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Minnesota Senate Democrats advance assault weapons ban; path to final passage remains rocky

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Minnesota Senate Democrats advance assault weapons ban; path to final passage remains rocky


ST. PAUL — Asked how he felt after testifying in the Minnesota Senate Judiciary Committee, Mike Moyski said, “At least in this committee hearing, the opposing group was able to make eye contact with us.”

Moyski’s daughter, 10-year-old Harper Moyski, was killed in the

Annunciation Catholic Church shooting on Aug. 27.

Another child, 8-year-old Fletcher Merkel, was also killed, and 28 others were injured in the Minneapolis shooting.

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Mike Moyski testified Friday, March 13, in support of an assault weapons and high-capacity magazines ban. He and Harper’s mother, Jackie Flavin, also

testified two weeks ago

in a House committee, where the bill stalled.

“I do know at the heart of it, nobody in those rooms wants kids to die, so it’s just landing on what makes the most sense and what will get us there the fastest,” Moyski said Friday.

Despite no movement from Republicans on an assault weapons ban Friday, Moyski said he’s feeling “very much still hopeful,” and intends to keep showing up at the Capitol.

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“This is the long game, and we’re here for it,” he said.

Mike Moyski and Jackie Flavin testify in favor of an assault weapons ban at the Capitol in St. Paul on Friday, March 13, 2026.

Mary Murphy / Forum News Service

The Minnesota Senate Judiciary and Public Safety Committee heard a slate of 17 gun violence prevention bills on Friday. With a DFL majority, several advanced out of committee, including the assault weapons ban.

Sen. Michael Holmstrom, R-Buffalo, said he brought the assault weapons ban bill into a sporting goods store on Thursday, and wasn’t able to find any hunting rifle that wouldn’t be banned under the bill. But he said that’s not why he’s against it.

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“Over the last 100 years, we’ve seen 250-plus million people killed by their own nations,” Holmstrom said. “And the Second Amendment is created specifically to defend our right against a tyrannical government that looks to strip away our freedom. That is the reason that I defend these bills — it is not because I like hunting. That is just an ancillary benefit.”

Sen. Michael Holmstrom
Sen. Michael Holmstrom, R-Buffalo, discusses opposition to gun control bills at the Capitol in St. Paul on Friday, March 13, 2026.

Mary Murphy / Forum News Service

Sen. Zaynab Mohamed, DFL-Minneapolis, who authors the ban and represents the district that covers Annunciation, responded to Holmstrom’s argument with, “Looking forward to you speaking about the occupation in our state.”

Sen. Judy Seeberger, DFL-Afton, who has previously been opposed to an assault weapons ban, was a “yes” vote on Friday, though she shared Holmstrom’s concerns about the scope of the bill.

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“I am also concerned that this issue — which is at its heart a public safety issue — is being turned into a partisan issue by both parties,” Seeberger said.

While the Senate DFL can advance gun control bills with their one-seat majority, the bills’ prospects in the tied House aren’t promising.

Asked Thursday night if he sees any movement from his House Republican colleagues, House DFL Leader Zack Stephenson, of Coon Rapids, said he doesn’t believe anything has changed.

“I wish I could tell you that it was leading towards Republican support,” he said. “Leader [Harry] Niska said in a press conference many months ago that there wasn’t a single Republican vote for meaningful gun violence prevention measures, and that he wouldn’t allow a bill come to the floor, and I don’t believe that has changed.”

ZackStephenson
House DFL Leaders Zack Stephenson of Coon Rapids and Jamie Long of Minneapolis answer questions from reporters at the Capitol in St. Paul on Thursday, March 12, 2026.

Mary Murphy / Forum News Service

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One Republican gun bill that passed Friday was

SF3825,

from Sen. Warren Limmer, R-Maple Grove, amending existing safe storage negligence law.

Current law prohibits someone from failing to properly store a loaded firearm away from a child; Limmer’s bill would also require safe storage from a “person prohibited from possessing firearms,” not just a child. Limmer listed some examples of who the change could apply to: felons, domestic violence offenders or individuals deemed mentally unstable.

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The committee also passed several bipartisan gun violence prevention bills not related to gun control — such as funding studies or mental health services.

One of those,

SF3648

from Rich Draheim, R-Madison Lake, regarding school safety specialists funding, passed unanimously. The school safety initiative has seen bipartisan support in the Senate and House — though lawmakers are

working with a tight budget this session.

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JackieFlavin
Jackie Flavin (third from left), mother of Harper Moyski, listens to debate on gun control at the Capitol in St. Paul on Friday,

Mary Murphy / Forum News Service

Mary Murphy

Mary Murphy joined Forum Communications in October 2024 as the Minnesota State Correspondent. She can be reached by email at mmurphy@forumcomm.com.





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Minnesota weather: Rainy mix Saturday, 40s for Sunday

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Minnesota weather: Rainy mix Saturday, 40s for Sunday


It’ll be a cold and gusty Saturday with rain and snow mixing throughout the day. 

Saturday forecast

Local perspective:

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Winds will slowly pick up out of the west and northwest today. 

The heavier snow in northern Minnesota will start to taper off later in the day, but as this system swings eastward, the rest of the state will have a chance of rain/mix and passing snow showers. 

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Temperatures stay cold with wind chills in the upper 20s to lower 30s today.

Extended forecast

What’s next:

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Sunday will be a little below average with 40 expected by the afternoon. 

A few passing showers or sprinkles will be possible the second half of Sunday, but not adding up to much. 

Monday shapes up to stay cold with a slightly milder outlook toward the second half of the work week.

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The Source: This story uses information from the FOX 9 weather forecast. 

WeatherWeather Forecast



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Byron Buxton Immediately Leaves Twins’ Home Opener After Getting Hit By Pitch

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Byron Buxton Immediately Leaves Twins’ Home Opener After Getting Hit By Pitch


Twins star Byron Buxton immediately left Friday’s home opener after getting hit on the arm and then the ribs by a pitch in the bottom of the seventh inning.

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Buxton tried to shake it off for a few seconds before quickly calling for a trainer, walking into the bullpen and then the clubhouse. He was replaced by James Outman as a pinch runner.

It was quickly announced that x-rays were negative, and Buxton suffered what the team called a right forearm contusion. It looked like it could’ve been much worse, based on initial reaction. The Twins seemingly avoided disaster with their best player’s health in their first home game of the season.

This is a developing story.

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Minnesota housing reform proponents remain hopeful for movement

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Minnesota housing reform proponents remain hopeful for movement


ST. PAUL — A bipartisan group of Minnesota lawmakers working on housing reform remains motivated and hopeful despite hitting another roadblock this session.

One of the major bills in the overall housing reform effort, the “Starter Home Act,” stalled in committee on March 23, just before a key March 27 deadline that says committees must advance bills in their house of origin. The bill,

HF3895/SF4123

, hits on several reforms, including limiting the zoning authority of local governments, incentivizing more multifamily housing, and streamlining administrative reviews.

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Although the bill didn’t meet that deadline, there is a chance a version or pieces of the bill will show up later in the session. Last session, smaller pieces of the housing reform, such as limiting aesthetic mandates, traveled solo and further than the bigger zoning reform bills.

Proponents of the reforms, including authors of the Starter Home Act in the Senate and House Rep. Spencer Igo, R-Wabana Township, and Sen. Jordan Rasmusson, R-Fergus Falls, remained hopeful that something could be done this session.

“I am still highly confident,” Igo said in an interview Wednesday, April 1. “Anything worth doing is never easy, and change is really hard, but the fact that we all know … whether you support land use and zoning reform or you’re against it … everything we’ve done in Minnesota in the past 10, 15 years hasn’t moved the needle yet, and it’s on us as legislators and as a state to start making changes that could make a difference, because we can’t afford to wait any longer.”

Rasmusson said that regardless of outcomes this session, “this issue isn’t going away.”

“A lot of Minnesotans, especially younger Minnesotans, are concerned about their ability to afford a home, and that’s why we’re working to make starter homes legal again here in Minnesota by reducing government overreach that’s preventing these types of homes from being built,” he said.

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Rep. Jordan Rasmusson, R-Fergus Falls

Contributed

It’s the

third push at the Legislature

for the housing reform; its first official appearance was at the end of the 2024 session. Igo said there have been roughly 30 different versions of the bill as a result of weekly meetings with stakeholders and opponents.

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Daniel Lightfoot, senior intergovernmental relations representative at League of Minnesota Cities, said that while cities are always opposed to local preemption, the League of Minnesota Cities has taken a more neutral stance this session as a result of some changes made in the interim to accommodate flexibility for cities.

“Previous iterations of this bill were much more sweeping, and they applied statewide, forced density everywhere, without accounting for infrastructure and things like that, and because cities stayed engaged, the current bill certainly is more targeted … and ultimately, better reflects how cities actually operate,” he said.

One of those changes is a “menu-based option,” Igo said, where, based on population, cities can pick changes that work for them to meet the new land use and zoning requirements.

The Starter Home Act is a policy bill, meaning it comes without state funding — the Legislature also isn’t in a budget-building session — but cities note that the reforms could cost them instead.

Igo said it’s “probably true” that the reforms could cost cities, but pointed to potential long-term returns, such as community growth or a larger tax base, should affordable housing become available.

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“I think it’s really easy to look short-sighted and freak out about why that would hurt in the early phases, but think about what’s going to happen in the long run,” he said.

Lightfoot argues that it remains to be seen whether these reforms would actually result in more affordable housing. During the hearing on March 23, Rep. Patty Acomb, DFL-Minnetonka, said she’s concerned the Starter Home Act would not address affordable housing, but only housing supply.

“There is nothing in here that is going to ensure affordable units are built,” she said. “I encourage that we allow our communities who have elected officials who represent and are accountable to our constituents be allowed to continue to do the good work cities are doing.”

Opponents have also argued that the bill is another overreach on local government. But lawmakers in support are pushing back on that. Rasmusson said there are several occasions where it might be better for the state to step in, and pointed to how local units of government used to have their own building codes before the state stepped in.

“It created a lot of confusion for builders and for the marketplace. We don’t allow local units of government to have their own gun laws, right? They’re preempted on that,” he said.

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Rep. Nathan Coulter, DFL-Bloomington, said during the March 23 hearing for the bill that “government overreach is very much a thing on the local level.”

“It is absolutely possible for local governments to overreach, and I have seen it happen time and time again,” he said. “And the result is, when it comes to housing, that not only are we punishing the communities that want to do the right thing, but we are punishing the people.”





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