Minneapolis, MN
Readers Write: Promoting Minnesota, end-of-life options, Gaza resolution
Opinion editor’s note: Star Tribune Opinion publishes letters from readers online and in print each day. To contribute, click here.
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Some important considerations are missing from Explore Minnesota’s plan to attract more travelers and residents to our state, because there are larger issues in play (“State will sell itself to U.S. audience,” Jan. 31). Businesses are short employees for now, but does that justify a full-court press at the national level? How many more workers are desired? How many new residents?
These questions matter because another dynamic is gaining more impact every day: the flood of immigrants to countries with good situations like the United States. The southern states have borne the brunt of a torrent that lately has neared 10,000 migrants every day. While governors in those states have played politics by sending packed buses to northern cities with no warning, they have a point: Why shouldn’t the pain be shared nationally?
Well, it’s already happening, right here. Migrants who moved on from New York City chose Minnesota as their fifth-most-popular destination. This trend is also growing from the movement of longtime residents of other states, particularly the hot ones: The flip side of our warmer, more hospitable winter is scorching summer in places like Phoenix, Miami and Houston. A recent Forbes survey found that 64% of Americans cited climate change or better weather as a motivation to move in the next year.
What to do? Building walls doesn’t work in the long run: Desperate people will find ways around any obstacle. Nor should we seek to entirely squelch the stream of newcomers, who largely arrive motivated to work and who bring welcome additions to the variety of our population. Another idea comes from an unusual source: the far-right prime minister of Italy, who wants to improve conditions in African nations in order to stem the deluge of migrants reaching Italian shores. The execution of her plan has started out bumpy, but the concept is one the U.S. could apply to its own dilemma: If Central and South Americans had higher wages, less violence from the drug trade and a reliable climate for growing crops, they would be more likely to stay in their homes. The U.S. has had a hand in many of the problems in our neighboring nations, which also means that we have leverage for improving the lives of people there.
Coming back around to our tourist agency: Let’s not get carried away with telling the world how fabulous it is here. The Legislature gave Explore Minnesota $25 million to do just that. But other factors will do much of the agency’s work for it, and some of that money might be better spent on other things, such as training programs for specific state industries. In any case, let’s keep in mind that if we turn on the charm too high, we might soon need a new program: Hide Minnesota.
Jeff Naylor, Minneapolis
END-OF-LIFE OPTIONS
Minnesota Medical Association insists on safeguards
Although the legislative session is more than a week away, the topic of physician aid-in-dying is already a topic of legislative hearings and public testimony. This is a serious issue that demands robust discussion and deliberation.
The patient-physician relationship is a sacred trust that must be protected through all stages of life, including the dying process. The Minnesota Medical Association (MMA), the state’s oldest and largest professional association of Minnesota physicians and physicians-in-training, acknowledges that principled, ethical individuals hold a broad range of positions on this issue. For physicians, this is a topic that results in competing ethical obligations: the obligation to “first do no harm” and the obligations to relieve pain and suffering and respect the dignity and autonomy of dying patients.
The MMA’s position has been incorrectly characterized in media reports as “neutral.” In fact, our position is more nuanced than that. Minnesota’s largest physician advocacy group will oppose any aid-in-dying legislation that does not adequately safeguard the interests of patients and physicians. Such safeguards must include the following:
• The legislation must not compel physicians or patients to participate in aid-in-dying against their will.
• It must require patient self-administration.
• It must not permit patients lacking decisionmaking capacity to utilize aid-in-dying.
• It must require mental health referral of patients with a suspected psychological or psychiatric condition.
• It must provide sufficient legal protection for physicians who choose to participate.
The current Minnesota bill, authored by Rep. Mike Freiberg and Sen. Kelly Morrison, M.D., includes those key safeguards. Should the legislation advance this year, the MMA will continue to ensure that such safeguards remain in place.
Dr. Laurel Ries, Falcon Heights
The writer is a family physician and president of the Minnesota Medical Association.
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I attended the House Health and Finance Policy Committee hearing on the proposed end-of-life legislation. Here are some of the things I saw or heard and how that landed with me.
First off there were no Republican members in attendance. This led me to speculate that they were either trying to see that there was no quorum, or they had other more pressing people’s business.
To me the testimony broke down into four major themes. One was on religious grounds. This testimony basically said my religious views do not align with this proposed bill and my religious views are more important than yours. I also heard from physicians that this bill would change the physician-patient relationship. That could be seen as good news in that patients would be fully informed when they make their own decisions about their own life. Third, I heard concerns about safeguards. The safeguards in this legislation have been tested in multiple states for years and have been found to meet the needs of the public. Finally, I heard a preponderance of stories about loved family members in agony and pain at the end of life wanting to be released from their suffering. This proposed legislation would give such individuals a way to end their suffering.
I came away from the hearing strongly believing this proposed legislation is a very good piece of family legislation that is clearly pro-choice, letting every person make their own end-of-life decisions, not letting others dictate how they will die.
Douglas Bruce, Bloomington
GAZA RESOLUTION
The double standard
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey did the right thing in vetoing the one-sided “cease-fire” resolution passed by the Minneapolis City Council on Jan. 25. The resolution was poorly conceived and presented a narrow viewpoint that will only encourage antisemitic response.
Apparently, it’s much easier for some to focus their anger exclusively on Israel by creating a false narrative claiming that Israel is a colonial power, after living on the land for over 3,000 years. Stating that Israel is an “occupying power” conveniently ignores the fact that any “occupation” is a result of being directly attacked (1967, 1973). Once again, on Oct. 7, Israel was brutally attacked, savagely and without provocation.
Where is the righteous outrage for the 2 million unprovoked deaths in Syria at the hands of Bashar al-Assad with the help of Vladimir Putin? What about the thousands of deaths in Ukraine, China and Myanmar, to name only a few?
I ask all Americans how the U.S., or any other nation, would respond to a direct, face-to-face attack of rape, murder, torture, beheadings, burning and kidnapping. And this barbarism was proudly videotaped in real time by the perpetrators.
Ostensibly, there seems to be a double standard for judging Israel vs. the other nations of the world.
To all Minneapolis City Council members who plan to override Frey’s veto, I have one request: Before you vote, google and read “Hamas Charter 1988.”
Ned Kantar, Minneapolis
Minneapolis, MN
Minnesota serves as the flagship for nationwide ‘No Kings’ protests against Trump
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Organizers of Saturday’s “No Kings” rallies across the country are predicting that the protests against the actions of President Donald Trump and his administration could add up to one of the largest demonstrations in U.S. history, with Minnesota taking center stage.
Organizers say more than 3,100 events have been registered in all 50 states, with more than 9 million people expected to participate.
And they’ve designated the rally at the Minnesota Capitol in St. Paul as the national flagship event, in recognition of how the state where federal agents fatally shot two people who were monitoring Trump’s immigration crackdown became an epicenter of resistance.
Headlining that observance will be Bruce Springsteen, performing “Streets of Minneapolis,” which he wrote in response to the deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, and in tribute to the thousands of Minnesotans who took to the streets over the winter. Springsteen’s Land of Hope & Dreams American Tour, which has a “No Kings” theme, kicks off Tuesday in Minneapolis.
Minnesota organizers have told state officials they expect 100,000 people could converge on the Capitol grounds, where last June’s event drew an estimated 80,000 people.
The St. Paul rally will also feature singer Joan Baez, actor Jane Fonda,Sen. Bernie Sanders and a long list of other activists, labor leaders and elected officials.
The White House dismissed the nationwide protests as the product of “leftist funding networks” with little real public support.
“The only people who care about these Trump Derangement Therapy Sessions are the reporters who are paid to cover them,” White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in a statement.
Rallies are also planned in more than a dozen other countries, from Europe to Latin America to Australia, Ezra Levin, a co-executive director of Indivisible, a group spearheading the events, said in an interview. Countries with constitutional monarchies call the protests “No Tyrants,” he said.
For those unable to attend in person, another activist group, Stand Up For Science, is hosting a “virtual and accessible” event online.
National organizers told reporters in an online news conference Thursday that they expect Saturday’s protests to be larger than the first two rounds of No Kings rallies, which they estimate drew more than 5 million people in June and more than 7 million in October.
“This administration’s actions are angering not just Democratic voters or folks in big blue city centers – they are crossing a line for people in red and rural areas, in the suburbs, all over the country,” said Leah Greenberg, the other co-executive director of Indivisible. “The defining story of this Saturday’s mobilization is not just how many people are protesting, but where they are protesting,”
Two-thirds of the RSVPs have come from outside of major urban centers, Greenberg said, listing registration surges in conservative-leaning states like Idaho, Wyoming, Montana, Utah, South Dakota and Louisiana, as well in competitive suburban areas of Pennsylvania, Georgia and Arizona.
“Millions of us are rising up from all walks of life, from rural communities to big cities at No Kings,” said Katie Bethell, executive director of MoveOn, another major organizer. “And as we do so, we will send the loudest, clearest message yet that this country does not belong to kings, dictators, tyrants. It belongs to us.”
Copyright © 2026 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
Minneapolis, MN
Minnesotans mobilize for third and potentially biggest No Kings Day
On a freezing February evening last year, around a dozen people gathered on an interstate overpass in Minneapolis and hoisted a sign in view of oncoming traffic.
The sign — letters screwed to long, thin pieces of lumber — read: “STOP THE COUP.”
A week later, the group gathered again, though they had doubled in number. The week after that, they doubled again.
Over a year later, around 40 neighbors and up to 100 on busy nights now squeeze onto the overpass Thursday evenings with a new message for the rush-hour traffic.
They call themselves Democracy Bridge Minneapolis, and have protested almost every week since President Donald Trump’s second inauguration.
And in the lead-up to the third nationwide No Kings protests tomorrow, Democracy Bridge catalyzed a wave of demonstrations like their own spanning the 1,568-mile length of Interstate 35.
From Duluth, Minn., to San Antonio, 47 different bridge protests cut through the midline of the country Thursday with the same message: “YES DEMOCRACY NO KINGS.”
Grassroots organizations 50501 Kansas City, Indivisible Twin Cities and The Visibility Brigade also took the lead on mobilizing this week.
Organizers said they hope their efforts inspired onlookers to participate in what’s projected to be the largest turnout for a single-day protest in United States history.
“We have to help us and we have to start by letting our neighbors know what the hell is going on and why they should care,” Sarah Linnes-Robinson, a founding member of the group, said.
While millions of Americans will take to the streets in cities across the country, as many as 100,000 people could attend the No Kings Day flagship rally in Minnesota’s capital, St. Paul.
The flagship rally will feature progressive leaders Gov. Tim Walz and U.S. Sen Bernie Sanders, as well as legend Bruce Springsteen, who will headline with his “Streets of Minneapolis.”
“ICE OUT OF MN:” The Twin Cities fight back
Past the stardom, the rallies across the Twin Cities may provide catharsis for residents whose lives over the past several months have been upended by Trump’s winter immigration enforcement operation.
Dubbed “Operation Metro Surge,” Trump’s massive deployment of immigration officials in Minnesota resulted in mass unlawful detentions, repeated violent assaults against peaceful protesters, and ultimately, the killings of two U.S. citizens, who were both shot by federal officers.
Democracy Bridge protesters channeled their outrage over Renee Good’s and Alex Pretti’s killings through their weekly messages.
“DEFUND ICE” and “ICE OUT OF MN” lit up the bridge on Jan. 29, 2026.
Similarly, “HANDS OFF ELECTIONS” appeared following Trump’s threat to “take over voting” this February, as well as signs protesting the escalation of the Iran war.
Other messages, all of which can be viewed on the organization’s website archive, urged for the release of the Epstein files, opposed a war with Venezuela and admonished Trump’s proposed 2027 budget for its potential impact on Minnesotans’ healthcare.
Most messages are succinct and sometimes abbreviated so while organizers said they would like it, words like “authoritarianism” don’t make the cut.
Some have backgrounds in community organizing, while other bridge-goers are architects and retired researchers. Some come straight from pickleball practice and others from church.
“All are welcome so you can have a Ukrainian flag, you can have a Palestinian flag, a right side up flag, an upside down flag I mean come as you are,” Rosemary Dolata, a Minneapolis resident and bridge protest organizer, said.
Mary Jane Levine has lived in Minneapolis since 2000 and works in a garden store. But before that, she was a federal law enforcement officer. It’s what brought her to the bridge.
“I’m horrified by what was done to the civil service and even more horrified to see what my former federal law enforcement officers are doing to our citizens,” Levine said.
Do protests work? What the data and the locals say
With thousands of other local protests planned across the U.S, this follows a trend of increasing decentralization within civic action.
That’s according to data from American University researcher Dana Fisher, who has been conducting surveys of widespread protests since the Women’s March in 2017.
Fisher’s data shows that nationwide protests in recent years have been largely composed of white, highly educated, and primarily older women. While multiple factors are at play, Fisher noted that a lack of diversity is not always reflective of a lack of interest.
As pointed out by organizers as well, many people of color don’t feel safe showing up to a large crowd and making their presence known amid Trump’s deployment of federal agents. And for young people, some are just burned out.
“They’ve had a really hard go of being adults,” Fisher said. “And the country has been in precarious moments of democracy basically consistently.”
In addition to her vast demographic research, Fisher said she’s worried about the national focus on high turnout without a solid plan for what’s next after No Kings Day.
While excited about the potential record turnout this weekend, bridge regulars underscored how their smaller efforts have engendered meaningful local impact in Minneapolis.
Everyone who protests has their first one, and Linnes-Robinson said the project has been a way to meet the moment in a time when many in Minneapolis “are just ready to say yes.”
Fisher added that despite her doubts or larger organizational aims, these local actions remain important for “collective mourning” and fostering “collective identity formation.”
Demonstrators came together overwhelmingly on the top two issues of “Trump” and “Immigration” at the last No Kings Day, according to Fisher’s data.
“While I’m critical of the way the organizers keep banging on the number, I also just want to recognize that they are very much doing other work to get people to build power and capacity in their communities,” Fisher said.
Sarah Strzok, another founding member of the group, described the organizing process as a true grassroots effort. Each Monday, members text in their Signal group to brainstorm and settle on a message for the signs. Neighbors then build the signs from their “letter library” with wooden sticks and sign holders.
Because they are not permitted to fasten the signs to the bridge itself, participants get creative with pieces of bamboo and pool noodles to hold up the signs.
Apart from sign logistics, unforgiving Minnesota weather has been another consideration for bridge regulars. While some still made it outside in freezing temperatures, the group organized an indoor project in the coldest months where others could write letters and assemble whistle kits.
Once daylight savings hit, the group moved their demonstration an hour earlier and community members donated reflective tape to ensure signage visibility and safety.
Dolata lives in South Minneapolis and said protesting at the bridge has been a way to not just advocate for change but connect with the community she’s lived in for more than 25 years.
“It’s just been neighbors reaching out to neighbors,” Dolata said.
This “reaching out” has transcended the bridge demonstrations. This winter, Rebecca Shield told Democracy Docket that some in the group found out that families at local schools were facing food insecurity.
It wasn’t long before the crew decided to chip in. What began as boxes of food for 20 families in need has surged to about 120, Shield said. And bridge friends are pitching in to cover rent for some of the families, too.
The solidarity and community-building that Fisher said No Kings protests have the potential to engender have manifested at the bridge – from mutual aid to merely flashing a smile to a fellow protester in the grocery store.
“It [the bridge] was just another thread that knit us all together,” Strzok said.
Minneapolis, MN
Man dead, 2 others hurt in overnight shooting in Minneapolis
Police say two people were hurt and one other man died.
A homicide investigation is underway in Minneapolis after a shooting early Friday morning killed one man and hurt two others.
Minneapolis police were called to the area of East Franklin Avenue and Chicago Avenue at around 12:30 a.m.
5 EYEWITNESS NEWS cameras caught more than 65 evidence markers scattered across the ground in the area and shattered glass at a bus shelter. Some nearby businesses also appeared to have some damage.
Minneapolis police are still working to determine what led up to the shooting and who was involved but investigators say first responders found the three men suffering from gunshot wounds.
One injured man is in his 40s, the other in his 50s, police say. Both were taken to a hospital by ambulance.
The third man died at the scene. His name and age haven’t yet been publicly released.
Police say early information suggests the men were on a sidewalk when at least one person opened fire, then fled in a vehicle.
So far, no arrests have been made.
Anyone with information about what happened is asked to call police at 612-673-5845 to leave a voicemail or email policetips@minneapolismn.gov.
“This is a tragic and deeply disturbing act of violence that has taken a life, and left others seriously injured,” MPD Chief Brian O’Hara said. “This kind of violence is unacceptable, and we are committed to identifying those responsible and holding them accountable.”
Minneapolis police investigating alleyway shooting near East Franklin Avenue
It comes less than 30 hours after another serious shooting along East Franklin Avenue, just a half-mile west of Friday’s scene. That incident left a man hospitalized with a potentially life-threatening gunshot wound. No arrests have been announced in that case either.
5 EYEWITNESS NEWS is still working to learn more about this shooting. Stay with KSTP-TV for the latest updates on air and on the KSTP app.
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