Minnesota
Minnesota Democrats gather for state convention
The Minnesota DFL Social gathering holds its state conference in Rochester this weekend. Not like Republicans final week, there are not any contested endorsements. The celebration will endorse incumbents for all of Minnesota’s statewide places of work, however these incumbents face stiff challenges in a yr when the president’s approval ranking is low, and inflation is excessive.
Midterm elections are traditionally tough for the celebration that controls the White Home, however DFL Social gathering Chair Ken Martin contends his celebration is in higher form than the opposition.
“Republicans would moderately be in our place than theirs. I can let you know that,” Martin mentioned, including that considerations are rising amongst voters about the place Republicans wish to take the nation.
“Persons are actually beginning to see the Republican Social gathering for who they’re,” Martin mentioned. “And they’re a bunch of right-wing nuts who’re marching us in the direction of fascism.”
College of Minnesota political science professor Kathryn Pearson mentioned Democrats have loads of headwinds to battle, saying their challenges go effectively past inflation and considerations about fuel costs.
“President Biden is unpopular, and in order that helps Republicans,” Pearson mentioned. “It is not simply congressional Democrats that endure when their celebration’s president is unpopular, it is also state legislators and governors of that very same celebration.”
Minnesota Republicans have loads of criticism to lay on DFL Gov. Tim Walz. They are saying he botched the response to rioting and looting in Minneapolis following the police homicide of George Floyd. And so they contend Walz overreacted to the COVID-19 pandemic by imposing restrictions on companies and faculties that have been pointless.
Final weekend Republicans endorsed Scott Jensen for governor. The doctor and former state Senator fired up Republican delegates over the prospect of stripping Democrats of the governor’s workplace for the primary time in 12 years.
For his half, Walz is portray Jensen as an all-or-nothing extremist unwilling to compromise.
“Compromise is a advantage, not a vice,” Walz mentioned this week. “It turns into very tough when you do not simply disagree with individuals, you are threatening to jail them, you are threatening to criminalize them. The phrases you converse and the actions you are taking cannot be misaligned. And I believe that is a very essential piece of this, as a result of it’s extremely onerous to control when you burn the home down.”
Jensen has repeatedly instructed that DFL Secretary of State Steve Simon must be jailed for his function in easing absentee balloting guidelines for the 2020 election. Simon has known as Jensen’s statements “weird and irresponsible.”
Walz goes into his celebration’s conference effectively conscious of the challenges he and different Democrats face this fall. For greater than two years Walz has been defending his pandemic response.
“My job was to make use of this workplace and the authority that was vested in me and the perfect well being care steering to try to put out insurance policies that may save lives,” Walz mentioned in December of 2020 defending his masks mandate. “This one has been a tough one.”
Whereas nationwide developments favor Republicans, Pearson mentioned Minnesota Democrats have benefits too, together with incumbency and fundraising.
The most recent state and federal marketing campaign stories present the DFL sitting on practically $3 million {dollars} in money. The Republican Social gathering’s newest stories present their money readily available stood at lower than $200,000.
And the current information that the Supreme Court docket is poised to overturn Roe v. Wade which might finish the nationwide proper to abortion will seemingly value Republicans in November, Pearson mentioned.
“Nationally and in Minnesota majorities, and sizable majorities, favor sustaining Roe v. Wade,” Pearson mentioned. “And in order that whereas the Supreme Court docket determination could assist the Republican base, it actually is not going to assist Republicans with unbiased voters who favor Roe v Wade remaining intact.”
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Minnesota
Preds Conclude 2024 With Loss in Minnesota | Nashville Predators
The Nashville Predators closed out 2024 with a 5-3 loss to the Minnesota Wild on New Year’s Eve at Xcel Energy Center. The result sees the Preds go winless in their back-to-back set through Winnipeg and Minnesota with three contests to go on their five-game trip.
Colton Sissons, Jonathan Marchessault and Ryan O’Reilly scored for Nashville, and the Preds had 46 shots on goal, but Minnesota scored three times on the power play to help them to a victory.
“Tough one,” Preds Head Coach Andrew Brunette said. “I thought we played more than well enough, deserved to win. I thought we had the ice tilted most of the game, gave up three power play goals, [but we were] in the box way too much, especially on a night when the kill wasn’t as good as it has been.”
“I think we wasted another good effort with just parading to the penalty box,” Sissons said. “Again, we’re putting the kill under duress, not to say it’s just the volume that’s the issue. We’re making some mistakes out there too, which we’ve got to get back to being dialed in, but it’s just too much – our 5-on-5 game, it’s been pretty solid for a couple weeks – and we’re just killing ourselves. It’s frustrating.”
Marco Rossi gave Minnesota a 1-0 lead less than halfway through the opening period, but the Preds came back to tally two of their own. First, Sissons tipped home a Brady Skjei point shot, and then Steven Stamkos capitalized on a Wild turnover and fed Marchessault in front to beat Filip Gustavsson to give Nashville a 2-1 advantage.
In the middle frame, Minnesota regained the lead on goals from Mats Zuccarello and Jonas Brodin before O’Reilly tied things at three when he roofed a rebound in tight. But before the period was out, the Wild got their second power-play goal of the night – this time from Declan Chisholm – to take a 4-3 lead into the room after 40 minutes.
The Preds gutted things out in the third period on the second half of a back-to-back – and down to 11 forwards and five defensemen with Zach L’Heureux having been ejected with a match penalty for slew-footing and Jeremy Lauzon leaving with a lower-body injury – but Minnesota got one more on the power play before the night was out as 2024 came to a close.
“Certain nights, the goaltending, the penalty killing, taking too many penalties, lose momentum; those things, that’s been the story of the year,” Brunette said. “It’s been, you plug one hole, it’s another hole. Give a lot of credit to the group, they’re still fighting. I thought they showed a lot of resolve today. Never gave in, never gave up, and when we get through this, we’ll be better for it. We just have to believe that and keep putting the work in.”
Notes:
Preds defenseman Adam Wilsby did not play on Tuesday in Minnesota and is day-to-day with an upper-body injury. Additionally, defenseman Jeremy Lauzon left Tuesday’s game with a lower-body injury and did not return.
Predators forward Zach L’Heureux was given a match penalty for slew-footing in the second period, an automatic ejection from the game.
Per NHL Public Relations, Jonathan Marchessault’s goal was the 244th of his career, the second most among undrafted players since he entered the League in 2012-13 behind Artemi Panarin (281).
The Predators will now head back to western Canada to start 2025 with a back-to-back set in Vancouver and Calgary on Friday and Saturday. They’ll then head back to Winnipeg to close out the trip before returning home next weekend.
Minnesota
Balance of power uncertain as Minnesota Legislature readies for 2025 session following death of lawmaker, court challenge
ST. PAUL, Minn. — The balance of power is uncertain in the Minnesota Legislature following the death of a state senator and a court challenge for a House seat, which will prompt special elections two weeks after session begins.
Lawmakers will return for the 2025 session on Jan. 14, but the special election for two legislative seats will happen on Jan. 28.
Tuesday is the deadline for candidates to file in Senate District 60, vacated by former DFL Senate Majority Leader Kari Dziedzic who died Friday after a battle with cancer, and House District 40B covering Roseville and Shoreview.
In the latter, a judge barred the winner, DFL candidate Curtis Johnson, from taking the oath of office following a court challenge in which the Republican candidate argued Johnson did not live in the district before the election, which is required by law in order to serve. The judge agreed and Johnson said he wouldn’t appeal the decision and stepped aside.
This means the balance of power is in flux pending the outcome of those two races. The Senate vacancy means that the chamber is tied 33 to 33, and in the House, the chamber was already headed for a tie of 67 to 67 before the outcome of the election contest in House District 40B. House Republicans now have a one-seat majority — at least temporarily.
There’s a dispute among both parties about what that power really means, pending the results of the special election. GOP Leader Lisa Demuth said the move gives Republicans an organizational majority to elect a speaker and make other decisions about how the chamber operates, while Democrats maintain Republicans are short a key vote to take any action until someone fills that seat.
There is another court challenge that could further complicate the balance of power: A judge will soon decide the outcome of an election contest for House District 54A in Shakopee, where DFL incumbent Rep. Brad Tabke beat GOP challenger Aaron Paul by 14 votes.
Republicans are seeking a new election because of missing ballots at the center of the case. If a judge agrees, there could be yet another special election in the new year.
This story will be updated.
Minnesota
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