The Democratic National Committee will host its 2020 presidential convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In August, a coalition of Midwestern senators from Minnesota to Indiana to Ohio signed on to a letter to the DNC calling for a Milwaukee selection. | Mike De Sisti/Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel via AP 2020 Elections Milwaukee to host Democrats' 2020 convention

Democrats are going all in on the heartland.

On Monday, the Democratic National Committee announced it had selected Milwaukee, Wisconsin to host its 2020 presidential convention, a move that offers real and symbolic significance after Hillary Clinton skipped the state in the 2016 presidential race, then went on to lose it to President Donald Trump.


Milwaukee beat out Houston and Miami, which had mounted an unsuccessful final lobbying blitz to be the host city.

Wisconsin has embodied the party’s failures in the 2016 presidential race. Clinton felt so confident in capturing a state that Barack Obama had claimed that she bypassed it in the general election campaign. Trump then won it by less than 25,000 votes, the first time the state had gone red in a presidential contest since 1984.

Alex Lasry, chair of Milwaukee’s bid committee, said the selection signals “the importance of Wisconsin and the Midwest for winning the presidency.” He added: “Landing the Democratic National Convention is an unprecedented opportunity to put Milwaukee on the international stage.”

COUNTDOWN TO 2020 The race for 2020 starts now. Stay in the know. Follow our presidential election coverage. Email Sign Up By signing up you agree to receive email newsletters or alerts from POLITICO. You can unsubscribe at any time. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

DNC chair Tom Perez echoed as much in an email to DNC members on Monday, adding that Democrats in the state had made notable gains, including ousting longtime Republican Gov. Scott Walker last year.

“This is the first time the Democratic Party has held a national convention in the Midwest, outside of Chicago, since 1916,” Perez wrote. “This choice emphasizes the importance of the heartland and the strength of a diverse community working together.”

In recent weeks, top Midwestern Democrats and business leaders engaged in a frenzied effort to bring the convention to their region, insisting that holding it in Wisconsin would help repair the frayed relationship between the party and heartland voters. Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisc.) and even Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker were involved in the behind-the-scenes overtures to the DNC.

And in August, a coalition of Midwestern senators from Minnesota to Indiana to Ohio signed on to a letter to the DNC calling for a Milwaukee selection.

“Democrats have not held a convention in the Midwest since 1996, and a Milwaukee convention would send a strong message to the nation that winning America’s heartland is a priority in the 2020 election cycle and beyond,” the group of senators wrote. “Wisconsin is a state with a deep progressive and Democratic history. It is an ideal place for our party to showcase our values, priorities and agenda in our commitment to fight for everyday Americans.”

Milwaukee made its new Fiserv Forum the centerpiece of its bid. The Milwaukee Bucks basketball organization had poured some $250 million into building the state-of-the-art arena that was so new when DNC members walked through it last summer, it still smelled like fresh paint on the tour.

For months, DNC members complained that the city’s hotel room inventory couldn’t handle the convention. Some warned that Milwaukee would be “another Charlotte,” a reference to the 2012 convention host city, which struggled to accommodate the influx of people.

But local organizers point to a Harley-Davidson anniversary event last year that accommodated more than 100,000 bikers who descended on the city over one weekend. And they say the DNC wouldn’t have chosen the city or even considered its bid if it couldn’t fulfill every requirement:

“We have enough hotels,” Lasry said.