House by house, vote by vote, Ben Kruse and Melisa Franzen hike through familiar neighborhoods with messages of hope and political deliverance.
Kruse, a low-key Republican in Coon Rapids, and Franzen, a high-octane DFLer in Edina, are performing the timeless rite of "doorknocking" in pursuit of separate state Senate seats. Their doorstep listening sessions are critical parts of the multimillion dollar battle for the biggest statewide prize of the election season: control of the Minnesota Legislature.
Their pitches are gently persuasive -- "Just some information on all the things I've accomplished," Kruse tells one potential voter, as he hands out a leaflet -- but their quest is serious.
The legislative party caucuses, the political parties, DFL Gov. Mark Dayton and powerful business and labor interests are raising and spending millions to support these lonely block-walkers because taxes and budgeting and all the workings of state government are within the purview of 201 men and women who make it to the finish line.
Republicans have narrow majorities in both bodies for the first time in nearly four decades, and the majority means everything: control of the agenda and the ability to pass or defeat bills and budgets. In a year when all seats are on the ballot, the combatants are struggling mightily to attain the magic numbers Nov. 6 -- 68 votes in the House, 34 in the Senate.
Franzen, seeking to move from one house to another, makes a claim any of the candidates could make: "It's a race that might be pivotal in terms of who gets the majority," she said.
This drive for the majority creates a statewide panorama of streetwalking campaigners, glossy hit sheets filling up mailboxes and highway ditches sprouting signage amid the reddening sumac. There is an ex-NFL star running for the Senate in Moorhead, present and former mayors having at it in Worthington and a redistricting trifecta in Bemidji-Grand Rapids: Six incumbents thrown together by new political boundaries in one suddenly crowded Senate district.
Doorstep democracy has its own sweet rhythm. Waning daylight, combines in the fields and winds picking trees clean of fall color provide the backdrop for a homey, biennial ritual.