Minnesota is definitely not getting left off the 2020 presidential campaign map.

A little over three weeks after Republican President Donald Trump rallied supporters at Target Center, Bernie Sanders, one of the front-runners for the Democratic nomination, rallied supporters Sunday at Williams Arena on the University of Minnesota’s Minneapolis campus.

Sanders is hoping for a repeat of his 2016 caucus win in Minnesota. In March, the state’s voters will participate in a primary vote on Super Tuesday when more than a dozen states pick candidates to run in the 2020 election.

Sunday’s event was moved to the basketball arena to accommodate the expected crowds, which filled a good portion of it. Congresswoman Ilhan Omar, who represents Minnesota’s 5th District including Minneapolis, welcomed Sanders.

Sanders’ liberal ideals were the reason supporters such as Judith Schwartzbacker came out to see the Vermont senator. She says the other top Democratic candidates are not progressive enough and Sanders is leading a revolution.

“What is the revolution?” Schwartzbacker said. “He has a people’s army behind him, and he’s the one who will be able to make his agenda a reality.”

That type of revolution concerned a man calling himself “Wing Bob,” who belongs to a newly formed local chapter of the national group “Bikers for 45.” He says Sanders and Omar’s policies are bad for Minnesota and the nation.

“So, I’m here to say no to Bernie Sanders and Ilhan Omar and the socialist group that is trying to take over our country,” Wing Bob said as he gathered with a small group of Trump supporters outside the arena.

Hip-hop star Brother Ali and Prince’s iconic band, the New Power Generation, warmed up the crowd before attendees heard from Minneapolis City Council member Jeremiah Ellison and his father, Attorney General Keith Ellison.

Omar introduced Sanders, but not before getting an approving roar from the crowd when she said: “Here in Minnesota, we don’t just welcome refugees … we send them to Congress.”

Sanders outlined the progressive agenda that helped him win the support of more than 60 percent of caucus-goers in 2016.

That includes tuition-free college and wiping out student debt, Medicare for all and the Green New Deal to combat climate change. To pay for his plans, Sanders wants new taxes on businesses and the wealthy.

“Our campaign is not just about ending a very corrupt political system, it is not just about ending a very rigged economy,” Sanders said to applause. “It is about transforming our national priorities and our system of values.”

Trump was a regular target of Sanders and the other speakers at Williams Arena. Sanders called Trump a racist, sexist and homophobic.

“Today, tragically, we have a president of the United States who is a pathological liar. Who is running the most corrupt administration in history,” he said. “This is a president … who deserves to be impeached and will be.”

That brought chants of “Lock him up” from the crowd, a variation on the line Trump encouraged about his opponent Hillary Clinton during the 2016 campaign.

Sanders also noted Trump’s aggression toward Omar, saying the vitriolic attacks were unprecedented. “Ilhan has stood up to Trump, and we will stand with her,” Sanders said.

Left out of Sanders’ stump speech was mention of his dozen other opponents for the 2020 Democratic nomination, including Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar. Sanders praised the late Minnesota Sen. Paul Wellstone and his wife Shelia but made no mention of his colleague Klobuchar.