DULUTH – Sen. Al Franken had just arrived in Washington after winning the closest Senate race in the country when he got some advice from a former Hillary Clinton aide: Duck the showy theatrics and dig in on substance.
Six years later, Franken has an array of legislative achievements that show he heeded that tip: He successfully passed new rules for health insurance companies. He wrote a section on renewable energy into the farm bill. He launched an investigation into Apple's creation of unencrypted files of user's locations on iPhones.
But these topics don't tend to fit neatly onto a bumper sticker or easily become crisp sound bites.
And now some of the same Republicans who once derided Franken as a lightweight comedian sense new political opportunity in his dogged and low-key embrace of complex policy questions.
In accepting the DFL endorsement for a second term on Saturday, Franken told delegates in Duluth that he is not interested in having a flashy style in Washington.
"It's not about getting on TV," Franken said. "It's about seeing what Minnesotans are doing right and seeing what they need and getting it done."
Franken, 63, also vowed to win by "more than last time," a reference to his razor-thin victory margin of 312 votes.
Aaron Brown, a liberal blogger and radio show host from Bovey, Minn., said Franken has some work to do.