As a high school marching band played a rendition of Neil Diamond’s “Sweet Caroline,” Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz walked down the 50-yard line at the crosstown rivalry football game on Friday between Mankato East High School and Mankato West High School.
Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Walz spent Saturday morning tramping through tall grass on the opening day of Minnesota’s pheasant hunting season, giving the campaign a chance to highlight the governor’s rural roots and love of outdoor sports.
Democratic vice presidential nominee Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz joined fellow hunters in Minnesota to mark the start of pheasant season hunting in the official Governor’s Pheasant Hunting Opener in the southern town of Sleepy Eye.
U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders campaigned for the Harris, Walz presidential ticket in St. Paul Friday. He told Minnesotans to send Gov. Tim Walz to D.C.
The former president held three Minnesota rallies in the three months leading up to the 2020 election. He’s had less of a presence this year and has spent considerably more time in Wisconsin.
Mountain Iron sits between Hibbing and Virginia, an hour’s drive north of Duluth on the edge of the Mesabi Iron Range. The city used to be a DFL bulwark, the spiritual center of the Iron Range’s union-facilitated marriage with Minnesota’s Democratic-Farmer-Labor party.
She produced children's television programming in New York for a year before returning to Washington, DC. When she lost a bid to win back her seat in 1960, she worked for 10 years in the Civil Defense Office. Another run for office in 1977 failed.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz's comments at a Tuesday fundraiser about the Electoral College shine a light on a longstanding debate: Should the Electoral College stay or should it go?
With the Senate split 33 Republicans to 33 Democrats, whoever wins the seat will determine not only who will win the state Senate but whether the DFL trifecta in St. Paul lives another session.
Video from the game shows Walz leaving the field at Michigan Stadium, waving and at one point extending an arm and finger. In the audio that plays with the video, a man can be heard yelling, "Trump 2024, baby!" Other video footage from outside of the stadium shows people booing Walz.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz's comments at a Tuesday fundraiser about the Electoral College shine a light on a longstanding debate: Should the Electoral College stay or should it go?Walz, according to pool reports,
If control of the U.S. House and Senate flips on election night, it would mean a change of jobs and status for Minnesotan lawmakers.