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Minnesota’s 16- and 17-year-olds can now pre-register to vote. Will they sign up?

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On Wednesday morning, Steve Simon stood in a dim auditorium in front of hundreds of high school juniors and seniors in Albert Lea, Minn., to ask if they’ve ever seen the inside of a polling place before.

Only a few hands shot up, which is to be expected, given most of the students are not yet old enough to vote.

Then Minnesota’s secretary of state turned to his pitch: They’d soon be old enough to go to the polls and cast their ballot, and a new law allows eligible 16- and 17-year-olds to pre-register so they are automatically in the system when they turn 18.

“Your vote is your voice,” said Simon. “You get formal political power, and that is meaningful and that is valuable, and you cannot and should not leave that on the table.”

As students head back into classrooms this fall, Simon plans to appear in high schools around the state to promote the law change, part of a broader effort to foster strong voting habits in a demographic group that’s the most challenging to engage in the civic process. In Minnesota, there are an estimated 150,000 16- and 17-year-olds who are now eligible to pre-register to vote, according to numbers provided by the Secretary of State’s Office.

Those who are eligible to pre-register can fill out a regular voter registration form on the Secretary of State’s website. If someone is a resident and 16 or 17 years old, their information will be flagged in the system as a pre-registration. On their 18th birthday, they will be automatically added to the state’s list of registered voters.

That’s helpful to the state to cut down on same-day registrations ahead of a major presidential election year, but studies also show engaging youth in the election process before they are eligible to vote helps demystify it and establish lifelong voting habits.

“The more we give young people the opportunity to think ahead about voting and elections the more likely they are to participate, and not just because of the momentum,” said Michael Wall, who works to engage young people in voting and government as outreach director for the YMCA’s Center for Youth Voice.

Right after high school, many younger voters are heading off to college, getting jobs or both, Wall said, and figuring out how to register to vote can get pushed to the backburner.

“Young people have shared anecdotally the notion that they would rather pass and wait until they know what they’re doing than show up for an activity and be seen as someone who doesn’t know what’s going on,” he said.

Other groups are also pushing to let high schoolers know about the new law, including the League of Women Voters of Minnesota, which is creating a toolkit to give schools examples of social media posts and student announcements to let them know about how to pre-register, said executive director Michelle Witte.

DFL Party Chair Ken Martin said the party is in early conversations with groups such as Young Democrats of America and High School Democrats of America on how to engage with younger voters to get them signed up, but he also wants to team up with the state Republican Party to do events geared at pre-registration.

The millennial and Gen Z generations are now the largest voting bloc in the American electorate, but they turn out at lower numbers than other age groups.

In the 2022 election, 23% of 18- to 29-year-olds nationally turned out to vote, lower than the record-breaking 2018 midterm cycle, where 28% of youth voters cast ballots, according to the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement at Tufts University.

But Martin said the youth vote has been growing the last several election cycles, and he doesn’t see that slowing down.

“They are very politically minded, they care deeply about issues,” he said. “What they haven’t done is connect the dots yet between their advocacy and voting, and why voting matters and how voting can actually lead to change.”

Michigan had the highest youth turnout in the country at 37%, but Minnesota was among a group of four states that also saw above 30% turnout from young voters in 2022. Minnesota joins 15 other states and Washington, D.C., that allow voters as young as 16 to pre-register to vote.

At the assembly, Simon posed for selfies, did a short interview with a student TV program and played up Minnesota’s No. 1 status for voter turnout to encourage the students to sign up to vote.

Jaylee Waters, a senior involved in student government at Albert Lea High School, said she recently turned 18 and wasn’t registered to vote yet. She planned to this week after attending the assembly.

“Not a lot of us students know much about voting. Granted, we have our government classes and whatnot, but some kids don’t have parental figures that share that information,” Waters said. “The fact that we were able to get the whole school together today to talk about it was awesome.”



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Kamala Harris campaigns in La Crosse, Wis. as election nears

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“I honestly think he used to understand how tariffs work,” Cuban said. “Back in the 90s and early 2000s, he was a little bit coherent when he talked about trade policy and he actually made a little bit of sense. But I don’t know what happened to him.”

Speaking in Pittsburgh on Thursday, Trump’s running mate, Ohio Republican Sen. JD Vance, pushed back against the Harris campaign’s claims that tariffs would hurt the economy. Vance described the tariffs as a way of discouraging imports and boosting American manufacturing.

“If you are a business, and you rely on foreign slave labor at $3 a day, the only way to rebuild American manufacturing is to say, if you want to bring that product made by slave labor back into the United States of America, you’re going to pay a big fat tariff before you get it back into our country,” Vance said.

Back in Wisconsin, Amara Marshell, freshman at UW-La Crosse, said she showed up to support Harris because she is concerned about what a second Trump presidency could mean for reproductive rights. Like her friend, sophomore Avery Black, Marshell is also excited about the possibility of electing the nation’s first female president.

“Women deserve to have power over their own bodies,” Marshell said. “We shouldn’t have to not be able to get an abortion just because of a president.”

Mary Holman, an 80-year-old retiree from Fort Atkinson, Wis., said she hasn’t been to a rally since former President Barack Obama’s first campaign in 2008. But Holman said she decided to get off the sidelines this cycle because she views the election as a fight to preserve democracy.



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Minnesota offering land for sale in northern recreation areas

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The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources will auction off state lands in popular northern counties next month.

The public land — in Aitkin, Cook, Itasca, and St. Louis counties — will go up for sale during the Department of Natural Resource’s annual online public land sale from Nov. 7 to 21.

“These rural and lakeshore properties may appeal to adjacent landowners or offer recreational opportunities such as space for a small cabin or camping,” the DNR said in a statement.

Properties will be available for bidding Nov. 7 through Nov. 21.

This all can trim for print: The properties include:

40 acres in Aitkin County, with a minimum bid of $85,000

44 acres in Cook County, minimum bid $138,000

1.9 acres in Itasca County, minimum bid $114,000



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Razor wire, barriers to be removed from Third Precinct

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Minneapolis city officials say razor wire, concrete barriers and fencing will be removed from around the former Third Precinct police station – which was set ablaze by protesters after George Floyd’s police killing – in the next three weeks. The burned-out vestibule will be removed within three months with construction fencing to be erected closer to the building.

This week, Minneapolis City Council members have expressed frustration that four years after the protests culminated in a fire at the police station, the charred building still stands and has become a “prop” some conservatives use to rail against city leadership. Most recently, GOP vice presidential nominee JD Vance made a stop outside the building and criticized Gov. Tim Walz’s handling of the 2020 riots.

On Thursday, the council voted 8-3 to approve a resolution calling for “immediate cleanup, remediation, and beautification of the 3000 Minnehaha site including but not limited to the removal of fencing, jersey barriers, barbed wire, and all other exterior blight.”

Council Member Robin Wonsley said the city needs to acknowledge that many police officers stationed in the Third Precinct “waged racist and violent actions” against residents for decades.

Council Member Aurin Chowdhury said the council wants the building cleaned up and beautified “immediately.”

“We cannot allow for this corner to be a backdrop for those who wish to manipulate the trauma of our city for political gain,” Chowdhury said.

Council Member Katie Cashman said the council shouldn’t be divided by “right-wing figures posing in front of the Third Precinct and pandering to conservative interests.”

“It’s really important for us to stay united in our goal, to achieve rehabilitation of this site in a way that advances racial healing and acknowledgement of the past trauma in this community, and to not let those figures divide us here,” she said.



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