Star Tribune
Rep. Ilhan Omar seeks re-election in blue Fifth District
In the reliably blue Fifth Congressional District, results were not yet known in the race between Democratic incumbent U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar and Republican challenger Dalia Al-Aqidi.
Omar is expected to easily win re-election in the Fifth District, which includes Minneapolis and nearby suburbs stretching from Richfield to Fridley. The nationally known congresswoman is seeking a fourth term in the U.S. House. Omar is a former state legislator and the first Somali American elected to Congress.
Al-Aqidi was born in Iraq and came to the U.S. with her family in 1993. She’s a former journalist who once worked as a media adviser for the U.S. Department of Defense.
Omar defeated her last Republican challenger by about 50 percentage points two years ago, winning roughly 74% of the vote.
Omar, a critic of the war in Gaza, has supported Vice President Kamala Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz even though their position on the conflict hasn’t changed much from President Joe Biden’s.
In an interview with the Minnesota Star Tribune last week, Omar said, “I do believe that having a Trump presidency certainly will have divinity on [whether this] genocidal war continues. And it would be harder for those of us who are fighting to end it, to even be active in doing that.”
If Harris and Walz prevail, Omar will remain the deputy chair of the Progressive Caucus, and if Democrats retake the House, she hopes to get back on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, which Republicans ousted her from last year, and chair the Africa Subcommittee.
Star Tribune
Four early takeaways from the 2024 election in Minnesota
Minnesota has not gone for a Republican candidate since Richard Nixon in 1972.
Six congressional incumbents in Minnesota easily won back their House seats.
As of 11:30 p.m. Tuesday, Republican Reps. Tom Emmer, Brad Finstad, Michelle Fischbach and Pete Stauber won re-election, along Democrats Reps. Angie Craig and Ilhan Omar.
The race in Minnesota’s Fourth District, between DFL Rep. Betty McCollum and Republican May Lor Xiong, had not been called as of 11:30 p.m.
For the second time in her career running for U.S. Senate, Amy Klobuchar is outperforming the Democratic presidential candidate.
As of 11:30 p.m., Klobuchar earned nearly 83,000 more votes than Harris, despite Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz running as her vice president nominee.
Star Tribune
Minnesota judicial election results 2024: Incumbents lead races
Minnesota Supreme Court Justice Natalie Hudson and Justice Karl Procaccini both held commanding leads early Wednesday in the only two contested races on the state’s high court.
Throughout the whole statewide judiciary, only nine sitting judges were up for election against challengers, and some of those races were too close to call as 1 a.m. approached. Six of the contests involved district court judges in the Twin Cities, central Minnesota and up north.
On the state’s Court of Appeals, incumbent Judge Diane Bratvold was leading comfortably over challenger Jonathan Woolsey of Chaska. She began serving on the Appeals Court in 2016 and was elected to a six-year term in 2018.
Hudson, appointed as the court’s first Black chief justice last fall, was challenged by Stephen Emery, who has run for multiple offices. With 87% of precincts reporting, she garnered 63.5% of the vote. Hudson served as an associate justice on the Supreme Court since 2015 and previously served 13 years on the state’s Court of Appeals.
Procaccini, appointed in August 2023 by Gov. Tim Walz, was running against lawyer Matthew R. Hanson, who two years ago ran unsuccessfully against Scott County Judge Charles Webber. Procaccini served as general counsel to Walz for four years beginning in 2019, helping the governor navigate the pandemic.
Hanson stressed in his campaign that he would be independent from the governor’s office. With 83% of precincts reporting, he drew 43% of votes to 57% for Procaccini.
Supreme Court Justice Anne McKeig, first appointed in 2016 and elected in 2018, was on the ballot without opposition.
In the Tenth Judicial District, Judge Helen Brosnahan held a lead in her first election after being appointed to the bench by Walz in 2022. Her challenger, Nathan Hansen, is a solo practitioner who received Republican party assistance as the party’s recommended candidate. The Tenth Judicial District covers Anoka, Washington, Chisago, Isanti, Kanabec, Pine, Sherburne and Wright counties.
Star Tribune
MN voters decide whether to elect Tim Walz as vice president
Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris and Gov. Tim Walz were poised to win Minnesota’s electoral votes on Tuesday, but there was little to celebrate as a path to nationwide victory looked narrow.
Neither Harris-Walz nor former President Donald Trump and running mate, Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, spent much time campaigning in the state. Republicans had pledged to turn Minnesota red for the first time since 1972, but polls consistently showed Harris-Walz with a slim but steady lead.
Late into the evening Tuesday, the returns looked far less promising for the Democrats.
If elected, Harris would be the first female president and Walz would be the third Minnesotan elected to the vice presidency.
Harris and Walz ran a compressed campaign as she tapped him for the ticket in early August shortly after President Joe Biden stepped aside and just before the start of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
Walz sought to join Minnesota’s favorite sons, the late vice presidents Walter Mondale and Hubert Humphrey, who served, respectively, with former Presidents Jimmy Carter and Lyndon Johnson.
Voting in north Minneapolis Tuesday, Joseph Thomas, 39, said he chose Harris and cited equality, help with housing and taxes as issues he cared about most. He also liked that Harris could be the first female president: “That was a big deal, too,” he said.
At Martin Luther King Recreation Center in St. Paul, Kate Kulzer walked her dog, a Catahoula leopard dog named Rhubarb, and dropped her fiancé off to vote about an hour before polls closed. Kulzer had voted for Harris earlier in the day – but she considered it a vote against Trump.