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Minnesota legislator concerned gun storage law puts farmers at greater risk if a cow charges

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While discussing his concerns about a legislative proposal for more stringent gun-storage laws, Minnesota State Sen. Warren Limmer offered one that caught some off-guard: He thinks farmers will be in greater danger of being injured by a charging cow if they don’t have easy access to a gun.

Limmer, R-Maple Grove, raised his concern with the proposal during Friday’s legislative hearing for the Judiciary and Public Safety Committee. The proposal authored by Sen. Heather Gustafson, DFL-Vadnais Heights, increases the criminal penalties for negligent gun storage and specifies what level of security is required. Under the proposal as it currently reads, guns must be unloaded and equipped with a locking device when the owner is not carrying it, or placed in a locked gun storage unit.

He said many farmers have a gun readily available for emergencies, and that if they aren’t accessible quickly, more cow-related injuries or fatalities could result.

“Take for example a cow that just recently had a calf — you even walk too close to a cow and it’ll take you down and trample you into dust,” Limmer said. “Fumbling around with a lock while a cow or a bull or any other animal is going after your daughter or your son — you can’t fumble around with a key or try and find the lockbox or put your thumb on a biometric key of some sort in your home while the danger is outside.”

Reports show that deaths caused by cows in the U.S. are uncommon but not unheard of. In 2019, a 41-year-old Minnesota man was trampled to death in his cow yard near Parkers Prairie. A January 2024 report by the journal Forensic Science, Medicine and Pathology estimated that around 20 to 22 deaths per year in the United States are caused by cattle.

Along with his concern for cattle farmers, Limmer said he thinks the bill ignores people who need a gun more readily available to protect themselves inside a home.

Fellow Republican senators and organizations associated with gun ownership or gun rights also argued against the bill. Others spoke in favor of it, including victims of gun violence and some DFL senators.

Limmer did not return a request for comment Monday.



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Gov. Tim Walz’s swing-state appeal is put to the test in western Wisconsin

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“This is an area that swings back and forth depending on the election cycle, and it’s an area that really can deliver those decisive votes for candidates in a statewide election,” said Anthony Chergosky, a University of Wisconsin-La Crosse political science professor. “If the Harris-Walz ticket can develop a brand that helps them stop the party’s slide in rural Wisconsin, then that will massively help their path to victory.”

Both presidential campaigns have spent considerable time in Wisconsin. Trump recently visited the state four times in a span of eight days. Harris held rallies in La Crosse and Green Bay earlier this month, and Walz made stops in Eau Claire, Green Bay and Madison. Walz told a crowd gathered at a “Students for Harris-Walz” event in Eau Claire that “it’s very realistic to believe that this race will be won going through Wisconsin.”

Though both campaigns have made frequent visits to the Badger State, their stops appear to be geared toward shoring up their respective bases, retired GOP strategist Brandon Scholz said.

“I think Tim Walz’s job right now in Wisconsin, from what he’s saying and where he’s going and what he’s doing, is, ‘let’s make sure 99 percent of our voters turn out, because we need every single one of them because of how close Wisconsin is,’” Scholz said. “To date, neither he nor Harris have communicated a message to bring in those undecideds, ticket splitters.”

Ryan O’Gara is one of those undecideds. The 47-year-old Christian conservative lives in the village of Downing, some 20 miles northwest of Menomonie and home to about 230 people. O’Gara said he sees mostly Trump signs around his town, but he isn’t a fan of either nominee and likely will sit out this election.

Asked what he thought of Walz, O’Gara referred to him as “far-left.” He said he disagrees with allowing gender-affirming health care services for minors. Walz signed a bill into law last year making Minnesota a refuge for people seeking gender-affirming care.



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Tolkkinen: Talking politics over dinner, and nobody threw the carrots

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But then, they were Lutherans.



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Pro-Palestinian voters remain frustrated with Harris-Walz ticket

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“It’s time for a hostage deal and cease-fire that ensures Israel is secure, all hostages are released, the suffering in Gaza ends, and the Palestinian people can realize their right to dignity, freedom, and self-determination,” Walz said on this year’s anniversary of Hamas’ 2023 attacks on Israel.

Polls indicate Minnesota will likely break for Harris, but in states where margins will be much tighter, some protest voters are choosing to vote for Harris despite their reservations.

Roman Fritz of Oconomowoc, Wis., voted early for Harris on Wednesday, he said, even though he remains deeply frustrated with her stance on the war.

Neither he nor Engelhart want to see Trump win. The Uncommitted National Movement has been trying to carve out a middle ground between opposing Trump and supporting Harris, with leaders saying a Trump presidency would be worse for Palestinians, and warning that votes for third-party candidates could result in a win for Trump. But the group declined to offer its endorsement to Harris.

Similarly, Fritz said, he did not feel he should talk his friends into voting for Harris, especially Palestinian American friends who have lost loved ones in Gaza.

“I do want her to win,” Fritz said, but, “I’m not going to campaign for her.”



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