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
Detroit Tigers seek split in home series vs Houston Astros on Sunday
Milwaukee, WI
After Another Unsuccessful Opportunity, Craig Yoho’s Time In Milwaukee Could Be Nearing Its End
After he dominated the minor leagues and reached the majors in his second full professional season last year, Craig Yoho’s career has not followed the path he or the Brewers hoped for. In 13 career appearances, most of them low-leverage outings, the 26-year-old has pitched to a 6.75 ERA and 5.22 SIERA.
It was not long ago that Pat Murphy spoke highly of Yoho after a dominant spring training showing in 2025. Within a few months, he became an afterthought on the 40-man roster. After a few rough outings last year, it became clear that the Brewers struggled to trust Yoho in pivotal situations. This season, they’ve rarely trusted him enough to roster him at all.
Control issues have been the primary culprit, in part because Yoho’s stuff moves so much. In Triple-A this year, his signature screwball-like changeup has averaged 2.2 inches of induced vertical drop and 17.8 inches of arm-side run. Even his fastball has averaged 16.6 inches of horizontal movement. In his big-league career, he’s walked 17.9% of batters faced.
Back in the big leagues by necessity for most of June, Yoho showed signs of progress this month amid his longest stint to date. In his first four outings, he was throwing enough strikes and missing barrels, posting a 1.73 xERA and 2.54 SIERA. According to Statcast, he induced whiffs on 36.6% of swings, and his average exit velocity allowed on balls in play was 83.5 mph. His walk rate was still 10%, but that will always be part of the picture for a reliever with so much movement. In each of his last two outings, Yoho threw more than half of his pitches in the strike zone.
On Monday in Cincinnati, Murphy said that performance played a role in the decision to option left-handed reliever Drew Rom, not Yoho, to make room for Brandon Woodruff’s return. Given that solid work and the recent unsteadiness throughout Milwaukee’s ‘B’ bullpen, one could argue Yoho had earned another shot at higher-leverage work.
He got that opportunity on Wednesday night, as Trevor Megill, Aaron Ashby, and a suspended Abner Uribe were unavailable. Yoho inherited a bases-loaded jam from Grant Anderson in the seventh inning, with JJ Bleday representing the tying run in a 6-2 game. With one pitch, a changeup in the zone, he induced an early swing from Bleday for a soft inning-ending groundout to first base. Yoho had answered the call in a big spot.
Things went haywire when he returned for the eighth. Edwin Arroyo waited back on an elevated changeup, dunking it to right field for a leadoff single. Elly De La Cruz worked him for a nine-pitch walk. Yoho nearly escaped with just one run allowed after coaxing routine groundouts from Dane Myers and Sal Stewart, but Spencer Steer blasted an 0-1 fastball over the heart of the plate for a three-run home run. With the score now 6-5, Yoho’s night – and his latest big-league stint – was over. The Brewers optioned him to Triple-A the following day.
As Yoho was being informed in the Cincinnati clubhouse that his next travel would be to Nashville instead of Milwaukee, Murphy gave a blunt postgame assessment of his outing, reiterating the shortcomings that have kept the Brewers from trusting him as an MLB-caliber reliever.
“They don’t know him yet, they haven’t faced him yet,” Murphy said of Yoho’s first inning. “Now he goes out the second inning, they’re expecting it. It’s a two-pitch guy, really, and he doesn’t throw strikes. You can’t do that … You can see he wasn’t comfortable in that situation.”
There were signs on Wednesday that some hitters could easily formulate a productive approach against Yoho. Arroyo waited back on his changeup. De La Cruz appeared intent on waiting him out and forcing him back into the strike zone; he watched five of those nine pitches, including two just outside the strike zone and a 3-1 changeup down the middle.
“They know the deal,” Murphy said. “I mean, the report’s out there. Fastball command, question mark. Changeup, very slow, sit on it, not a swing-and-miss [pitch]. So he’s got to make some adjustments with it, and I think he will. He’s a great kid.”
Most of the Brewers’ concerns are valid. Yoho’s movement is not only difficult to control, but it also makes pitch sequencing more challenging. His changeup is more than 15 mph slower than his fastball, and its extreme depth means he can’t tunnel any pitches within – or even near – the strike zone.
Assume that to get a chase on a changeup just below the zone, Yoho must make it look like his fastball out of the hand. The visual below from FanGraphs shows that, based on how his pitches move, he would have to throw that fastball well above the zone for the two pitches to start at the same sight line. In other words, his stuff moves so much that he can’t use an in-zone pitch to set up a chase on an out-of-zone pitch, or vice-versa.
Murphy made a questionable assertion that Yoho is purely a two-pitch pitcher, as he also features a curveball and cutter. However, the curveball is a more extreme inverse of his changeup in all the wrong ways: averaging 75.9 mph with 10 inches of induced vertical drop and 20 inches of glove-side break in Triple-A, it’s challenging for Yoho to land in the zone and is effectively impossible to tunnel. To even get that breaking ball to fit on a similar tunneling graphic from last year, you’d have to position his fastball at a right-handed batter’s helmet.
A pitcher with Yoho’s stuff will never defeat hitters with pitch tunneling and deception, though. Instead, it will work because the extreme movement will miss barrels, even if it’s not particularly deceptive. That’s where the Brewers may be selling him short.
So far, Yoho’s changeup has excelled at avoiding loud contact, even though hitters have likely known it’s coming and it has not always been located competitively. In his limited big-league work across two seasons, opponents have managed just a .247 xwOBA, 17.6% hard-hit rate, and 5.9% barrel rate against it with a 33.8% whiff rate. On Wednesday night, it induced two chases and two soft ground balls. The Reds did not whiff on it, but Murphy’s claim that it isn’t a swing-and-miss pitch is, frankly, incorrect.
Such a pitch does not need to be disguised as a fastball to be effective. Yoho just needs to throw it in and around the zone below the belt. When hitters start timing it up, a timely in-zone fastball can produce a take or a late swing. So far, he has done neither consistently. Yoho is partially responsible for his current situation because he sprayed the ball too much in his early chances last summer.
At the same time, it’s becoming clear that a poor fit between player and team is also part of the issue. Whenever Chris Hook talks about a particular pitch, he instinctively states whether it “tracks” in the strike zone like it’s a checklist item. To the Brewers, many big shapes pose tunneling problems and do not maximize in-zone swings, so they often find throwing more fastball variants and shorter sliders to be more useful than better “stuff” pitches. There are some exceptions, like Grant Anderson’s sweeper, but Yoho’s stuff is well beyond the mold.
Perhaps the Brewers are right about him, or perhaps it’s simply a poor fit. At this point, a change of scenery looks like the best way to find out. The club has a history of trading former prospects who have been leapfrogged on the 40-man roster for moderate upgrades at the trade deadline. In 2018, they flipped Brett Phillips in a two-player package for Mike Moustakas. In 2019, it was Mauricio Dubon for Drew Pomeranz. More recently, they traded Joey Wiemer for Frankie Montas in 2024.
With the deadline five weeks away, Yoho could be next. A fresh start – and, just as importantly, a setting where he’ll get a longer leash to become as competitive as possible with his arsenal – may be exactly what he needs. The Brewers, meanwhile, could fill his roster spot with a more consistent contributor.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis shooting leaves 1 injured near Penn Avenue
A shooting in north Minneapolis injured a man near Penn Avenue.
According to the Minneapolis Police Department, officers responded to a shooting near the 700th block of Penn Avenue North, where they found a man with a gunshot wound.
Authorities said preliminary information shows that the man was outside when the shooting happened, possibly coming from a vehicle. A nearby hospital treated the man for non-life-threatening injuries.
Police are still investigating, with a forensic team collecting evidence from the scene. Officers said no arrests have been made.
This is a developing story; check back for updates.
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