November 8, 2024

Red wave? In Minnesota, Dems ride blue wave to control gov’t

Dems #Dems

By STEVE KARNOWSKI – Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Minnesota Democrats defied expectations in a midterm election that had been expected to go well for Republicans, winning the governor’s race and completing a trifecta Wednesday by winning both houses of the Legislature to take full control of state government for the first time in eight years.

Republican Senate Majority Leader Jeremy Miller conceded Wednesday morning that his party had lost its majority to Senate Democrats. That followed a concession earlier Wednesday from GOP House Minority Leader Kurt Daudt and the re-election of Democratic Gov. Tim Walz on Tuesday night.

“Tim Walz is the governor for four more years,” GOP challenger Scott Jensen told supporters in a concession speech. “Republicans, quite frankly, we didn’t have a red wave. It was a blue wave. And we need to stop, we need to recalibrate, we need to ask ourselves: ‘OK, what can we learn from this? What can we do better? How do we go forward?’ ”

People are also reading…

  • Death of Chuck Drummond, 79, leaves family, ‘Pioneer Woman’ fans mourning
  • Ahha Tulsa, Hardesty Arts Center closing
  • POLL CLOSED: Vote for the Bill Knight Automotive high school football player of the week for Week 10
  • Letter: I’m not voting to retain Dustin Rowe for the state Supreme Court
  • Don’t look now, but Williams Crossing spans the entire Arkansas River
  • OK Preps Extra podcast: Todd Drummond on faith, family and football
  • First-round football playoff pairings
  • Tulsa couple mourning suspected murder-suicide of son, daughter-in-law and six grandchildren in BA
  • Developer tees up new event venue at site of former Bixby golf course
  • Guerin Emig: What in the world is Saturday’s OU football game doing on ESPN+? More than you’d think, according to Joe Castiglione
  • State Supreme Court justices appear on retention ballot
  • Closing of ahha Tulsa puts future of Mayfest, other programs in limbo
  • Union moves to No. 1 in 6AI rankings for first time this season
  • Endorsement: For Tanya Wilson for Tulsa County District Judge and retaining all appellate judges
  • Guerin Emig: On Spencer Sanders’ future, this week and beyond, and how that affects Garret Rangel
  • While several legislative races were yet to be called as of Wednesday morning, Democrats appeared to exceed the 68 seats they need to preserve their majority in the House, while Democrats appeared to have the 34 seats they need to control the Senate.

    The only other time that Minnesota saw single-party control in the past 30 years was when Democrats held full power in 2013-14, and the last time any Minnesota Republican won statewide office was in 2006, when Gov. Tim Pawlenty was reelected.

    Democrats also appeared poised to keep Minnesota’s three other constitutional offices. Secretary of State Steve Simon defeated Republican election skeptic Kim Crockett, winning more votes than any other Democratic statewide candidate including Walz.

    Attorney General Keith Ellison and State Auditor Julie Blaha held narrow leads over GOP challengers Jim Schultz and Ryan Wilson in races that had yet to be called Wednesday morning.

    Amy Koch, a former Republican Senate majority leader turned political strategist, said weakness at the top of the GOP ticket and and the party’s alienation of women were major factors in the Democratic sweep.

    “We should have wiped the floor with the DFL. We didn’t. We lost,” Koch said in an interview.

    She said a stronger showing by Jensen could have lifted other statewide Republicans. And she said she heard from many women, and many Republicans, angry over comments by Jensen running mate Matt Birk against abortion rights and women having careers, including accusing abortion rights supporters of playing the “rape card” by demanding exceptions to abortion bans for rape and incest.

    Many women responded by quietly going to the polls and voting for Democrats, she said, and “that’s why everybody is in shock this morning.”

    Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    Leave a Reply