The Denver Post

In race launched by #MeToo, 2 women have inside track

- By Kyle Potter

In Minnesota’s ST. surprise race to fill Al Franken’s former Senate seat, the two women running tell their own versions of a familiar story.

Democrat Tina Smith, who filled the former “Saturday Night Live” cast member’s seat in January after he resigned, recalls being asked if she could handle a grueling campaign. Her steely answer: “I should not be underestim­ated.”

Her Republican opponent, state Sen. Karin Housley, talks at campaign stops of her disbelief when her financial adviser told her to “stick to changing those diapers and putting a good meal on the table” when she asked about her portfolio. She studied up and wrote a book about investment instead.

Against the backdrop of the #MeToo movement that has swept high-profile men in politics, media and entertainm­ent out of power, a record number of women are running for governor and Congress. No race is more emblematic of the changing landscape than Minnesota’s Senate contest, where the leading candidates are women seeking election to the seat of a man who resigned due to sexual misconduct allegation­s.

“I think we are maybe at a tipping point for women to say: ‘Yes I can do this job,’“Smith said in a recent interview. “For women to grasp that moment and run with it is a really exciting thing.”

Two other states, Washington and New York, have general election Senate matchups where both candidates are women. Arizona and Michigan may join them.

Senate campaigns are often drawn-out affairs, but Franken’s unexpected resignatio­n made Minnesota’s race a relative sprint. His departure unexpected­ly put another pivotal seat on the map for 2018 — Democrats already needed to hold ground in nearly two dozen blue states to have a shot at retaking control of the Senate.

From the start of Franken’s downfall, the focus has been on women — first on whom Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton would name to Franken’s seat and now on the women running to finish his term. Housley and Smith are wellknown inside Minnesota’s state Capitol, but they are little-known statewide.

In an election triggered by women coming forward with sexual misconduct allegation­s, most prominent men in Minnesota politics stayed on the sidelines, including a former governor and several congressme­n.

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