had similar reactions to last week's disclosure that Franken had paid income taxes to the wrong states from 2003 to 2006, requiring him to send $70,000 to 17 states that had been shorted.
"It gave me pause when it first happened, but I took a keen interest in how he handled it and I appreciated how he stepped up," said Joe Hobot of Lakeville, a Franken delegate at the Faribault convention and teacher at an alternative high school in Minneapolis.
Bill Miller of Duluth, who chairs the state Senate District 6 DFL, said the tax problem hadn't shaken his faith in Franken.
"People involved in multi-state organizations typically encounter these convoluted mixes of tax laws, and when you compare the amount he's paid with the amount his accountant had trouble with, it doesn't strike me as that big an issue," he said.
In an interview on the road to Faribault early Saturday, Franken said he was focusing on the issues of concern to Minnesotans -- health care, the economy, Iraq -- and that he was confident that he will win the endorsement next month, despite the potential problems stemming from the tax flap.