Immigration is a core issue for voters. Some of the 2024 campaign’s most charged political vitriol has swirled around its effects.
Minnesota Supreme Court, Absentee Ballot Board
No Republican has won Minnesota for president since 1972, but Trump narrowly lost in 2016 by 1.5 points. President Biden won in 2020 by seven points. Polling averages for Harris are somewhere in between.
MINNEAPOLIS — More than half a million people have already voted in Minnesota for the 2024 election, but many still plan on voting in person on Election Day to cast their ballot. Here's a look at what's on the ballot in Minnesota.
On Minnesota's ballot this election, there are the races for president, U.S. Senate, Congressional districts and state House seats. But there are also a slate of under-the-radar judicial races, too.
Voters will determine the next president, Minnesota U.S. senator and a slew of local offices this Nov. 5. Here's what you need to know about voting.
Two Guatemalans wearing traditional embroidered skirts bought coconut boba teas on an October afternoon at the bustling downtown Asian market. In decades past, the building served as this rural town's hardware store where farmers shopped for hammers,
No Republican has won Minnesota for president since 1972, but Trump narrowly lost in 2016 by 1.5 points. President Biden won in 2020 by seven points. Polling averages for Harris are somewhere in between.
Craig, a Democrat first elected to represent Minnesota’s 2nd Congressional District in 2018 after defeating Republican U.S. Rep. Jason Lewis, faced two serious challenges 2020 and 2022, when many political observers considered the district to be a tossup.
For instance, Minnesota now has automatic voter registration, which means eligible voters who apply for or renew a state ID will automatically be registered to vote.
Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon praised local election officials in Itasca County after they flagged two absentee ballots for voter fraud, which led to a 50-year-old woman being criminally charged.
This year, voters will have to pick candidates in nine races to serve on the state's Supreme Court, Court of Appeals and District Court. The two incumbents up for re-election on the Supreme Court include Natalie Hudson, the first Black chief justice who was appointed last fall, along with Associate Justice Karl Procaccini.