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Vice presidential nominee JD Vance lands in Minnesota for fundraiser

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Vice presidential nominee JD Vance arrived in the Twin Cities late Monday morning for a brief campaign stop where he’ll attend a private fundraiser and possibly make another unannounced stop.

The Republican U.S. senator from Ohio didn’t take any questions from press who gathered on the tarmac as he stepped off his campaign plane and into a motorcade headed for the fundraiser.

It’s Vance’s first trip back to Minnesota since late July, when he and former President Donald Trump rallied together in St. Cloud. Trump hasn’t been back to the state since, and it’s unclear if he will before Election Day on Nov. 5.

No Republican presidential candidate has won Minnesota since Richard Nixon in 1972. A Star Tribune/MPR News/KARE 11 Minnesota Poll conducted last month found that Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris and Gov. Tim Walz held a 48%-43% lead over Trump and Vance in Minnesota. Harris hasn’t been to the state since she became the nominee.

Vance arrived in Minneapolis just as his vice-presidential counterpart Walz boarded a plane headed for Eau Claire, Wis. Walz is scheduled to participate in an unspecified political engagement in Eau Claire on Monday afternoon. The governor will then head to Green Bay, where’s he’s set to attend another political event alongside Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers and Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

The two presidential campaigns have spent considerable time in the Badger State over the past couple of months, including in some western Wisconsin communities that are within driving distance for Minnesotans.



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Hennepin County incorrectly appointed election judges

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The state Republican Party and conservative legal groups filed a petition with the Minnesota Supreme Court on Wednesday claiming that Hennepin County did not appoint partisan election judges in the right way.

The party and two conservative groups, the Upper Midwest Law Center and the Minnesota Voters Alliance, want to know how Hennepin County appointed election judges to its absentee ballot board this year. The board’s work includes making sure signatures on absentee ballots match signatures on voter registration cards and deciding if a ballot is spoiled or not.

The central question of the lawsuit, according to Andy Cilek, executive director of the Minnesota Voters Alliance, is whether county elections officials have to exhaust lists of potential election judges provided by the political parties before selecting others for the absentee ballot boards, which are required to have a balance of Republican and Democratic election judges.

“We want to understand how this occurred,” said Minnesota Republican Party Chair David Hann.

The suit alleges no one from a list of 1,500 Republicans supplied by the state Republican party to the Secretary of State’s office were selected by Hennepin County. Hann said he did not know if any Republicans were selected to serve.

Ryan Wilson of the Upper Midwest Law Center said the group has not scrutinized lists of election judges in other counties to make sure they included names provided by the state Republican Party. Wilson said his group is focusing on Hennepin County because it has the most voters, and the most potential to have an impact, he said.

In a statement, Daniel Rogan, Hennepin County auditor, said absentee ballot board members were appointed in compliance with state law and guidance from the Secretary of State.



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Funeral date set for 13 year old boy run over at Minnesota haunted hayride

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Funeral services for Alexander “Xander” Steven Mick will take place Monday at Discovery Church in Sauk Rapids beginning at 2 p.m.

The boy was injured Saturday after being run over by a wagon pulled by a tractor at the haunted hayride Harvest of Horror.

Xander was a unique child who loved Jesus with all his heart, said his mother, Teri Dahlberg Mick, in a statement.

“He was full of life, a junior black belt in taekwondo, played drums for worship team; he was in band, sang in choir, in robotics and soccer, and almost was an Eagle Scout,” she said.



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Former Duluth East hockey coach Mike Randolph violated employee conduct policies

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Not all of the interviews were negative; a fair amount of players and parents reported positive experiences with Randolph, some saying they never witnessed him belittling players.

“To me, he was fabulous,” one parent said, noting their child “blossomed” under Randolph.

Terch wrote he was not able to substantiate an allegation that Randolph received payments from the East End Hockey Boosters, although he did find “unusual financial management practices” by the booster club, including a misrepresentation to parents about the use of at least some of what they paid, a commingling of funds between events and “unorthodox” accounting practices. Several parents said they felt they had overpaid many times without explanation. The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension began investigating the former East hockey booster club in 2023 for alleged embezzlement. The status of that case is unknown.

In response to the report’s release, Duluth Public Schools Superintendent John Magas said in a statement that he can’t discuss personnel matters, but the district takes all reports from students and families “very seriously.”

“Our primary goal is to ensure that students have the best possible experiences, both in the classroom and in extracurricular activities,” he said. “We are committed to thoroughly investigating any concerns brought to our attention and taking appropriate action” to maintain safe and positive learning environments.

St. Thomas Academy didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.



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