Nicholas Johnston
Bloomberg
Monday, Oct 20, 2008
Minnesota has seen this movie.
Ten years ago, a gregarious professional wrestler, Jesse Ventura, won the race for governor by tapping into voter anger and running as a third-party candidate.
This year, Dean Barkley, Ventura’s former campaign manager, is trying to produce a sequel by vying for a U.S. Senate seat. While one of the major-party candidates is favored to win the race, high economic anxiety and Congress’ record-low approval ratings have given Barkley a lift in state polls.
“Something’s got to be done and I don’t think Republicans or Democrats can do it,” Gary Lilya, a 64-year-old Democrat said after meeting Barkley at a diner in Rochester.
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The race already had developed into one of the most closely watched in the country, with comedian Al Franken, a Democrat, challenging Republican incumbent, Norm Coleman.
Democrats had counted on Franken, 57, benefiting from the anti-Washington climate fueled by economic hard times. Enter into the race Barkley, who has a paid staff of two and $75,000 in campaign funds. He briefly served as a U.S. senator once already when Ventura appointed him to serve the final two months of Paul Wellstone’s term after the Democrat died in a plane crash in 2002.
Dead Heat
Barkley, 58, has changed the dynamic by turning the race into a dead heat. In a survey conducted by Quinnipiac University Oct. 8-12, Franken was ahead of Coleman by 2 percentage points, within the poll’s 3-point margin of error. Barkley, running this year on the Independence Party of Minnesota ticket, polled 18 percent, drawing almost equally from Democrats and Republicans.
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