DES MOINES – More than a dozen Iowa lawmakers assembled at the State Capitol on Tuesday in a well-choreographed display of regional support for U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, just weeks ahead of the first-in-the-nation caucuses that will determine the viability of her White House bid.
All that was missing from the political tableau was the candidate.
Klobuchar had left Iowa earlier in the morning, bound for Washington, D.C., jury duty as a senator in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump.
Confronted with a trial that could drag out a week or more, Klobuchar's campaign has been forced to rely on a little help from friends, family and a cadre of surrogates who can keep her name fresh in the minds of voters sorting through a dwindling field of Democrats vying for the party nomination.
"We're an army of legislators, and we're going to be talking to people in our districts and, for that measure, to people all across the state to let them know we're behind Amy," said Iowa state Sen. Liz Mathis, who represents the Cedar Rapids area. Klobuchar, she said, "has laid the groundwork, she's made an impression on people and it's up to us to keep getting that word out."
The enforced absence comes at a critical stage for Klobuchar's bid in Iowa, a neighboring Midwestern state she has visited 30 times as a presidential candidate, underscoring its significance to her campaign hopes. Riding a slow rise in the polls here for several months, Klobuchar has been drawing bigger crowds and generating much needed media attention.
Now the Minnesota senator's campaign team must figure out how to fill the void.
The trial, which got underway Tuesday in the Senate, gave Klobuchar and at least the three other senators in the race — including Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren — a chance to perform on the national stage.