The fight over the marriage amendment intensified Monday when a star-studded group of opponents joined Minnesota political heavyweights for a chilly outdoor rally to energize the faithful and kick off their final push toward Election Day.
"We believe in an America that was founded on equal rights," Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., told a roaring crowd of 1,800 outside the University of Minnesota's Northrop Auditorium. "We believe in an America that goes forward, not backward. ... So let's make good on the promise of America and defeat this amendment."
The event is part of a frenzied final effort by both campaigns to persuade voters on a measure that would change the state Constitution to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman. The other side, led by Minnesota for Marriage, is revving up its formidable campaign machine, including a surge of phone calling.
Both sides have much at stake in how they execute the final few days of a campaign that has been the most expensive and divisive ballot question in state history. A new Star Tribune Minnesota Poll shows the race deadlocked, so a flub could cost either side the race.
Monday's rally brought together swarms of supporters waving orange and blue signs, vowing to defeat an amendment that voters in 30 other states have passed without exception, including California and Maine.
"It is your right to love who you please; the government should not be matchmaker," said Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minn.
Minnesota for Marriage has already launched a relentless campaign of phone banking to reconnect with supporters and remind them to vote Nov. 6.
"The bottom line, rallies don't win elections, getting people to the polls does," said Chuck Darrell, spokesman for the group.