Talking Sense

It’s the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party. Except maybe in farm country

A group of people sit to listen to politicians inside a barn.
People at Farmfest on Aug. 7 in rural Morgan, Minn., listen to candidates speak during a congressional candidate forum for Minnesota's 6th, 7th and 8th Congressional Districts.
Jackson Forderer for MPR News

State House candidate Marisa Ulmen showed up to the annual ag expo Farmfest this year with a stack of papers that break down what a Trump administration would mean for farmers like herself.

“[Republicans] really, really, really want to revamp all of the farm subsidy payments,” she said. In her view, that’s bad for an industry already struggling. 

But in this deep red part of western Minnesota, where this massive farm gathering is held annually, it’s hard to make her case. 

As attendee Mitchell Bublitz passed by, Ulmen tried to hand him her flier. He wanted to talk about her views on abortion instead.  

a woman sorts through papers while talking to a man
Marisa Ulmen, left, hands out campaign material to a volunteer at the Conservation Minnesota booth at Farmfest in rural Morgan, Minn., Aug. 6.
Jackson Forderer for MPR News

“Oh, I think it’s Farmfest, and we should save those for another time,” Ulmen said. 

Ulmen is running in a large rural district just south of Mankato. And as far as she knows, she’s the only farmer running as a Democrat, a rarity among a group of voters who used to be the “F” in the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party. 

Those fissures between rural and urban Democrats are front and center with Gov. Tim Walz emphasizing his rural roots as a vice-presidential candidate. 

Vice President Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign wants to position Walz as someone who appeals to more moderate, rural voters and to progressives who cheer his more recent record as governor. 

It’s a division that’s accelerated in recent years, said Cindy Rugeley, an associate professor of political science at the University of Minnesota Duluth. Minnesota’s urban areas are becoming bluer and its rural areas are becoming redder.

“It’s not much different than other areas of the country,” she said. “It’s not over issues like farming or agriculture policy. It’s more social issues and identity issues. It kind of provides an incentive for political leaders to tap into that.”

a group of candidates speak to a crowd from a stage
A U.S. Senate candidate forum was held in the Wick Building at Farmfest. Seven candidates debated issues ranging from health care to border security.
Jackson Forderer for MPR News

Red and blue dividing lines

Being a rural Democrat can be challenging these days because DFL messaging around abortion protection, the environment, police reform and gender identity issues doesn’t resonate in rural parts of the state, said Ulmen. 

She pointed to the Minnesota Legislature’s heated debate over Uber and Lyft driver pay as an example of this messaging mismatch. 

“I’m sure that that’s a huge problem for people that live in the cities, but we’ve never been able to get a taxi in southern Minnesota,” she said. “You know, we live in a place where you can’t get a pizza delivered. These issues, they’re not ours.”

Four people sit down to listen to candidates.
The Meyer family, from left, Averi, 15, Erica, Dan and Kadyn, 13, listen to candidates speak at a congressional candidate forum at Farmfest.
Jackson Forderer for MPR News

The dividing lines weren’t always so stark, said former state legislator Jack Considine, who used to represent Mankato. 

“There was a point in the late ‘80s when you could drive from the Canadian border to Iowa and western Minnesota, and never leave a DFL district. And slowly that eroded,” he said.

He points to the fact that Walz successfully held his congressional seat for 12 years. Today, it’s held by a Republican.

In Considine’s opinion, Democratic leaders started taking their longtime farming base for granted. The DFL’s money and volunteers increasingly focused on urban and suburban wins to build power at the Capitol. 

Considine said it’s a logical strategy, even if he doesn’t agree with it. 

“It’s not really that much of a risk. They are winning, they’re controlling the houses. They continue to do good stuff for greater Minnesota,” he said. “But it’s not something that [Democrats] talk about.” 

stickers on a table
Stickers at the information booth of Vote, Run, Lead at Farmfest. Vote, Run, Lead is a nonprofit that helps women run for public office.
Jackson Forderer for MPR News

A rural voice in the party

Lori Sellner is a longtime DFL activist in southwest Minnesota and co-founder of the DFL rural caucus. She said Democrats often support policies that help rural families in general, like efforts this session to make child care more accessible. 

But she said Democrats in St. Paul just don’t tout those wins as much as they once did.

Nevertheless, Sellner said the dynamic is changing: She sees the DFL paying attention to rural Minnesota again.

“In recent [election] cycles the DFL is hiring rural organizers and red to blue organizers,” she said. “I’m seeing more effort with rural candidates out here in the last few cycles. It’ll take time to get back what we’ve lost, obviously.”

woman with sling smiles
Brown County DFL Chair Lori Sellner at Farmfest. Sellner is the co-founder of the DFL Rural Caucus, and says that the party seems to be paying more attention to rural candidates in recent elections.
Catharine Richert | MPR News

Ulmen sees the long game, too, even though she knows her chances of winning in her district are slim, given how much Republicans have dominated it in recent years. 

“I’m running to try to be that conduit, that rural voice, to try to get people in the metro to pay a little bit more attention to the struggles — and the wonderful parts — that we have about living in this area,” she said. “And at the same time, if we expect people in the metro to listen to our issues we’ve got to pay attention to theirs, too. It’s a frustrating, continual conversation.”

two people hold food trays
Marisa Ulmen laughs at a joke her husband, Jim Ulmen, made after he got the two of them cheeseburgers at Farmfest.
Jackson Forderer for MPR News