Woodbury starts its first community garden — and fulfills one woman’s dream

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As she kneels in front of her plot in Woodbury’s Community Garden, Ying Liang says that she always wanted to have her own vegetable garden.

“I would flip through catalogs and, you know, daydream about it. I would think about what I could plan but never be able to do it.”

Lack of space in her backyard and neighborhood association rules prevented Liang from growing vegetables at home. The IT professional of over 25 years said she had been asking the city for several years for some sort of community gardening space, and was excited to receive an email about one in 2022.

Liang wasn’t alone in desiring a garden space. A city survey of residents found that a community garden was one of the things most wanted by its population of just over 80,000. Until then, Woodbury had been the largest city in Minnesota without one, according to Simi Patnaik, director of the Woodbury Community Foundation’s Woodbury Thrives program.

Just next to Andy’s Bark Park, near Manning Avenue and Dale Road, Woodbury’s first community garden was farmland in 2021. In 2022, supported by Woodbury Thrives, the community garden was piloted with 16 plots, then fully implemented this year with 48 9-by-14 garden plots for community members to use. The garden was funded through grants offered by the state, according to Patnaik.

Patnaik said the community garden helps build on the organization’s three pillars of healthy lifestyle, mental well-being and social connectedness: It gets residents outside, learning about growing their own vegetables and interacting with other members of the community.

Patnaik and Woodbury Thrives chair Jodi Ritacca conducted a survey of garden users through email. Roughly two-thirds of the gardeners responded and revealed that 50 percent of them are immigrants and people of color. Additionally, 60 percent earned below $100,000 per year and live in multifamily housing.

“It’s about forming connections with the community,” Patnaik said. “And helping people meet the neighbors they might not normally see every day.”

200 pounds of tomatoes

On Saturday morning, Liang deftly clipped a handful of orange cherry tomatoes and gently rinsed them under one of the faucets in the garden. It’s the end of the harvesting season, and her yield has included squash, eggplant, red russian kale, lettuce, and a whopping 200 pounds of tomatoes. She says the tomatoes make her nostalgic.

“I am from China, so when I was little the tomatoes were marketed to us as both a vegetable and a fruit. We eat them like fruits.”

Liang emigrated to America in her high school years, and had always been disappointed in flavorless grocery store tomatoes.

“I’m at the grocery store and I’m looking at the tomatoes, and there’s just no way you can eat it. So bland, and it just doesn’t have that tomato taste. So when I grew my own, I thought, ‘Oh, that tastes like tomato.’”

A basket of produce Ying Liang harvested from Woodbury’s new Community Garden on Oct. 21, 2023. (Gabrielle Erenstein / Pioneer Press)

The roma and cherry tomatoes Liang grew are indeed far more sweet and flavorful than standard grocery store tomatoes. They make for a whole lot of sandwich toppings and soup she drinks cold out of bottles, too. Liang’s tomato surplus wasn’t just for her. She gave much of it away to family, friends, neighbors and even a piano teacher.

Liang has a similar childhood nostalgia for some of the other vegetables she grows and eats fresh, such as winter melons and purple starchy corn, which she can’t find at regular grocery stores.

“But I think I have it in my blood, wanting to grow something. You know, you look at a seed and you watch it grow and nurture it, and they reward you with this abundance. It’s just amazing.”

Liang has also enjoyed the garden as a way to connect with Woodbury’s community. She said she made new friends through meeting her fellow gardeners. She would water other gardeners’ plots when they were away, and they did the same for her. She connected with other gardeners via a Facebook group, which she hopes will take off more as a way for other gardeners to communicate.

Having previously worked only with flowers, she was able to learn more about vegetable gardening from other more experienced gardeners. Liang said she learned about how to properly support her plants, fertilizing, extending harvests and sustainability techniques.

“I met people from different cultures, who grow vegetables I’ve never seen or heard of before.”

Sharing expertise

Ed Myatt, one of the brains behind the Woodbury Community Garden, echoed the sentiment. Despite being a Master Gardener, one of nearly 200 in the state who undergo 80 hours of training by the University of Minnesota to contribute gardening knowledge to communities, he too had seen some vegetables for the first time during this year’s harvest.

“It was a real broad cross section of people, from places like Somalia, China and India.”

Myatt, a retired Exxon Mobile executive, is required by the Master Gardeners program to volunteer for 25 hours per year.  He said that on average, he volunteers 350 to 400 hours per year. When the garden first started up, because most of the gardeners were completely new, he helped them get started by lending tools and advice. The Master Gardeners also donated funds used to buy more tools for residents. After a few weeks though, he said he wasn’t as needed anymore.

“It became a community of gardeners because they started helping each other,” Myatt said. “I was amazed at how they came together.”

Even an 8th grade Girl Scout, Audrey Srefken, provided some expertise when it came to interacting with a very important denizen of the gardening world: Srefken taught gardeners about pollination and how to interact properly with bees, Ritacca said. Srefken gave a presentation about the gardeners and the bees to Woodbury’s City Council on Monday.

Ying Liang harvests produce she grew in Woodbury’s Community Garden. (Gabrielle Erenstein / Pioneer Press)

Liang worked Saturday on cleaning up her plot. The city has asked gardeners to clean up the plants and structures left after the harvest so the garden can be ready for next year. In April, Liang starts growing again.

Garden plot registration for 2024 begins Nov. 29 for Woodbury residents. Registration can be found on the “Recreation” section on Woodbury’s website: woodburymn.gov.

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Patriots’ cornerbacks group still has potential ‘through the roof’

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FOXBORO — The Patriots are unlikely to see the full potential of their cornerback group this season, but thanks to an early-season trade they can at least get close.

The Patriots are expected to be without cornerbacks Christian Gonzalez and Marcus Jones for the rest of the season, but they put a very strong group on the field Sunday. And the unit should be getting even better in time for Sunday’s game against the Dolphins.

J.C. Jackson, reacquired in a trade with the Chargers earlier this month, is back to playing close to 100% of defensive snaps in his return to the Patriots. Jack Jones, in his first game back from injured reserve, and Jonathan Jones, who was nursing a knee injury suffered in Week 7, split snaps at the other outside cornerback spot. And Myles Bryant manned the slot. Jackson, Jack Jones and Jonathan Jones all played in Sunday’s win over the Bills but never all shared the field at the same time.

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But Jackson, Jack Jones and Jonathan Jones have all been full-gos in practice this week. And the potential of a position group with Jackson and Jack Jones on the outside and Jonathan Jones back manning the slot seems high.

“Through the roof,” is where Jack Jones sets it. “I don’t want to put a cap on it. I feel like if I was to say anything, it would be putting a cap on it. Just let us go out there each Sunday and play to our potential and see where we land, but I think we’ve got a really good group.”

Jackson concurs.

“I feel like we have the potential to be one of the best secondaries in the league with this defense,” Jackson said. “We just got to play up to that.”

Jack Jones, who was one of the league’s top rookie cornerbacks last season, was frustrated by a hamstring injury he suffered prior to Week 1 that kept him out for the first six weeks of the season. The ailment occurred after gun charges, stemming from an arrest in June when police allegedly found two handguns and ammunition in his carry-on bag at Logan Airport, had been dropped against him.

“That was tough, bro,” Jack Jones said of his injury. “That’s the worst, especially first week. I mean, we go through all fall camp and the summer and you’re good. And then the first week is just a bummer. You don’t want that to happen at all. But you’d rather it have it earlier than later. It’s God’s timing, not mine. It was an unfortunate situation, but I’m blessed to come out of the situation and be able to play football.”

Jonathan Jones, who has primarily played outside over the last two seasons after serving as one of the NFL’s best slot cornerbacks for the first six years of his NFL career, said he’d be comfortable moving back inside.

“That’s my thing about my career,” Jonathan Jones said. “I’ve kind of done everything here. Whatever I’ve ever been asked to do has always been an option.”

And Jackson, who was one of the NFL’s top cornerbacks in his previous tenure in New England, has been praised by Patriots cornerbacks coach Mike Pellegrino for the effort he brings back to the team.

“I love J.C.,” Pellegrino told reporters on Tuesday. “I missed him when he was gone. … J.C.’s bringing a different energy to the room on working hard and getting ready to go for practice and stuff like that. That’s been really good. I’ve been really impressed with his new attitude, pushing himself, pushing everybody to play better. …

“He’s always been a guy who loves to work. I’m out there at practice, I’ve got two seconds to myself, he’s like, ‘Mike, let’s go do something. Let’s go do some long balls.’ He always wants to do extra work. He’s out there 10 minutes before practice starts, working on his footwork. He does a great job trying to stay on top of his craft.”

Jack Jones said Jackson gets the whole group going “being himself really, just being J.C.”

Jonathan Jones sees Jackson motivating younger players like Jack Jones.

“I mean, he doesn’t say too much, but just his presence,” Jonathan Jones said. “He’s one of those playmakers and has been here for a while. Just the energy he brings to the room is different, different energy, and a lot of those younger guys can kind of gravitate to that, as well.”

If Jackson and both Joneses start, that would allow Bryant to go back to his strength of being a versatile chess piece in the Patriots’ defense, capable of playing in the slot, outside and at safety.

The Patriots could catch a break this week with Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill missing Wednesday’s practice with a hip injury. Jonathan Jones has been adept at limiting Hill, who returned Thursday, in the past if the speedy wideout can power through the ailment.

Dean Phillips Isn’t on a Kamikaze Mission. It’s More Pointless Than That.

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The Hall of Failed Presidential Candidates, Incumbent Challengers’ Wing, overspills its velvet-roped boundaries with polystyrene statues of politicians who fantasized that they could convince their party to nominate them in place of their party’s current president.

Viewing the reverse chronologically designed exhibit, we see the contenders from 2020, Bill Weld, Mark Sanford and Joe Walsh, who staged their futile campaigns against President Donald Trump. In the 1992 space, we find Pat Buchanan, who unsuccessfully challenged President George H.W. Bush, and in the 1980 section, we meet Edward Kennedy, who took on President Jimmy Carter. The most historically significant of the displays belongs to 1968 challenger Eugene McCarthy, who, like his other hallmates, didn’t win the nomination but was elemental in hounding the incumbent out of the race.

As varied as each of these candidacies were, every one of them was more about ideology than a lust for regicide. The sitting president from our party is wrong, the challengers said, and their candidacies would set politics and policy right, and they used the primary system to force the president to state his case to voters for reelection rather than giving him a rubber stamp victory.

But breaking harder than a Clayton Kershaw curveball from this distinguished pattern of presidential challengers is Dean Phillips, a three-term representative to Congress from Minnesota with name recognition near zero, who has staked out no distinguishing political position, who counts no actual congressional accomplishments, and who is about to run against President Joe Biden for the Democratic nomination.

What makes Phillips so unique, and maybe deserving of his own sub-wing of the Incumbent Challengers’ Wing, is that he has no real policy or political bones to pick with Biden.

Even Robert Kennedy Jr., who was running against Biden until recently decamping for an independent campaign, and Marianne Williamson take defining anti-Biden positions on major issues. Phillips adores Biden, whom he still calls a “wonderful and remarkable man” and the holder of an “extraordinary legacy.” Phillips has voted the Biden line in Congress roughly 100 percent of the time. In April 2021, after Biden’s first address to a joint session of Congress, Phillips gushed on X, formerly Twitter, “I’m so grateful America elected Joe Biden to be our president.”

So what, you have every right to ask, motivates Phillips’ attempted Biden takedown? Speaking to “Meet the Press” in August, when Phillips was saying some Democrat should challenge Biden in 2024 but that he was not that Democrat, he said it was time for the country to “turn the page” on Biden, who should “pass the torch.” Interviewer Chuck Todd tried to help Phillips formulate his thinking by asking him if the real issue was age, a valid disqualifier for a candidacy in many instances. But Phillips categorically denied that as a reason. “This is all about how people feel,” he said, referring to the president’s “historically low approval numbers.”

That’s it, as far as the public record goes: Phillips wants Biden replaced because of his low approval numbers. But because no other Biden-worshipper with presidential ambitions — such as California Gov. Gavin Newsom or Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer — is currently willing to enter the contest and pursue the same policies that have earned Biden such low approval numbers, Phillips thinks he should campaign for the job.

“A Vote For Me Is a Vote For Joe Biden, Only You Get Me, Not Joe,” is an unsatisfying Phillips’ campaign slogan, too long to fit on most bumpers and too retrograde to reach most voters, but it might be all he’s got.

That’s not the only backward aspect of the Phillips crusade. The most elemental point of primary challenges has been to get the incumbent to defend his policies to the party faithful. This is laudable in all cases. But Phillips attacks Biden on his low approval numbers, something the president is hard-pressed to easily turn around. If Phillips thinks Biden’s approval numbers portend his defeat at the hand of Donald Trump next year, which could very well be the case, Phillips must have plans to improve those numbers if he’s so lucky to take Biden’s place on the ballot but continue those policies. But if that were such a doable task, wouldn’t it make more sense to simply give his secret plan to Biden for execution?

If Phillips would simply level with voters and say what many think he’s saying — that we should turn the page on Biden because in the 30 months since he tweeted his unalloyed praise of him, the president has lost a step or two — then Biden could at least respond directly. Perhaps he could perform a set of mental gymnastics and clear a cognitive minefield to prove his readiness for another four years. Such a statement by Phillips would place the age issue at the center of the campaign, where it belongs. But Phillips, who has yet to make his mark in politics, lacks the presidential fortitude to go there. Replace somebody who isn’t popular with somebody who is unknown is his basic response. By constantly pointing to Biden’s low approval numbers, he can’t be said to be improving them. If anything, he’s helping Trump beat Biden.

It has always been something of a kamikaze mission to run against your party’s incumbent president. But most of these kamikaze candidates do so with the knowledge that while their candidacy might end their political careers, at least they’ll have the satisfaction of having moved their party to the left or right or having sunk their target.

In Phillips’ case, it’s hard to imagine a Democratic Party future for him. But it’s equally hard to imagine him sinking — or even dinging — Biden. So beyond the few weeks of campaign glory and television interviews, what’s in it for Phillips? Just about nothing beyond his asterisk wing in the Hall of Failed Presidential Candidates.

Most politicians have either family or friends to keep them from running for president. Send advice for the Phillips campaign to Shafer.Politico@gmail.com. No new email alert subscriptions are being honored at this time. My X feed and Bluesky account will not run this season. My RSS feed is dead, so it will run in Chicago only.

55 Things You Need to Know About Dean Phillips

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Dean Phillips is a lucky man.

A multi-millionaire gelato tycoon, the heir to one of America’s largest liquor dynasties and the first Democrat to represent Minnesota’s 3rd Congressional District in nearly 60 years, Phillips is expected to make his long-rumored presidential campaign official in New Hampshire on Friday, ending months of speculation over his plans for 2024.

But as the third-term Democratic congressman launches a long-shot presidential bid against President Joe Biden, luck might not be enough to land Phillips in the White House. To do that, he may need to bet on something closer to a miracle.

Phillips, 54, is expected to pitch himself to voters as a sprier alternative to the 80-year-old Biden, whom he has otherwise praised as “a president of great competence and success.” But given Biden’s advanced age, Phillips has argued, Democratic voters deserve “not a coronation, but … a competition.”

With Biden still the overwhelming favorite for the Democratic nomination, Phillips’ chances of winning that competition are notably slim — but not zero. According to recent polling, nearly 70 percent of Democratic voters believe Biden is too old to effectively serve another term, and 67 percent say they’d prefer a different candidate as the party’s nominee. But is a gelato-tycoon-turned-back-bench-congressman an attractive alternative?

Here, culled from (rare) media coverage and (spare) public remarks, is a definitive primer on Dean Phillips.

1.

As a hockey fan growing up in Edina, Minn., Phillips remembers watching the U.S. Olympic Hockey team defeat the USSR in the “Miracle on Ice” game at the 1980 Olympics: “It’s a memory that will be forever seared into my mind as the moment I learned that anything was possible, no matter how challenging the circumstances or how remote the odds,” he has written.

2.

He describes himself as a “eternal optimist.”

3.

His net worth is approximately $124 million, making him one of the wealthiest members of the House of Representatives.

4.

“I’m one of the luckiest guys in the world,” Phillips has said.

5.

He was born Dean Benson Pfefer on January 20, 1969, in St. Paul, Minn.

6.

His biological father, Arthur (Artie) Pfefer, was a captain in the U.S. Army at the time of Dean’s birth. Artie was killed in a helicopter crash in the Pleiku province in Vietnam on July 25, 1969 — before he had ever met his son.

7.

In March 2023, Phillips visited the site of his father’s death with a U.S. delegation that included actor Woody Harrelson. “It was frightening and exciting, and something I probably could have done much sooner,” Phillips said in an interview about the trip. “Maybe I didn’t have the courage at the time.”

8.

Family members say that Dean is the spitting image of his father.

9.

In 1972, his mother, DeeDee, married Edward Phillips, the chairman and CEO of Phillips Distilling Company, the Minnesota-based liquor behemoth that’s credited with producing the first American-made brand of schnapps. Edward — known by his family as Eddie — was the third member of the Phillips family to run the company, which was founded by his grandfather, Jay Phillips, in 1912.

10.

After the wedding, Eddie adopted Dean, who took his adoptive father’s last name. The adoption “brought me into a family of great achievement and high expectations,” Phillips later wrote.

11.

Phillips’ adoptive grandmother, Pauline Phillips, was the author of the famous “Dear Abby” advice column, which she wrote under the pseudonym “Abigail Van Buren” between 1956 and 2002.

12.

In 2022, Phillips told a reporter that Pauline was responsible for his eventual party affiliation: “When I was in the sixth grade, John Anderson, the former Republican congressman from Illinois who was running for president, came to my school and spoke. And that night, we were having a family dinner, and my grandma asked about my day and said, ‘Before you continue, are you a Democrat or Republican?’ I didn’t know. And she said, ‘You’re a Democrat.’ So she anointed me a Democrat when I was 11 years old.”

13.

He attended the Blake School in Minneapolis, a private preparatory day school whose alumni include former U.S. Sens. Al Franken and Mark Dayton, former North Dakota Governor Jack Dalrymple and CNN reporter Poppy Harlow.

14.

In 1991, he earned a bachelor’s degree in urban studies from Brown University, where he was a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity and a newscaster for the campus radio station.

15.

He interned for Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) during the summer of 1989. He later described it as “the greatest summer of my life” and credits the experience with inspiring him to run for Congress.

16.

After college, he worked for a bicycle equipment and apparel company before joining Phillips Distilling in 1993.

17.

While on a business trip to Poland with his father in 1993, he helped acquire the rights to two Polish vodkas, which Phillips Beverage Company began importing to the U.S. in 1996 as Belvedere and Chopin. The move is credited with introducing ‘super premium’ vodka to the American spirits market.

18.

In 2000, after earning an MBA from the University of Minnesota, he was named the new CEO of Phillips Distilling Company.

19.

By 2012, the company was reportedly worth over $175 million.

20.

Phillips stepped down as CEO of Phillips Distilling in 2012 to manage a small, Texas-based gelato company called Talenti that his father had previously invested in. Talenti quickly became one of the best-selling ice cream brands in the country and was sold to the multinational packaged goods brand Unilever in 2014 for an undisclosed sum.

21.

He has two college-age daughters — Pia and Daniella — with his ex-wife, Karin Einisman. In 2019, he married Annalise Glick, musician-turned-art-gallery-proprietor.

22.

“Some people like Warhols,” he has said. “I like whiskey bottles.”

23.

He and his wife have a Norwich Terrier named Henry.

24.

He founded Penny’s Coffee, a high-end coffee and crepe shop with two locations in the Twin Cities area, in 2015. Phillips said of the business, “I’d like to position it more as an escape, and it just happens to serve coffee and crepes. And I’d like to think at some point in time, Penny’s will become a national if not perhaps international player in the coffee and mini-vacation business.”

25.

The two shops, which boasted a $15 minimum wage for all employees, closed in 2022.

26.

In February 2023, a former manager at Penny’s sued Phillips and his business partner for wage theft. The suit was later voluntarily dismissed by the plaintiff.

27.

Phillip’s political career began in 2018 when he challenged fourth-term incumbent Republican Erik Paulsen in Minnesota’s 3rd congressional district. The district, which includes the Western suburbs of Minneapolis, had not been represented by a Democrat since 1961.

28.

In his first campaign, he presented himself as a “fiscally responsible, socially inclusive” moderate focused on bipartisanship and pragmatic governance. “I don’t aspire to be a politician,” he said at the time. “I aspire to be a representative.”

29.

He also pitched his business acumen as a major selling point for voters: “I’d like to bring some of the business principles, the fiscal responsibility that I appreciate in the Republican Party, to Democrats,” he said.

30.

“Change starts with coffee and conversation,” he said in his first TV spot, which was set at Penny’s Coffee. It also introduced his campaign slogan: “Everyone’s invited.”

31.

He defeated Paulsen in the general election with 55.6 percent of the vote.

32.

The first caucus he joined upon taking office was the Problem Solvers Caucus, a bipartisan group of business-friendly centrists that isn’t actually known for solving problems. He now serves as the caucus’ vice-chair.

33.

His district is home to the Mall of America, the largest shopping mall in the Western hemisphere.

34.

He is one of 22 Jewish Democrats currently serving in the House.

35.

In 2019, he was criticized by other Jewish members of Congress for his delayed response to a tweet by Rep. Ilhan Omar that was widely condemned as antisemitic. Phillips later said that he wanted to speak to his fellow Minnesotan before issuing a statement: “You know, a little more talking, a little less tweeting. It’s the tweeting that gets us into trouble,” he said after speaking to Omar.

36.

During his first term, he led two bipartisan trips to the Southern border. “What I saw was almost indescribable,” he said, following his second visit in July 2019. “I couldn’t believe that, in my own country, that people were being kept in the ways that I saw.”

37.

In June 2019, he voted in favor of a $4.6 billion emergency aid package to address the crisis at the Southern border. Ninety-five Democrats voted against the bill, claiming it failed to address the ongoing humanitarian crisis and risked re-enforcing the Trump administration’s punitive border policies.

38.

Phillips has said that lowering health care costs is one of his top legislative priorities, and in 2020, he co-sponsored a bill to allow residents to buy into their state Medicaid plans. The bill never advanced out of committee.

39.

Georgetown University’s Lugar Center and the McCourt School of Public Policy ranked him the 13th most bipartisan member of the House during the 117th Congress. The ranking measures how often a member of Congress introduces bills that attract co-sponsors from the other party and how often that member co-sponsors a bill introduced from across the aisle.

40.

He voted twice to impeach President Donald Trump. “I’m not a fan of Donald Trump’s character and principles and values,” he has said.

41.

He has won re-election to Congress twice: In 2020, with 55.6 percent of the vote, and in 2022, with 60 percent of the vote.

42.

He holds seats on the House Committee on Small Business, the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, the House Committee on Ethics, and the Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress.

43.

He is a fixture of the Democrats’ congressional softball team, though he admits to being “a below average baseball player and an average softball player.”

44.

He identifies as pro-choice, though he hasn’t always been clear about his stance on abortion rights. In 2017, he reportedly told a group of voters, “I’m pro-life. And I’m also pro-choice. And I don’t think they’re mutually exclusive. I think it’s really important to be both. And I celebrate both.”

45.

He has voted with Biden’s stated policy positions 100 percent of the time.

46.

“He’s a president of great competence and success, I admire the heck out of President Biden,” Phillips said in February. “And if he were 15-20 years younger it would be a no-brainer to nominate him, but considering his age it’s absurd we’re not promoting competition but trying to extinguish it.”

47.

Phillips began agitating for a Democratic challenger to Biden in early 2023. “Nobody wants to be the one to do something that would undermine the chances of a Democratic victory in 2024,” he told POLITICO’s Jonathan Martin in February. “Yet in quiet rooms the conversation is just the opposite — we could be at a higher risk if this path is cleared.”

48.

In May, he denounced the possibility of a third-party challenge to Biden by a candidate on the ‘No Labels’ ticket as “a historic disaster” for Democrats.

49.

He has also criticized other third-party candidates like Cornel West and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who are both running as independents. “Those people are absolutely helping Trump,” he has said.

50.

“I think I’m well positioned to be president [of] the United States … I do not believe I’m well positioned to run for it right now,” Phillips told POLITICO in August.

51.

In early October, he stepped down from his leadership position as the co-chair of the Democratic Policy and Communications Committee, citing conflicts over a potential 2024 presidential run. “My convictions relative to the 2024 presidential race are incongruent with the majority of my caucus, and I felt it appropriate to step aside from elected leadership to avoid unnecessary distractions during a critical time for our country,” he said in a statement.

52.

After Hamas attacked Israel in early October, he said: “We need a two-state solution. We need peace and prosperity and opportunity for both Palestinians and Israelis living side by side. But right now, it is black and white. We need the United States to continue to support Israel. We need to eradicate Hamas. And we need to encourage Palestinians to elevate a leadership that can sit at the table with principle with good character, and with the intention for peace.”

53.

During the fight over the House speakership, Phillips offered a rare olive branch to Republicans, publicly offering to “sit out” a vote if Republicans nominated fellow Minnesota Rep. Tom Emmer and Emmer agreed to Democratic terms. Emmer’s bid flamed out quickly.

54.

A campaign bus with “Dean Phillips for President” was spotted driving around Ohio on Oct. 24 — several days before Phillips officially announced his campaign.

55.

The bus’ bumper teased Phillips’ new campaign slogan: “Make America Affordable Again.”