Tim Walz’s dual role as Minnesota’s governor and Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate was on full display Saturday as he attended a tailgate with Michigan football fans before going on the field to meet with Minnesota’s coach.
With early voting underway, local elections officials and the Minnesota Secretary of State’s office are working to address issues with a small number of ballot misprints after reports of errors in two counties.
Wall St. Insights This election cycle, Harris and Trump campaigns are focusing their resources on a handful of key swing states, where the election will likely be decided. In most of the rest of the country,
GOP leaders are still talking about 1,000 voting registrations that were rejected for not having proof of identity.
The Secretary of State’s office says the number of Minnesotans who are voting early in the November 5, 2024 election is fewer than in 2020 during the pandemic when 1,246,810 ballots were sent in the first week, but nearly three times higher than in 2016, when 150,488 ballots were sent in the first week.
Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Walz is set to make his final major campaign appearance before the coming week’s debate at a football game between the University of Michigan and the University of Minnesota in Ann Arbor,
Much of the talk this week around the intersection of sports and politics is about Donald Trump – the former president who is again vying for the White House in this election – attending the big clash
Minnesota has garnered a lot of attention this election cycle. This is in part due to Democratic presidential candidate Vice President Kamala Harris selecting Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as her running mate.
Nearly eight in 10 Minnesotans surveyed for a new MPR News, KARE 11 and Minnesota Star Tribune poll have high to moderate confidence of an accurate vote count in the November election. They’re more split over the safeguards around absentee and mail-in voting.
Half of likely voters said they are highly confident that votes will be counted accurately in November, and nearly a third more said they were moderately confident.