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Minn. Senate hopefuls will debate on Monday©Associated PressNovember 3, 2002 MINNEAPOLIS -- The six-day sprint to replace the late Sen. Paul Wellstone will climax with a debate between Walter Mondale and Norm Coleman on the eve of the election, their campaigns announced Saturday. Meanwhile, both sides turned their attention Saturday for the first time to trustworthiness and national security -- the topics that had divided the race before Wellstone was killed in a plane crash Oct. 25. Mondale, the Democrat and former vice president who jumped into the campaign after Wellstone's death, asked voters to think about who they would trust more in the Senate. Wellstone repeatedly suggested Coleman couldn't be trusted. "Who do you trust? That's a big thing in politics because words don't mean anything unless there is trust," Mondale said to voters in Virginia, one of several towns he visited in northern Minnesota, a traditionally Democratic region dominated by mining and forestry. Coleman, the former St. Paul mayor, toured southern Minnesota, a farm-rich area that tends to vote Republican. He also gingerly returned to some of the issues that separated him and Wellstone. "I will work with our president to make sure our nation is secure," Coleman said, without specifically mentioning Wellstone's vote against a resolution authorizing President Bush to use military force in Iraq. The House and Senate overwhelmingly passed the resolution; Mondale said he would've voted against it. The candidates will get their first and only chance to hit on those and other issues when they meet head-to-head in Monday morning's debate. "I think it's important for voters to hear the vice president at this point," Coleman said. "I've been out there for two years." Mondale agreed Thursday to debate Coleman alone, at the request of broadcasters. © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
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From the Times wire desk
From the AP |
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