Elections officials are making changes to Minnesota’s automatic voter registration system after finding some potentially problematic entries, but they say they are not aware of anyone ineligible who has been registered to vote via the system.
When Minnesotans go to the polls this fall, they won’t just vote for president and U.S. Senate. They’ll also decide whether the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party should have another two years of control over state government.
Forty percent of lottery proceeds go to the state Environment and National Resources Trust Fund, which funds projects like Dakota County's Thompson Park. "All over the state, every corner of the state, if you are a Minnesotan, if you walked on a trail, if you swam in a lake, you have been a beneficiary of this funding," Marcus Starr said.
We will offer closely studied analyses of a few key races and candidates to help keep voters informed on those who seek to lead.
Minnesota election officials are changing the state’s automatic voter registration system ahead of Election Day after finding roughly 1,000 potentially problematic entries. About 1% of the more than 90,
Republicans sent letters to the Secretary of State and Department of Public Safety asking about the security of the new system.
The Land of 10,000 Lakes may not have seemed like an electoral battleground when the state’s governor got picked for the presidential ticket. But now it may be a different matter per a MinnPost-Embold Research poll,
Down-ballot GOP candidates are putting space between themselves and White, a candidate with a combative style and complicated past. They say they’re focusing on their own campaigns.
Democrats at the national level on Thursday announced 13 "spotlight" candidates for Minnesota legislative races, putting an emphasis on down-ballot races for seats they hope to retain or flip to keep the DFL majority in the Minnesota House and Senate.
The governor, making his fourth appearance in the battleground state as the Democratic vice presidential candidate, asked voters for ‘All gas, no brakes.’
Vice President Kamala Harris' choice of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate is doing her no favors with independents.
Vice-presidential nominees typically don't decide elections, but voters are paying close attention to Ohio Sen. JD Vance and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.