In an election year marked by well-funded Tea Party insurgencies across the nation, Minnesota's movement finds itself split by disputes and short of the cash that could make its activists players in the November elections.
Unlike national Tea Party organizations that strongly support conservative candidates like Republican Michele Bachmann, Minnesota's leading Tea Party activists are deeply conflicted about ties to the GOP. Local leaders say they care less about being players in the big races than preserving the decentralized, grassroots ethic they see as their greatest asset.
The upshot is a fledgling movement already divided in two as it vies for money and the allegiance of dozens of smaller groups across the state, with both factions accusing each other of trying to head what is supposed to be a headless organization.
Antoinette (Toni) Backdahl, a political newcomer who helped found the state's Tea Party group, takes a decidedly independent stance.
"We're not a GOP dog and pony show," says Backdahl. But as the movement grows, her purist fervor has put her at odds with even newer leaders, like Randy Liebo, co-founder of the North Star Tea Party Patriots, whose members are more willing to work with the GOP.
While national Tea Party organizations spend millions on advocacy and congressional elections, Minnesota's two leading Tea Party groups still operate on the edges of the Republican Party -- though close enough to nudge the state party to the right on some key endorsements, including that of gubernatorial candidate Tom Emmer.
Lack of organization has also made them cash-poor. A dispute between Backdahl and Liebo over the cost of a single bus charter to Bachmann's House Call rally in Washington last November underscored the financial constraints they face as one of the smallest-dollar Tea Party groups in the nation.
"All of our contributions are from individuals," Liebo said. "The largest check I've seen was for $500."