Midwest
Trump’s lawsuit moves to Iowa State Court: What’s next in his case against pollster, Des Moines Register
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President Donald Trump successfully got his lawsuit against Iowa pollster J. Ann Selzer and The Des Moines Register to land in Iowa State Court last week with “good strategy” by his legal team, according to attorney Danny Karon.
Trump’s legal team, which has accused the defendants of “brazen election interference” with their final 2024 Iowa presidential poll that showed him trailing Democrat Kamala Harris, originally requested the case be moved to Iowa State Court in May after the defendants “removed” the case to federal court. A federal judge denied the request at the time, but the Obama-appointed judge was overruled by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit on Friday.
Karon, author of the recently published book “Your Love lovable lawyer’s guide to legal wellness,” believes Trump’s team played it perfectly.
TRUMP SCORES LEGAL WIN, GETTING LAWSUIT AGAINST IOWA POLLSTER, DES MOINES REGISTER MOVED TO STATE COURT
President Donald Trump, seen here at the America250 rally in Des Moines, successfully got his lawsuit against Iowa pollster J. Ann Selzer and The Des Moines Register to land in Iowa State Court last week. (Kyle Mazza/Anadolu via Getty Images)
“The federal judge was terrible for him. It was an Obama appointee,” Karon told Fox News Digital.
Karon said the practice is sometimes referred to as “forum shopping,” but he simply feels it was “good strategy” by Trump’s legal team.
“You want to find a judge where you’re going to have a fair shake, or a good shake, or better shake, call it what you want, but you don’t want a judge who’s going to work against you,” Karon said.
“He liked the state court judge, didn’t like the federal judge. When the defendants removed him to federal court, he wanted really bad to get it back,” Karon continued. “Now he’s where he wants to be.”
DAVID MARCUS: TRUMP’S BALLROOM IS NO VANITY PROJECT, IT’S ABOUT AMERICAN GRANDEUR
President Donald Trump notched a key legal victory Friday in his lawsuit against Iowa pollster J. Ann Selzer and the Des Moines Register. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Karon, who practiced class action law for years, found it interesting that Trump sued for consumer fraud, since that is typically a claim that a product was defective or fraudulently represented.
“Trump said, ‘You know what? The newspaper was the product that was sold. It had a fraud in it, which was this ginned-up poll, it wasn’t true. It wasn’t accurate. It was deceptive and people were damaged, namely me,’” Karon said. “His damages are, he had to spend all this money from the campaign to fix this problem, to take it to Iowa.”
Karon expects Selzer and The Des Moines Register to file a motion to dismiss.
“If the motion to dismiss is denied, you get into discovery, which is ugly and hairy and expensive and takes forever and that’s where all the hard work comes and that often where cases settle,” Karon said.
FORMER POLLSTER ANN SELZER HITS BACK AT CRITICISMS OVER IOWA POLL: ‘THEY ARE ACCUSING ME OF A CRIME’
Pollster J. Ann Selzer came under fire after releasing a poll claiming then-candidate Kamala Harris was leading Trump in Iowa ahead of the 2024 election. (Getty Images/ The Bulwark Podcast via YouTube screenshot)
Trump’s legal team celebrated the ruling.
“[The] just and appropriate ruling by the 8th Circuit ensures that President Trump’s powerhouse case focused on the fake election interfering polls conducted and denominated by J. Ann Selzer, The Des Moines Register and its corporate owner Gannett will be litigated in Iowa State Court where it belongs,” a spokesman for Trump’s legal team told Fox News Digital on Friday.
“These defendants have repeatedly engaged in unlawful gamesmanship to avoid State Court, and that ends today,” the spokesman continued. “President Trump will continue to hold those who traffic in fake news, lies and smears to account.”
Bob Corn-Revere, chief counsel for the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE), who represents Selzer, also issued a statement last week after Trump’s victory.
“The 8th Circuit ruling was focused entirely on a technical point of civil procedure and said nothing about the merits of the case. This case is every bit as frivolous today as it was yesterday, and that fact will be borne out in whatever forum it is finally resolved,” Corn-Revere told Fox News Digital.
Lark-Marie Antón, a spokesperson for The Des Moines Register’s parent company, Gannett, believes the case belongs in federal court.
“We are assessing the court’s decision. Given the nature of the case and that it involves the President of the United States as a plaintiff, we continue to believe the federal courts are the most appropriate forum for this lawsuit. In the event the suit is heard by the state courts of Iowa, we have confidence the matter will be adjudicated fairly,” Antón told Fox News Digital.
The lawsuit was originally filed in December in Polk County, Iowa, and sought what it calls “accountability for brazen election interference committed by” The Des Moines Register and Selzer “in favor of now-defeated former Democrat candidate Kamala Harris through use of a leaked and manipulated Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll” published Nov. 2, 2024.
“The Harris Poll was no ‘miss’ but rather an attempt to influence the outcome of the 2024 Presidential Election,” the lawsuit stated at the time, adding that “defendants and their cohorts in the Democrat Party hoped that the Harris Poll would create a false narrative of inevitability for Harris in the final week of the 2024 Presidential Election.”
FORMER POLLSTER ANN SELZER HITS BACK AT CRITICISMS OVER IOWA POLL: ‘THEY ARE ACCUSING ME OF A CRIME’
Selzer released her final Des Moines Register-sponsored poll showing Harris leading Trump by three points in Iowa just three days before the election. That shock poll showed a seven-point shift from Trump to Harris from September, when he had a four-point lead over the vice president in the same poll.
Selzer’s poll was hyped up by the media in the days leading up to the election as her polling predictions had been historically accurate. Many suggested it implied a monumental shift in Midwest support for Harris in a red state, but the poll turned out to be way off.
Trump thumped Harris in Iowa by more than 13 percentage points, the third straight time he’d won the state and the first time any candidate had won there by double digits since 1980.
Shortly after the election, Selzer announced she was done with election polling and moving on to “other ventures.”
Fox News Digital’s Lindsay Kornick and Brooke Singman contributed to this report.
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Milwaukee, WI
Milwaukee flooding traps drivers and leaves thousands without power
MILWAUKEE — Severe storms swept through Milwaukee, causing significant flooding and leaving thousands of residents without power.
Near Timmerman Airport at 97th Street and Hampton Avenue, rapidly rising water trapped multiple drivers. At least five vehicles became stuck in the floodwaters. TMJ4’s Mike Beiermeister called 911 after finding four people inside one of the submerged cars. Emergency services responded, and all drivers and passengers were able to get out safely.
Watch: Milwaukee flooding traps drivers and leaves thousands without power
Multiple cars stuck in flooded streets
The high water concealed a median on the road. As drivers attempted to turn around to avoid the flooding, they did not see the median and drove straight into it, becoming stuck.
Atrilla Wilson witnessed the scene unfold.
“It was pretty much like last year in August. It just came and so fast that you couldn’t control it, and watching them go into those medians was the dangerous part,” Wilson said.
Wilson noted that other drivers created additional hazards by not paying attention to the people trying to stop traffic.
“People just driving through here and not stopping, they just going through here and then filming while they’re driving, and it’s just been a whirlwind,” Wilson said.
The storms knocked out power for 24,500 customers across the area. Wilson and his neighbors were among those left in the dark.
“Everybody around here has got to go to work in the morning, so they depend on the electricity to get them up and getting them going, so hopefully before the end of the night we get electricity,” Wilson said.
Flooding and ponding were also reported on Silver Spring Drive and Mill Road. Authorities advise residents to stay home and avoid driving through flooded roadways.
This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
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Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis man dies after neighbor assaulted him
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – A man has died days after he was assaulted by his neighbor in Minneapolis.
Minneapolis deadly assault
What we know:
According to Minneapolis police, on April 5, officers responded to an apartment building on the 300 block of Hennepin Avenue.
Officers found a man in his 70s unconscious. He was then taken to the hospital.
Police learned through surveillance video that the victim had been hit by another 61-year-old man after a verbal argument.
The 61-year-old man was found to also be a resident in the apartment building and was later arrested.
Police announced Tuesday that the victim died at the hospital from his injuries.
The suspect was initially charged with first-degree assault, but those are expected to be amended to include homicide, police said.
What we don’t know:
Police did not say what led up to the altercation between the two men.
The Source: A press release from the Minneapolis Police Department.
Indianapolis, IN
New board overseeing IPS and Indianapolis charter schools begins work on November referendum question
The new mayor-appointed board overseeing Indianapolis Public Schools and the city’s charter schools held its first meeting Tuesday, taking initial steps on decisions that will reshape how nearly 43,000 students are educated across the district boundary.
The Indianapolis Public Education Corporation, or IPEC, met for about an hour at the City-County Building. The meeting was largely procedural but set in motion two of the most consequential choices facing the board in its early months: whether to put a new IPS operating referendum on the November ballot and who will lead the municipal organization day-to-day.
The nine members unanimously adopted rules of procedure, named Michael O’Connor of Bose Public Affairs as acting executive director and passed a resolution authorizing a request for funds to operate, pay for staff, consultants and other expenses — the first use of IPEC’s authority to draw on property tax revenue. The board set a distribution percentage of up to 3% of local property tax revenues for IPS and charter schools, as allowed by the new state law that created the authority.
“We are building a municipal organization from scratch that has not existed anywhere else in the United States,” said David Harris, who chairs the corporation board, and was also Indianapolis’ first charter school director and founded local education reform organization The Mind Trust in 2006 “This is a big assignment for us.”
The board takes on an ambitious charge by state lawmakers: reshaping a divided education system so that every public school student in the IPS boundary has access to the same resources. Reform advocates see it as the long-sought fix to a fragmented landscape that has left charter schools without equal footing. Traditional public school supporters see it as a slow dismantling of a district already weakened by declining enrollment and a looming budget shortfall.
The multi-step process for the corporation to approve a referendum for IPS and the city charter schools would begin immediately. “How many dollars?” O’Connor said about one of the many decisions the board must make. “And how many years?”
A public hearing will be held before the board makes a decision toward the end of June. State law requires final action by Aug. 1 for a question to make it on the November ballot.
The current IPS operating referendum expires at the end of this year. IPS projects ending the year with a $40 million cash deficit. Superintendent Aleesia Johnson, who attended Tuesday’s meeting, has said the district is already cutting staff and programs.
Mayor Joe Hogsett, who also sat in the audience, said he wants to hire a permanent executive director “the sooner the better.” Hogsett will select the candidate, and the board votes on the appointment.
O’Connor said a job description will be posted as quickly as possible and that the position will draw on the duties spelled out in House Enrolled Act 1423: “building a transportation that works efficiently and effectively and serves all of our kids; building a facilities program that assures all of our children are learning in a safe and welcoming environment. And then an accountability system that represents the needs of all of our kids is developed and then maintained.”
The salary range will be “both competitive and appropriate for the job of this nature,” he added.
O’Connor said he will stand up three working groups in the coming days — on the referendum, on staffing and finance, and on the accountability framework IPEC owes the legislature in a preliminary report due in August. IPS School Board members Ashely Thomas and board member Hope Duke Star pressed for parents and outside experts to be included in those groups.
In addition to Harris, president and CEO of Christel House International, the board includes other charter school leaders: Janet McNeal, president of Herron Classical Schools; Dexter Taylor, director at Paramount Brookside; and Edward Rangel, founding CEO of Adelante Schools.
A website for IPEC could be online as soon as Wednesday at indianapolispubliceducationcorporation.org, with board contact information, documents and meeting details. The domain will eventually shift to .gov.
O’Connor said public comment will be taken at meetings where decisions are made on taxes and budgets. The board’s next meeting is May 28.
Eric Weddle is WFYI’s education editor. Contact Eric at eweddle@wfyi.org or follow him on X at @ericweddle.
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