Hillary Clinton is heading to heavily Republican Nebraska on Monday in search of a single electoral vote.

In a move that suggests the Democratic presidential nominee is taking nothing for granted against Republican Donald Trump, Clinton has scheduled a late afternoon rally in Omaha, a moderate pocket of an otherwise conservative state.

Here’s why: Nebraska is one of only two states that awards part of its electoral votes based on outcomes in congressional districts. The other is Maine.

In Nebraska’s case, two of the state’s five electoral votes go to the statewide winner. That is almost certain to be Trump. The other three are distributed on the basis of performance in Nebraska’s three congressional districts.

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In 2008, then-Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.) edged out GOP nominee John McCain in the 2nd Congressional District, which includes Omaha, picking up exactly one of the 270 electoral votes needed to secure the presidency.

Four years later, Mitt Romney swept the entire state, which has pretty much been the norm for Republicans in recent decades.

Bud Synhorst, executive director of the Nebraska Republican Party, said he considered Obama’s 2008 pick-up “pretty much of a fluke.”

“I think Clinton is wasting her time and money,” Synhorst said. “She thinks she can pull an Obama, but she’s not the same candidate, and it’s eight years later.”

Democrats, however, say they are pretty fired up about the visit, scheduled for a high school gym that will not be nearly large enough to fit everyone who has already RSVP’d, according to Nebraska Democratic Party Chairman Vincent Powers.

Powers said that after consulting with others on Facebook, he determined that a Democrat hadn’t campaigned in Nebraska during the general election since President Franklin D. Roosevelt sought reelection in 1936.

“It’s been 80 years,” Powers said. “We’re just very happy she’s coming. For us in Nebraska, it’s a huge development to have a future president campaigning here.”

Obama came to Nebraska ahead of the 2008 Democratic caucuses but did not return before the general election, Powers said.

“Unless you come and ask for our vote, you’re not going to get our vote,” said Powers, adding that he has been annoyed by those in the national media who consider Nebraska a state that Democrats “should just fly over.”

Unlike other parts of the state, conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh doesn’t dominate the airwaves in Omaha, Powers added. “There’s a lot more to listen to on the radio,” he said.

Omaha is Nebraska’s largest city and home to a handful of Fortune 500 companies as well as the annual College World Series.

It is telling that Clinton considers the Omaha-centered district a battleground. Her campaign has staff on the ground there and is airing television ads in the Omaha market.

Only eight states have been afforded the same status: Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Virginia. (Pennsylvania is relatively new to the list, having replaced Colorado, a state targeted in an earlier Clinton ad buy.)

Republicans have speculated that Clinton’s stand in Omaha is really more about shoring up support in Iowa, a swing state on Nebraska’s eastern border. The Omaha TV market bleeds over into western Iowa, including Council Bluffs, which is just across the river.

The Clinton campaign insists otherwise.

During last week’s Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, a high-ranking Clinton campaign official made a point of visiting a Nebraska delegation breakfast.

“We are campaigning in Nebraska for your congressional district,” said Marlon Marshall, the campaign’s director of states and political engagement, according to an account in the Omaha World-Herald. “We feel very strongly that we can win.”

The state GOP doesn’t plan to be particularly welcoming when Clinton touches down Monday. Synhorst said groups of military veterans opposed to her policies are planning to greet her both at the airport and the event site.

“We have a couple other things planned for her that she’ll find out about when she gets here,” he said.