Minnesota is finally getting a taste of life in the cross hairs of two presidential campaigns.
The airwaves are humming with attack ads. Former President Bill Clinton and vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan rearranged their schedules to fit in visits to Minnesota. Polls indicate that President Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney are running close in a state that was relegated to the political backwater, overshadowed by such swing states as Wisconsin and Ohio.
It remains to be seen whether this last-minute burst of interest really means Minnesota's 10 electoral votes are up for grabs.
"I don't think it means Minnesota is a battleground state," said political scientist Henriët Hendriks, who studies campaign tactics in safe vs. swing states at St. Olaf College in Northfield. "There's not much chance that a few visits or a little bit of ads will really change anything."
Minnesota has not gone Republican in a White House race since Richard Nixon in 1972. Obama maintains a lead in the polls and his campaign has been on the ground here for more than a year, quietly mobilizing a grassroots network in a state where Romney has no offices.
But the recent spate of ads and attention can energize supporters, Hendriks said. And in campaign offices across the Twin Cities this week, there was energy in the air.
"I'm giving up my free time to work for some change. Change for the better, I think," said Corey Peterson, a senior at Lakeville North High School who has spent about 60 hours this fall volunteering for Romney and other local Republican candidates.
When Romney didn't open an office in Minnesota, state Republicans opened their own -- 39 of them.