Star Tribune
Control of the MN Senate will be decided by one seat
A single western Twin Cities contest on Tuesday’s ballot will provide the tie-breaking vote in the Minnesota state Senate, determining whether Republicans or DFLers control the chamber.
Republican Kathleen Fowke, in her second run for office, seeks to turn the seat red. Former Sen. Ann Johnson Stewart, a Democrat, wants voters to return her to St. Paul.
All 134 state House of Representatives seats were on the ballot Tuesday. But of the 67 Senate seats, this was the only one on the ballot because of a special election.
Results are expected later tonight.
This Senate district that surrounds Lake Minnetonka is is up for grabs because Sen. Kelly Morrison, DFL-Deephaven, stepped down to run for the Third Congressional District seat. She was on the ballot Tuesday as well, facing Republican former judge Tad Jude.
Morrison resigned the seat after the 2024 legislative session, leaving the Senate at a tie with 33 DFLers and 33 Republicans. The Senate’s tie hasn’t been an issue because it hasn’t gone into session since Morrison’s departure, but the 2025 legislative session starts Jan. 14.
Fowke, 60, a real estate agent and entrepreneur, campaigned as a pragmatist, a moderate who would restore balance at the Capitol after two years of the DFL controlling both chambers and the governor’s office.
Republican Kathleen Fowke leads a group of volunteers on a door knocking campaign in Long Lake on Wednesday, Oct. 9, 2024. (Alex Kormann/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Former Republican Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch told the Star Tribune last month that it’s a tight race with two good candidates. “Neither side should take this one for granted, and it’s for all the marbles in the Minnesota Senate,” she said.
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.
Star Tribune
Minnesota’s election results posted slower due to absentee voting deadline change
Less than half of the results in the presidential race in were reported in Minnesota just before 11 p.m. The first race call in Minnesota — Seventh District Rep. Michelle Fischbach’s re-election — came after 10 p.m., two hours after polls closed.
So what caused the delay in reporting results? In 2023, the deadline for receiving absentee ballots was extended from 3 to 8 p.m. That change is causing results to be posted later, said Cassondra Knudson, the spokeswoman for Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon.
“Most counties are expected to process the absentee ballots received by 8 p.m. before reporting any election results,” Knudson wrote in a statement about the deadline changes.
So far, some state races have almost all of the results posted, while others have a long way to go to be called. Nearly 1.3 million absentee ballots had been accepted, according to the Minnesota Secretary of State’s Office. There are nearly 3.7 million registered voters in Minnesota.
Star Tribune
In MN’s 7th Congressional District, U.S. Rep. Michelle Fischbach cruises to victory
PARK RAPIDS, MINN. — In western Minnesota’s deep-red Seventh Congressional District, U.S. Rep. Michelle Fischbach easily won a third term.
Democrat A. John Peters challenged Fischbach, a Donald Trump loyalist from Litchfield who was first elected in 2020 when she ousted DFLer Collin Peterson, who held the seat for 30 years. Fischbach, 58, has since amassed one of the most conservative voting records in Minnesota’s delegation.
She won in 2022 by about 40 percentage points and nearly 30 percentage points in the August primary. She was ahead by similar margins in early returns.
Fischbach said in a statement before the victory that “the election will validate the work I’ve been doing on behalf of the good people in western Minnesota. I am honored to be their voice in D.C. advocating for decency, common sense, and our rural way of life.”
Audrey Brasel, 37, a nurse practitioner in Park Rapids, voted for Fischbach after her shift Tuesday night at Essentia Health-Park Rapids Clinic. She cast an all-Republican ballot.
“Those leaders are the people that align with what I believe and just want to preserve, I guess, the standards of our country and preserve our freedom,” Brasel said.
Peters, 76, of Browerville, twice ran unsuccessfully for Minnesota Senate. He was hoping to get 35% of votes. Polls gave him a 1% shot at winning.
The Seventh Congressional District is Minnesota’s largest by land area, spanning 38 counties from the Canadian border nearly to Iowa.