Minnesota Republicans emerged from bruising endorsement battles over the weekend seeking unity as the party tries to win its first statewide races in years and expand its influence in the Legislature.
"If we do, we can win," U.S. Rep. Tom Emmer told the crowd at the state GOP convention Saturday. "If we don't, we will fight among ourselves, wasting valuable time and money. And we will risk losing our best opportunity in a decade."
Party leaders and convention delegates described this year as a key chance to take offices that have long eluded Republicans in Minnesota. Many stressed that the GOP's activist base, a subset of voters who play a critical role in building momentum, must push past internal divides and train their energy on Democrats.
But calls for unity are already being tested this week, as attorney general hopeful Doug Wardlow decided to buck his party's endorsement process and press on to the primary.
"There is a Minnesota swamp, just like there is a national swamp. It is the fear-driven RINO establishment," he said in a video, using the acronym for "Republican in name only." "It is the elites who care more about staying in power than they care about the people."
He said the result of the contest for the attorney general nod was fixed against him. The endorsed candidate Jim Schultz ran a "despicable smear campaign," Wardlow said, and has surrounded himself with "swamp creatures."
The party responded with a forceful statement that Wardlow had committed to abiding by the endorsement and called on him to end his campaign.
Divides within the party were thrown into sharp relief during the convention as Republicans spent nine rounds dueling over their gubernatorial pick — including bashing candidates' judgment, trustworthiness and insider status — before landing on former state legislator Scott Jensen.