Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand channeled her inner diva at a Des Moines gay bar, where she posed—and shared her frock—with a drag queen.

Photos the Democratic presidential candidate posted to Twitter late Friday showed Gillibrand touching up her lipstick backstage at a bar called the Blazing Saddle, flaunting a skintight black sheath with jeweled straps and a crystal-studded bodice.

“Vana and the amazing queens at the Blazing Saddle in Des Moines invited me for a visit tonight before their show,” the New York lawmaker gushed.

“I felt underdressed, so I brought a dress I picked up yesterday—turns out it fit me, but it fit Vana even better!” she added. “Thank you for having me, ladies!”

Gillibrand, who officially entered the presidential race in March but has been fundraising for it since January, collected just $3 million in the campaign’s first quarter—an embarrassingly low sum for a sitting US senator who enjoyed significant support from moneyed Wall Street donors in the past.

An internal memo blamed the fundraising fail on backlash against Gillibrand for being the first senator to call for the resignation of Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) in 2017 over sexual harassment allegations, the New York Times reported.

But she has not yet found favor with voters, either: Gillibrand has not broken the 2% threshold in any poll.

The senator announced plans this week for a May 2 fundraiser with Marti Gold Cummings, whom the campaign described as an LGBT activist and performer, in Manhattan.

“For the first time in the history of the United States a presidential candidate is sitting down one on one with a drag queen to discuss the issues,” Cummings tweeted Thursday. “This is a huge moment in our history.”

Other Democrats hit the campaign trail with far less flashy appearances during the holiday weekend, as voters were occupied by Easter and Passover observances.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar (Minn.) made a trip to the “world’s longest candy counter” in Littleton, NH; Rep. Tim Ryan (Ohio) wooed future caucus-goers at Raccoon River Park in Des Moines; and South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg traveled with his husband Chasten to meet students at New Hampshire’s Plymouth State University.