Five months to the day since the Democratic presidential primary season began, it ends tonight with the spotlight trained squarely on Minnesota.
Voters in South Dakota and Montana are choosing between Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton 147 days after Iowans handed Obama his first, most crucial, victory in what has become a bruising campaign.
Unlike election nights past, neither tonight's winner nor loser will show up in either of the states where they just battled. Instead, Obama is headed to the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul for one of his patented mega-rallies -- a clear shot across the bow of Republicans who will be holding their national convention at the hall in September. Doors will open at 7 p.m., but Obama is not expected to speak until closer to 9:30 p.m.
Clinton is headed home to New York City, where she will hold what her campaign described as an "election night celebration."
As the final votes of the primary campaign are being cast, Obama almost has the nomination in his grasp, needing only about three dozen to reach the 2,118 he needs to clinch. For Clinton, the math is more unforgiving. She needs about 200 more delegates.
Obama's aides were working furiously Monday to accumulate commitments from enough superdelegates before the polls close tonight to push him over the top, which would make his Xcel appearance a declaration of victory.
"I don't know what he's going to say," said Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak, who headed Obama's campaign in Minnesota, where he crushed Clinton in the Feb. 5 caucuses. "It's been a long, fascinating campaign, but now it's time for Obama and the rest of America to concentrate on the real issues facing us."
David Axelrod, Obama's chief strategist, was less circumspect Monday, speaking of the St. Paul rally on MSNBC: "Tomorrow night, I think he is going to talk about the road ahead."