Close races in the Second Congressional District indicate the seat could remain purple for the foreseeable future.
State house elections this fall will determine whether Minnesota continues to pass progressive laws on abortion and health care or if the GOP can stem the trend led by Gov. Tim Walz.
ST. PAUL, Minn. - Early numbers on absentee and mail ballots in Minnesota are sharply down from 2020 but substantially higher than 2016.
Minnesota lawmakers are sharing their thoughts after Tuesday night's vice presidential debate between Democratic Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Republican Ohio Sen. JD Vance.
A look at who is running against Sen. Amy Klobuchar this election cycle. The incumbent is polling behind the margin she won by in 2018.
Tim Walz defended his record on abortion as Minnesota governor, seeking to capitalize on one of Democrats’ strongest issues heading into November. Antiabortion groups have sought to portray Walz as an extremist on abortion.
As increasing numbers of candidate yards signs dot the Minnesota landscape, sprinkled in among them are “Vote Yes” and “Vote No” placards. That latter signage typically refers to school excess levy referendums — ballot requests that ask for voter permission to raise property taxes to support local schools.
Whoever said a vice presidential debate couldn't double as an infomercial has clearly never met Governor Tim Walz.
About a third of likely voters in the latest Star Tribune/MPR News/KARE 11 Minnesota poll describe themselves as independent, and they’re fairly evenly divided on the top of the ticket.
Live has ripped Democratic vice-presidential candidate Tim Walz for his debate performance against Republican rival JD Vance. The candidates went head-to-head on Tuesday, with Vance walking away the victor,