FILE - In this July 18, 2018, file photo, Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minn., asks a question at a House Committee on Financial Services hearing in Washington. Ellison's decision to back away from Congress and run for Minnesota attorney general is the latest reminder of the newfound national spotlight on states' top attorneys nationwide. Ellison was first elected to a deeply liberal Minnesota seat in 2006, becoming the first Muslim in Congress. He's built a national profile as an energetic campaigner firmly behind liberal causes like expanding Medicare for all. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Rep. Keith Ellison[1] asked himself the question that lingers over his political career before any of the 1,000-plus supporters at his recent rally could: Why was he leaving the safe congressional district he’s represented for more than a decade to run for state attorney general?

“Attorneys general all over this country led the fight against this Muslim ban,” he said to raucous applause. “It is attorneys general that are fighting and suing to protect an open internet.”

A year after falling short in his bid to chair the Democratic National Committee and with his party stuck in the minority, Ellison[2] is angling for a change.

Democrats nationwide have increasingly looked to attorneys general in their states as a counter to President Donald Trump[3]’s administration and its policies. State attorneys general pushed back against the administration’s ban on travel from several mostly Muslim countries, winning early court battles before a more limited version was upheld by the Supreme Court. More recently, they sued the Trump administration to stop the separation of children and parents who were in the country without permission.

Ellison[4], who, in 2006, became the first Muslim elected to Congress, said his quest isn’t personal. He has a lengthy priority list, including protecting President Barack Obama’s health care law and restoring so-called “net neutrality” provisions scrapped by the Federal Communications Commission under Trump[5].

“For me, it is a dramatic oversimplification to say that this is about Trump[6]. It’s not,” he said. “But it is about policies that he’s pursuing that I think hurt consumers, hurt people’s rights.”

A 54-year-old with the campaign vigor of someone 30 years younger, Ellison[7] has carved out a reputation as an energizing force in state and national politics while making frequent appearances on cable news shows. He was an early supporter of Bernie Sanders’ presidential bid and co-chaired the House Progressive Caucus until last year, recently taking charge of the push to expand Medicare for all.

Even before Ellison[8] entered the race, there were signs of the new thirst among Minnesota Democrats for a more activist attorney general. Lori Swanson, the three-term Democratic incumbent, was humbled at a June endorsing convention by a little-known challenger who criticized her as too careful.

When she abruptly decided to run for governor, Ellison[9] joined a stampede of five Democrats who filed to run for a seat that Republicans haven’t won in more than half a century. Though Ellison[10] hasn’t won a statewide race, he has a higher public profile than any of his Democratic challengers and will likely benefit from an expected heavy turnout at the Democratic primary, where a fierce competition for the nomination to run for his congressional seat will be settled....

Though Ellison[11] has significant rivals –

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