Midwest
Abortion front-and-center in ‘swing’ Minnesota as official invites Iowans to avoid new ‘extreme’ ban
As Republicans appear bullish on breaking Democrats’ 50-year cycle of keeping Minnesota out of presidential election play, a new law in neighboring Iowa brings a controversial political issue front-and-center there.
On Monday, Iowa’s new six-week abortion ban took effect, leading one of Minnesota’s top executive officials to issue an invitation to Iowans seeking access to the procedure.
That news comes as former President Trump, formerly within the margin of error against President Biden, is now further trailing presumptive Democratic nominee Vice President Kamala Harris in the Land of 10,000 Lakes.
During a tour of a nonprofit abortion clinic in Bloomington, Minnesota, Democratic Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan issued a call for women to travel north if abortion can’t be provided for them in Iowa.
“If you’re afraid, come to Minnesota. We’ve got you,” Flanagan said.
IOWA’S 6-WEEK ABORTION RESTRICTION TAKES EFFECT AS STATE COURT STRIKES DOWN CHALLENGE
Abortion rights demonstrators gather near the Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, Minn. (Nikolas Liepins/Anadolu via Getty )
Earlier this year, Flanagan notably tweeted her NCAA March Madness bracket: choosing teams based on the level of abortion restrictions in their home states.
“By this measurement, it’s only fair that Minnesota didn’t make the tournament because they’d have been a favorite for the title,” she wrote at the time.
With Democrats hammering Republicans over abortion and pregnancy-related issues, Harris currently enjoys a six-point lead over Trump in Minnesota.
While the Harris campaign did not respond to a request for comment, a spokeswoman for Trump reiterated the GOP nominee’s 10th Amendment-centric position that it is up to the states to decide abortion policy either way.
“President Trump has long been consistent in supporting the rights of states to make decisions on abortion,” said Karoline Leavitt, national press secretary for the Trump campaign. “[W]hile Kamala Harris and Democrats are radically out of touch in their support for abortion up until birth and even after birth, and forcing taxpayers to fund it.”
TRUMP’S STRENGTH IN RESPONSE TO ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT LIKELY WON HIM CRITICS VOTES
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz speaks at a press conference. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr, file)
The latter reference was directed toward former Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, a pediatrician by trade who once publicly ruminated about deciding what should be done in the case of a mother already in labor and in the moments after the infant is delivered.
Leavitt said there are greater concerns than abortion on Minnesotans’ minds when it comes to considering Harris’ candidacy.
“Harris encouraged donations to the Minnesota Freedom Fund, which bailed now-convicted murderers and rapists out of jail and put them back into communities across the country,” she said.
“Kamala wants to make this election about anything but her extreme policy positions and miserable record, but Minnesotans know that she is weak, failed, and dangerously liberal.”
Fox News Digital also reached out to Minnesota Democratic Gov. Timothy Walz for comment on Flanagan’s invitation and the abortion issue in such political context, but the request went unanswered.
In a post on X, however, Walz said Minnesota “takes care of our neighbors.”
“As our neighbors in Iowa are stripped of their fundamental rights, my message is clear: Your reproductive freedom will remain protected in Minnesota,” Walz wrote.
However, the White House responded to the news by slamming Iowa’s “extreme abortion ban.”
Abortion rights adovcates gather in front of the J Marvin Jones Federal Building and Courthouse in Amarillo, Texas, on March 15, 2023. (MOISES AVILA/AFP via Getty Images)
“[It bans] care before a lot of women even know they’re pregnant. Iowa will be the 22nd state with an abortion ban in effect,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said.
“These bans, imposed by Republican elected officials, put women’s health and lives in jeopardy.”
Minnesota has not elected a Republican president since Richard Nixon, and only offered its delegates up to Dwight Eisenhower and Herbert Hoover within the last 100 years.
Trump has remained hopeful that Minnesota is in play this cycle. A Sunday rally in St. Cloud served as such an example.
At the event, the mogul called Harris “evil” and cited her past solicitation for donations to the aforementioned Minnesota Freedom Fund.
Trump’s running mate, Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, has received criticism as of late — after podcast comments resurfaced in which he floated federal penalties for abortion-related travel.
“Let’s say Roe v. Wade is overruled. Ohio bans abortion… and then you know, every day, [Hungarian-American billionaire] George Soros sends a 747 to Columbus to load up disproportionately Black women to get them to go have abortions in California,” Vance said in the resurfaced comments.
“And of course, the left will celebrate this as a victory for diversity. That’s kind of creepy.”
However, more recently, Vance has appeared to soften that view, saying in December, “We have to accept that people do not want blanket abortion bans.”
“I say that as a person who wants to protect as many unborn babies as possible. We have to provide exceptions for life of the mother, for rape, and so forth,” he told CNN at the time.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Detroit, MI
Boston Red Sox vs. Detroit Tigers Game Delayed on Monday
Original Story: The Boston Red Sox and Detroit Tigers clash on Monday night was anything but smooth.
Boston got an excellent start from Payton Tolle, who went seven innings in the contest and allowed just one base hit and two earned runs. After a five-run seventh inning, Boston took a 5-2 lead. Then, in the top of the eighth inning, the consest was delayed due to inclement weather.
This story will be updated as information surfaces.
Updated: The weather certainly played a role in Monday’s contest. Midway through the contest, fans at Comerica Park had to take cover due to lightning in the area.
Fans forced to move to cover, threat of lightning. Well that last play was lightning for our Tigers!! pic.twitter.com/HvY96mFROR
— Iffy The Dopester (@IffyTheDopester) May 4, 2026
The rain came fast and hard, but the action continued for a few innings afterward.
Eventually, with the crowd looking empty, the action started to get a bit sloppy. Tolle allowed the two earned runs on just one base hit. That’s in part due to two errors from the Red Sox behind him in the sixth inning. Detroit scored both of its runs in the sixth inning. Fortunately, the Red Sox followed suit with five runs of their own in the seventh inning in equally weird fashion. Red Sox outfielder Jarren Duran smashed a homer to left field that on the broadcast looked like it was going to be a pop-up to left field, then all of a sudden it was out.
Jarren strikes for the lead ⚡️ pic.twitter.com/B0jcRTj8j6
— Red Sox (@RedSox) May 5, 2026
Wilyer Abreu followed up with a base hit to push Boston’s fourth run of the inning across.
Wilyer drives in Masa! pic.twitter.com/4Bj2E8Z1a2
— Boston Sports (@bahstonspahts) May 5, 2026
Finally, Marcelo Mayer came through with a base hit to drive in the fifth run of the inning for Boston.
This Marcelo Mayer heater is the only reason I still watch the Red Sox pic.twitter.com/m6wO97NGiF
— MayerIsKing (@MayerIsKing) May 5, 2026
Then, in the eighth inning, the contest was put into a rain delay with the weather getting worse.
“The game is currently in a delay due to inclement weather in the area. We will continue to provide updates,” the Tigers announced on X.
At the time, Enmanuel De Jesus was on the mound for Detroit with Andruw Monasterio at the plate with one ball. As of writing, neither the Red Sox nor the Tigers has provided an estimated time for the resumption of the contest, although the grounds crew did start to move the tarp on the field. When the game does resume, Boston will be just six outs away from getting back in the win column. For Boston, it’s a game it certainly needs to win and currently is in a good position to do so. But, again, it’s not over.
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Milwaukee, WI
Milwaukee’s housing crisis leaves younger adults and families struggling to find stability
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis restaurant tests cheaper menu, smaller plates as diners cut back on spending
A Minneapolis restaurant in the North Loop is testing smaller plates and lower prices as it looks for a way to bring more diners back.
Salt and Flour started testing the new menu this week. The full menu, with prices capped at $15 and many items in the $10 range, goes into effect next week.
The summer menu includes fire-kissed pizza and grilled octopus. Owner Brian Ingram said the lower prices are meant to attract bigger crowds as consumers cut back due to rising unemployment and inflation.
“We need people to start dining out more often,” said Brian Ingram.
“As we did our market research and looked at what could make you dine out more often, we thought the $15-$20 mark, maybe that is the sweet spot,” said Ingram.
Ingram said he needs customers to start eating out again if he is going to stay open. He said the restaurant has 50 employees and empty tables.
“We’ve got 50 employees and an empty restaurant. How do you bring people back and make them feel comfortable about coming back?” said Ingram.
John Spry, a finance and economics expert at the University of St. Thomas’s Opus College of Business, said the move is one way restaurants can stand out in this economy. He said more businesses are being forced to get creative and aggressive, and that can benefit customers.
“This is a form of differentiation. This is a common business strategy,” said John Spry.
“You are getting the quality of their chef, but smaller plates at a smaller price point,” said Spry.
Ingram said other restaurants are also trying to figure out how to adjust to current conditions. He said Salt and Flour plans to keep the pricing strategy through the summer.
“We have to figure out how to exist in this place, and that goes for every restaurant out there. How do you live in this new world?” said Ingram.
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