ST. PAUL, Minn. — Former President Donald Trump used a day off from his hush money trial Friday to headline a Republican fundraiser in Minnesota, a traditionally Democratic state that he boasts he can carry in November.
Trump took the stage late as he headlined the state GOP's annual Lincoln Reagan dinner in St. Paul after attending his son Barron's high school graduation in Florida.
Declaring his appearance to be ''an official expansion'' of the electoral map of states that could be competitive in November, Trump said, ''We're going to win this state."
Trump was using part of the day granted by the trial judge for the graduation to campaign in Minnesota, a state he argues he can win in the November rematch with President Joe Biden. No Republican presidential candidate has won Minnesota since Richard Nixon in 1972, but Trump came close to flipping the state in 2016, when he fell 1.5 percentage points short of Democrat Hillary Clinton.
Trump returned to Minnesota several times in 2020, when Biden beat him by more than 7 percentage points.
''I think this is something Trump wants to do. He believes this is a state he can win. We believe that's the case as well,'' David Hann, the chairman of the Republican Party of Minnesota, said in an interview.
Democratic U.S. Sen. Tina Smith of Minnesota, a Biden ally, said the Trump campaign is ''grasping at straws'' if it thinks he can win the state.
''The Biden campaign is going to work hard for every vote,'' Smith said in an interview. ''We're going to engage with voters all over the state. But I think Minnesota voters are going to choose President Biden.''