A nationwide push to change the way Nebraska hands out its presidential votes landed in Omaha Tuesday.

The state’s five electoral votes a major battle between Republicans and Democrats.

[View our full video report above]

Some were in line 2-hours early, rally organizers estimating upwards of 600 on hand, told that this year’s race for the White House is going to be close, possibly boiling down to one of Nebraska’s five electoral votes.

Malia Shirley, NE Freedom Coalition: “Welcome everyone to the Win Every Vote rally. There’s been a lot of momentum and movement behind this.”

That momentum all part of a nationwide right-wing push to change the Nebraska vote to winner-take-all, that without it a Trump win is in jeopardy.

Clay Travis/Buck Sexton Radio Show: “If he were to flip Arizona, Georgia, and Nevada he would lose potentially by one electoral vote because Omaha, Nebraska is not rolled into the overall State of Nebraska. Nebraska, the fate of the nation and whether we get four more years of Joe Biden could come down to you guys… can you imagine.”

Right now, Nebraska’s five electoral votes are divided up, two statewide, and one for each Congressional district. A Joe Biden win in Omaha’s 2nd Congressional District would hand Biden that one electoral vote, as it did in 2020.

But going to winner take all, would all but guarantee a Donald Trump clean-sweep of Nebraska’s five electoral votes.

“Okay we’re full,” the venue Lord of Hosts Church in Republican southwest Omaha, the church the target of a never-Trumper State Sen. Megan Hunt, tweet noting, “Here’s the IRS form to fill out to complain about the tax-exempt status of the church hosting this event.”

The Nebraska Democratic Party running a mobile billboard targeting Trumpers, defending the current vote. Party chair Jane Kleeb arguing, "Trump extremists did their best to interfere with our fair electoral votes process and they failed,” Kleeb adding the party is “prepared to keep fighting to protect our fair electoral voting system."

That fight apparently would have to involve a special Legislative session called by Gov. Jim Pillen, who wants winner-take-all.  But so far, no special session, no not yet.