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Tag: tim walz

  • Three Annunciation Catholic School​ moms demand action during town hall

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    Three women stood together on stage at a town hall in Plymouth, Minnesota on Sunday, bound together by the tragedy their children experienced inside Annunciation Catholic School on August 27. 

    “I don’t want any other parent or family to feel this misery,” said Malia Kimbrell.

    Kimbrell’s 9-year-old daughter Vivian was rushed to the hospital after over 100 bullets shattered the windows of Annunciation Catholic School. Vivian was shot multiple times. Now, Vivian is recovering at home and Kimbrell is advocating for a ban on assault weapons.

    “It’s more mental health resources and safer gun storage and better background checks and detecting potential threats online and improved security measures and banning assault weapons,” Kimbrell said Sunday. “If the next mass shooting happens at your child’s school, what type of weapon are you comfortable with the shooter being armed with?”

    The group was brought together by Democratic Rep. Kelly Morrison as a town hall focused on gun violence prevention, for members of Minnesota’s third district. 

    “By taking action, that’s how we honor Harper, Fletcher and all the lives taken by gun violence,” said Carla Maldonado. 

    Maldonado has two children at Annunciation and described the panic she felt after she and her husband heard the gunshots that morning from their home nearby.

    “We cannot accept a world where civilians have access to weapons designed for battlefields,” Maldonado said. 

    Stephanie Moscetti, a mother of two, also shared her fear that day. Saying her children are changed, espeically her son who was friends with Fletcher Merkel, an 8-year-old boy who was killed in the attack. 

    “My son was an honorary pallbearer at his friends funeral, how is this our reality?” Moscetti questioned. “Our kids deserve safe schools, they deserve safe childhoods where they can play and learn.”

    About a week ago, a Minnesota Senate work group focused on addressing gun violence met for the first time, listening to pleas from some of these same parents

    Gov. Tim Walz has vowed to call a special session to address the issue, though a date has not been set.

    If a bill is presented, the legislation would need the support of both democrats and republicans. 

    House Republicans previously released their list of policies to consider in a special session, which included school security grants, more funding for mental health beds and mandatory minimum prison sentences for repeat gun offenders.

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    Ashley Grams

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  • Gov. Walz launches re-election campaign, seeking third term as governor

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    Gov. Tim Walz launches re-election campaign, hoping for a third term



    Gov. Tim Walz launches re-election campaign, hoping for a third term

    02:21

    Governor Tim Walz launched his re-election campaign on Friday night, hoping to make Minnesota history by serving three consecutive terms as governor.

    He now has a national profile after his run as a Vice-Presidential candidate.

    In a packed Minneapolis hall, Walz took center stage to rally supporters pushing a message of unity for all Minnesotans and asking for their vote to serve another four years.

    “I believe governing like good neighbors is not just what Minnesotans want from us; it’s what they demand from us. Because we believe we’re One Minnesota,” he said. 

    The governor did not mince words making his priorities clear following the Assassination of Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark and the mass shooting at Annunciation.

    “As governor, I’m going to use the power of this office to figure out how to help stop the bloodshed,” he told the crowd. “It’s going to take some brave Republicans to join us. But I have to believe a courageous few want these weapons of war off of our streets and out of our schools.”

    Through the evening, Walz did not lose sight on the clash that continues between him and President Donald Trump calling him out on broken promises and taking jabs at the Big Beautiful Bill. 

    “Trump has all but abandoned working families. His tariffs are only sending costs in one direction: Up,” Walz said. 

    Yet, the governor shied away from the major running point for his challengers. The governor’s rollout comes just a day after

    federal investigators say they found another multi-million-dollar fraud scheme involving state programs.

    Walz closed the rally by telling Minnesotans if we’re going to get our country out of the mess, we’re in our leadership- here in Minnesota- will need to guide the way. 

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    Ubah Ali

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  • Executive order establishes council to crack down on fraud in Minnesota

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    Gov. Tim Walz has issued an executive order aimed at cracking down on fraud in Minnesota by utilizing new data-sharing laws passed in the anti-fraud legislative package

    Multiple state agencies are included in the directive, which requires them to look at their data to identify, prevent, or eliminate fraudulent use of state funds, resources, or programs. If any fraud is suspected, they must report it to the Department of Revenue, the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and the Office of the Legislative Auditor. 

    “We have no tolerance for fraud in the State of Minnesota. Abuse of taxpayer dollars takes resources away from the people who need them most. If you commit fraud in Minnesota, you will be prosecuted and held accountable to the fullest extent of the law. While we will continue to urge the legislature to take further action, this executive order gives our agencies additional tools to safeguard taxpayer dollars,” said Walz.

    The four-page document, issued on Wednesday, orders DPS authorities to lead a statewide council made up of various agency representatives with knowledge in program integrity, audit or internal controls. The council is then directed to meet every month and share investigative data and trends, as well as help agencies with auditing as needed. 

    The DHS has also been ordered to “publish information about program integrity actions taken by the agency” for public knowledge on how the agency is preventing fraud, waste and abuse.  

    It goes on to direct Inspector General James Clark to create a review program for Medicaid providers and claims, as well as identify high-risk providers, claims and service patterns through analytics and risk-scoring models. Additionally, Clark is being asked to identify DHS programs that pose a high risk of fraud, waste, and abuse. 

    The order says to disenroll all Minnesota Health Care Program-enrolled providers who haven’t billed Medicaid within the past year, effective immediately, and to ask all state accounts for funds to help “modernize systems to better prevent and detect fraud and waste. The order also says to hire an external consultant “to assess DHS and make recommendations on reorganization.” 

    Meanwhile, the Minnesota Department of Management and Budget has been ordered to create mandatory training on ethics, fraud prevention, waste and abuse for all state employees, do a review of existing state job classifications, lead a work group, create job-specific training and education standards and more. 

    Republican state Rep. Kristin Robbins, chair of the House Fraud Prevention and State Agency Oversight Committee, issued a statement after hearing about the order, which she says happened before Wednesday’s hearing in the Minnesota House on fraud prevention and state agency oversight. She said Walz’s order “falls far short of the reforms Minnesotans deserve.”

    “Decades of reports about the failures of internal controls at DHS have demonstrated they cannot police themselves. We need an independent executive branch OIG to hold them accountable,” she added.

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    Krystal Frasier

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  • Grumdahl out as asst. commissioner for homelessness and housing at DHS

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    Democrats hold onto slain Rep. Melissa Hortman’s seat in special election, and more headlines



    Democrats hold onto slain Rep. Melissa Hortman’s seat in special election, and more headlines

    06:53

    The Minnesota Department of Human Services says Eric Grumdahl, who had been serving as its assistant commissioner for homelessness and housing supports, is no longer there.

    A statement from DHS to WCCO on Wednesday said Grumdahl’s last day in the role was Tuesday. 

    This comes as Department Chair and Republican Rep. Kristin Robbins issued a statement early Wednesday morning that said in part that Grumdahl had been fired. 

    The DHS went on to say the reason for “an employee’s separation is not public” due to Minnesota’s Data Practices Act. 

    Robbins says she was notified about Grumdahl’s alleged firing on Wednesday, just hours ahead of a 10 a.m. meeting involving the House Fraud Prevention and State Agency Oversight Committee on Housing Stabilization Services and Integrated Community Supports.

    “This is yet another example of DHS and the Walz Administration dodging accountability for their failures,” said Robbins. “I would have expected Assistant Commissioner Grumdahl to attend the hearing and answer questions today, but DHS never intended for him to come. While I’m glad to see they are finally starting to hold individuals running these programs accountable for fraud, doing it the day before the public hearing just shows how DHS tries to hide what is going on from legislators and the public.”

    Earlier this year, a search warrant filed with the U.S. District Court for Minnesota details a fraud investigation into a “massive scheme to defraud” the state’s Housing Stabilization Services program, which is run by the DHS. The investigation concerns the Minnesota Medical Assistance benefit meant to help find and maintain homes for people with disabilities — including mental illnesses and substance use disorders — as well as the elderly. 

    When the program started in 2020, it was estimated that it would cost taxpayers about $2.5 million a year. But by 2021, it cost $21 million. Last year, it ballooned to $104 million. The FBI said the housing program has “proved to be extremely vulnerable to fraud,” and listed eight business locations where the alleged fraud took place, including in St. Paul, Roseville, Blaine, Little Canada and Woodbury.

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    Krystal Frasier

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  • Gov. Walz trashes Trump on shootings, national guard, economy

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    Minnesota Governor Tim Walz talks with Jen Psaki on the day that he had declared his candidacy for reelection. Walz offers harsh words on Donald Trump for his response to shootings in Minnesota, including the fatal shooting of Democratic politician Melissa Hortman, as well as the deployment of the National Guard to American cities, and Trump’s handling of the economic challenges Americans are facing.

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  • Maddow Blog | ‘I’m not familiar’: Three months later, the White House struggles with Minnesota killings

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    Three months ago, a suspected gunman shot and killed Democratic state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, at their home in Minnesota. This came immediately after the same suspected shooter tried to kill state Democratic Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette.

    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said in the immediate aftermath of the attack that it appeared to be a “politically motivated assassination.”

    Republicans at the national level did not exactly respond to the tragedy in a responsible way. Despite that everything we now know about the alleged gunman suggests he was an anti-abortion Trump voter and not a far-left radical, several congressional Republicans labeled the suspect a “Marxist” whose alleged crimes constituted an example of “extreme left” violence.

    This was ridiculous. It was also, in retrospect, the opposite of how Democratic officials responded to the shooting that claimed Charlie Kirk’s life. It happened anyway — though the Republican response to the Minnesota shooting wasn’t perceived as a national scandal and no one was fired for having said dumb things about the shootings.

    In the aftermath of the political violence, Donald Trump said very little about what happened. Indeed, as my MSNBC colleague Zeeshan Aleem explained, “He did not offer a substantial eulogy for her, or deliver an address on political violence, as he did after Kirk’s death. Unlike former President Joe Biden, Trump did not attend the funeral.”

    Three months later, a Fox News host characterized Hortman’s death as a “bulls—” example of political violence. Also on Monday, Attorney General Pam Bondi suggested that the suspect in Minnesota came from the left, not the right, despite all of the available evidence.

    And then, of course, there was the president himself.

    “In retrospect, given all of the moving ways that this White House has paid tribute to Charlie Kirk,” a reporter asked Trump, “do you think it would’ve been fitting to lower the flags to half-staff when Melissa Hortman, the Minnesota House speaker, was gunned down by an assassin as well?”

    The president replied, “I’m not familiar. The who?”

    Reminded of an incident he ought to have been familiar with, Trump said of lowering the flags, “Well, if the governor had asked me to do that, I would’ve done that. But the governor of Minnesota didn’t ask me.”

    For all of Trump’s comments in recent days about political violence, that he appeared to have no idea who Hortman was suggests the president hasn’t exactly done a full accounting of the broader national scourge.

    For that matter, leaders don’t generally wait to be asked to do the right and honorable thing.

    But let’s also not brush past the relevant details: In the aftermath of the political violence in Minnesota, Trump thought it’d be a good idea to lash out publicly at Walz — who might’ve requested lowering flags, but whom the president refused to contact.

    “Why would I call him? I could call and say, ‘Hi, how you doing?’ The guy doesn’t have a clue,” Trump said of Walz at the time. “He’s a mess. So I could be nice and call, but why waste time?”

    The Republican added, “I think the governor of Minnesota is so whacked out, I’m not calling him.”

    It’s worth appreciating the differences between the president’s reaction to Kirk’s death and how he responded to Hortman and her husband being killed.

    As Aleem concluded, “In a democracy, all political violence should be considered entirely unacceptable, no matter the ideology of the person committing the act or on the receiving end of it. Both the deaths of Hortman and Kirk were terrible tragedies and completely unjustifiable. But in his selective mourning and politicization of their deaths, Trump suggested one tragedy — more importantly, one type of tragedy — mattered more.”

    This article was originally published on MSNBC.com

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  • Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz announces run for third term

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    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz on Tuesday announced his plans to seek reelection, launching a historic bid for a third consecutive term. 

    Walz, a Democrat, revealed his intention to run again in a video posted on social media, touting policy achievements in office and making an appeal for unity.

    “We’ve made historic progress in our state, but we’re not done yet. I’m staying in the fight,” the governor said.

    In his announcement video, Walz called Minnesota “the best place on Earth with the best people,” but acknowledged the state has “seen terrible times this year.”

    “I’m heartbroken and angry about the beautiful people we lost to gun violence,” Walz said, referencing the high-profile political assassination of Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark and the mass shooting at Annunciation Catholic Church late last month. “But it’s in these moments we have to come together, because I’ve seen what we can do when we work together.”

    Walz said in the video that, if reelected, his priorities would include cracking down on fraud, making health care more affordable, investing in public schools and getting “serious about gun violence.”

    The former teacher and Congressman was elected governor in 2018 and won reelection in 2022. In 2024, former Vice President Kamala Harris chose him as her running mate in the presidential election, which catapulted him to the national stage.

    After the loss to President Trump and Vice President JD Vance, Walz returned to Minnesota to serve out the remaining two years of his term. Earlier this year, he went on a town hall tour of GOP districts across the Midwest, prompting speculation about a future presidential run. In an interview with The New Yorker in March, Walz said if the circumstances were right and he has the right “skill set” for the moment, he would consider running in 2028.  

    Since Mr. Trump took office, he and Walz have continued the clashes begun during election season. In his announcement video, Walz said he will “never stop fighting to protect us from the chaos, corruption and cruelty coming out of Washington.”

    During his gubernatorial tenure, Walz and Democratic lawmakers approved several progressive victories, including universal free school meals, the legalization of recreational marijuana, codified abortion rights and more. 

    His time in office hasn’t been without controversy, though. After authorities announced charges in the $250 million Feeding Our Future fraud case — the largest COVID-19 fraud case in the country — the GOP largely blamed Walz for letting it happen under his watch. The scandal prompted a renewed focus on fraud and governmental oversight in the most recent legislative session, which included some changes, though plans for a new state watchdog agency failed to pass. 

    Since Feeding Our Future, there are additional investigations into fraud in state programs, including alleged bogus claims billed at autism centers and for housing services. The Walz administration’s response to reports of fraud in state government is already becoming a centerpiece to Republicans’ campaign against him. 

    Walz’s 2022 challenger Scott Jensen is running again for the Republican nomination. State Rep. Kristin Robbins, who chairs the new House fraud-focused committee, and businessman Kendall Qualls have also launched campaigns.

    In its 167 years as a state, Minnesota has never elected a governor for three consecutive four-year terms, according to the Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Rudy Perpich served three non-consecutive terms and is the state’s longest serving governor.

    Before his reelection, Walz led the state through the COVID-19 pandemic, the police murder of George Floyd and the unrest that followed. 

    Walz and state lawmakers this year achieved what he called “the most impressive achievement” of his career, wrapping up a contentious budget agreement during a special session of the most closely divided Legislature in Minnesota history. The work to finalize the $66 billion biennial budget staved off a government shutdown and made significant headway into a projected $6 billion deficit in future years. 

    “This is why I got into this business, to try and make a difference, work together, compromise, find common ground,” Walz said of the agreement. “The commitment to making democracy work was as strong as I’ve seen.”

    Walz’s party made key concessions to get the deal across the finish line, including removing adult undocumented immigrants from the state’s health care program.

    Note: The video above originally aired Aug. 24, 2025.

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    Anthony Bettin

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  • Trump at first says he is ‘not familiar’ with Minnesota Democrat’s assassination

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    In response to a question about why he did not order flags lowered to half-staff to honor Melissa Hortman, the Democratic speaker of the Minnesota House of Representatives who was assassinated alongside her husband this summer, Donald Trump initially said he was “not familiar” with the case.

    The question came up during a briefing in the Oval Office on Monday, in light of the president’s order last week to lower flags in response to the killing of rightwing activist Charlie Kirk.

    Trump was pressed on why he and Republicans continued cast blame the left for a rise in political violence when elected officials and activists from both parties have been targets.

    Related: Iowa official defies governor’s order to fly flags at half-staff for Charlie Kirk

    The exchange began when the reporter asked about the tributes paid by the White House to Kirk, the founder of the conservative youth activist group Turning Point USA and a close ally of the president and his family.

    “Do you think it would have been fitting to lower the flags to half-staff when Melissa Hortman, the Minnesota house speaker, was gunned down by an assassin as well?” asked Nancy Cordes, the chief White House correspondent for CBS News.

    “I’m not familiar. The who?” Trump replied, leaning in across the Resolute Desk.

    “The Minnesota house speaker, a Democrat, who was assassinated this summer,” she said.

    “Oh,” Trump replied. “Well, if the governor had asked me to do that, I would have done that.”

    Trump did not mention the Minnesota governor Tim Walz – a Democrat and the vice-presidential nominee in 2024 – by name, but suggested that had he made the request, the White House might have obliged.

    “I wouldn’t have thought of that, but I would’ve, if somebody had asked me,” Trump said. “People make requests for the lowering of the flag, and oftentimes you have to say no, because it would be a lot of lowering.”

    At the time, Trump said that speaking to Walz, a close friend of Hortman, would have been a “waste of time”.

    “I could be nice and call, but why waste time?” Trump said then, referring to Walz as “whacked out” and a “mess”.

    Kirk was fatally shot last week while speaking at Utah Valley University. In the wake of his death, Trump and other prominent conservatives have sought to place the blame for political violence squarely on Democrats, vowing to crack down on the left-wing groups and institutions they allege “fund it and support it”.

    As Republicans grieve the loss of Kirk, they have largely ignored the violence against Democrats, including Hortman’s assassination, the arson attack on the home of Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro, the violent assault on Paul Pelosi, the husband of former speaker Nancy Pelosi, and a thwarted plot to kidnap the Michigan governor, Gretchen Whitmer.

    House Republicans and a handful of Democrats gathered at prayer vigil for Kirk on Capitol Hill on Monday. In brief remarks, Representative Tom Emmer, a Republican from Minnesota, reflected on several recent incidents of political violence, including Hortman’s killing by “another evil coward” who also shot a second Democratic state lawmaker that night.

    Trump, who survived two assassination attempts during the 2024 presidential campaign, denied on Monday that he had blamed just “one side” before accusing the “radical left” of causing “tremendous violence”.

    “The radical left really has caused a lot of problems for this country,” he said. “I really think they hate our country.”

    Earlier on Monday, vice president JD Vance, a close friend of Kirk’s, said he hoped for national “unity” while hosting the slain activist’s podcast. But then he insisted that this was not a “both sides problem” and that Democrats were primarily to blame, despite widespread condemnation of Kirk’s killing by party officials and elected leaders.

    During the lengthy episode, Vance made no reference to Hortman or other acts of political violence, such as the 6 January assault on the US Capitol.

    “Something has gone very wrong with a lunatic fringe – a minority, but a growing and powerful minority on the far left,” he said, and committed to using the levers of the federal government to “dismantle the institutions that promote violence and terrorism in our own country”.

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  • Senate panel hears testimony on assault weapons ban, other ideas for gun violence prevention

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    Students from St. Paul Conservatory for Performing Artists walk out to protest at the Minnesota State Capitol joining faith groups and gun control advocates in calling for a ban on assault weapons Friday, Sept. 5, 2025 following the mass shooting at Annunciation Church. (Photo by Nicole Neri/Minnesota Reformer)

    Lawmakers heard testimony from parents, first responders and faith leaders Monday as they considered a myriad of proposals to address gun violence in the aftermath of a shooting at the Church of the Annunciation in Minneapolis that left two children dead and more than 20 others injured. 

    Gov. Tim Walz said he will call a special session on gun violence this fall, and the Senate Gun Violence Prevention Working Group is evaluating which proposals could be viable in a divided Legislature. 

    An assault weapons ban — and any other law regulating firearms — is unlikely to pass, given Republicans’ temporary one-seat majority in the House, and dissent within the Democratic-Farmer-Labor party over gun control bills. The House is expected to return to a tie after a Sept. 16 special election in Brooklyn Park to fill the seat left vacant by the murder of Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman. 

    The working group heard testimony from five parents of Annunciation students who were hurt in the shooting, and from doctors who treated the injured students, all in support of a bill that would ban civilian ownership of “semiautomatic military-style assault weapons” and high-capacity magazines — those that hold more than ten rounds. 

    “It is up to our lawmakers to decide which weapon our next mass shooter is armed with,” said Malia Kimbrell, the parent of a third-grade student at Annunciation who was injured in the shooting.

    Dr. Tim Kummer, medical director of community outreach for Hennepin EMS, responded to Annunciation in the minutes after the shooting. A 12-year-old girl had what appeared to be a small graze wound on her head — but below the surface, the bullet’s velocity created a shockwave, causing the child’s brain to bleed. Doctors had to remove a section of her skull. 

    “From a handgun, that wound would likely have only been a graze wound, but from a high powered rifle, it became a life threatening brain injury,” Kummer said. “Assault rifles turn survivable injuries into fatal ones.”

    The working group also heard proposals that would do the following:

    • Establish an Office of Gun Violence Prevention within the Minnesota Department of Health.

    • Require gun buyers to complete a firearm safety course before purchasing a gun.

    • Create a public awareness campaign for Minnesota’s new “red flag” law, which allows judges to order the confiscation of weapons from a person deemed a danger to their own safety or others’. 

    • Create a Civil Commitment Coordinating Division within the Office of the Attorney General, tasked with streamlining the civil commitment process and collecting data on outcomes for those who are civilly committed. 

    • Require serial numbers on all firearms, including those that are 3-D printed or assembled at home. 

    • Allow local governments to ban firearms from city-owned or leased buildings. 

    • Require all gun owners to store their weapons unloaded and equipped with a locking device; or loaded or unloaded in a locked firearm storage unit or gun room.

    Sen. John Hoffman, DFL-Champlin, did not attend the meeting but submitted a bill to increase penalties on people convicted of impersonating a law enforcement officer. A man impersonating a police officer shot Hoffman and his wife Yvette before murdering Hortman and her husband Mark in the early morning hours of June 14. 

    Sen. Glenn Gruenhagen, R-Glencoe, submitted to the working group an article he co-authored in 2019 with a natural medicine doctor who spread false information about COVID-19 before dying of the virus in 2021. The article attributes the rise in mass shootings to the use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs,  a common type of antidepressant. That claim has been repeated by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, but psychiatrists and other experts have debunked a causal link between SSRIs and violence.

    The working group will meet again Wednesday morning. 

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  • Minnesota flags ordered to fly at half-staff in memory of 9/11 victims

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    Manhunt continues for Charlie Kirk’s assassin, and more headlines



    Manhunt continues for Charlie Kirk’s assassin, and more headlines

    07:36

    In honor of all who died on Sept. 11, 2001, all U.S. and Minnesota flags have been ordered to fly at half-staff at all state buildings. 

    Gov. Tim Walz issued the order on Wednesday, saying in part that “thousands of innocent lives were lost in an unthinkable tragedy that profoundly changed our nation.” 

    In the years that followed the terrorist attacks, Sept. 11 was designated as Patriot Day by Congress, which also asked the day be observed as National Day of Service and Remembrance. 

    Flags must continue to fly at half-staff until sunset on Sunday, Sept. 14, as the state is still honoring and remembering the victims of the Annunciation Catholic School shooting. Walz and President Trump had initially ordered the flags to be lowered for the shooting victims on Aug. 27. 

    Following Walz’s declaration, Mr. Trump called for flags to fly at half-staff after 31-year-old Charlie Kirk was killed during an event at Utah Valley University on Wednesday. 

    Kirk, at the time, was speaking to a large crowd during an outdoor debate, where he invited students to challenge his political and cultural views. He was shot shortly after 12 p.m. local time.

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    Krystal Frasier

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  • Gov. Tim Walz, legislative leaders meet to discuss special session

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    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz on Tuesday convened a meeting with top Republicans and Democrats at the Capitol to discuss details of a special session of the Legislature to respond to the Annunciation Catholic Church shooting that killed two children and injured 21 others two weeks ago.

    Walz wants to call lawmakers back to St. Paul to take action on gun restrictions, namely an assault weapons ban, in wake of the tragedy. But any legislation will require bipartisan support in a closely divided Capitol.

    He told reporters he doesn’t yet have a date set for when he would order that special meeting of the Legislature, but the hope is “sooner rather than later” and that he and leaders are working to come to an agreement about the parameters of a special session before it happens, as is common practice.

    But he said he is willing to call them back anyway — even if they don’t agree on what it will look like.

    “This is where the public leads the discussion on this and the legislators rise to the occasion and do the things that they’re being asked to do. And the public is asking us to do something,” Walz said. “So I hope we can get an agreement ahead of time, but I made it very clear I will call the special session one way or another.”

    Republicans released their proposal of policies to consider in a special session, none of which would put additional restrictions on firearms. They pitch school security grants, more funding for mental health beds, mandatory minimum prison sentences for repeat gun offenders and more.

    House Speaker Lisa Demuth, R-Cold Spring, said she was encouraged that Walz called all leaders together to discuss the topic. She did not say if any members of her caucus would be open to any gun measures, only that they would discuss proposals when they come forward. 

    “House Republicans are committed to making sure that we are keeping our schools and our communities safe, and that is a very broad way of looking at that and getting at the actual foundational root issues that cause someone to act out in such a horrendous way,” she said.

    It’s unclear if the DFL will even have the votes on their side for any additional gun regulations, either. In 2023, when Democrats controlled both chambers, they approved expanding background checks and a “red flag” law that enables a judge to temporarily suspend someone’s access to firearms if determined to be a harm to themselves or others.

    But additional proposals like a safe storage law and reporting of missing or stolen firearms to law enforcement failed to get the necessary support to pass the DFL-led Senate. An assault weapons ban never even received a hearing.

    Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy, DFL-St. Paul, said she believes the Annunciation shooting, as well as the assassination of Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark and attempted killing of state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife Yvette earlier this summer, may have the ability to move the needle on this issue for some. 

    “We’ve had a really, really difficult summer. We’ve all been impacted by gun violence, both our caucuses, all four caucuses,” Murphy said alongside Rep. Zack Stephenson, House Democrats’ new leader. “And I do think that the events that we live here together can impact how people choose to vote on something. I think we’re going to have some very frank and important conversations.”

    House Republicans have a one-seat edge right now because of the vacancy due to Hortman’s death. There is a special election next week that could return the chamber to a tie, requiring bipartisan collaboration to get bills to the floor and to pass.

    Even in the Senate, where Democrats had a one-seat majority this year, any legislation will need Republican support because of the vacancy due to Sen. Nicole Mitchell’s resignation in wake of her burglary conviction. A special election for her Woodbury-area seat isn’t until November, and the special session is likely to happen earlier. 

    “We only have 33 members, and we need 34 people to pass legislation out of our body. So we’re doing our work. I hope Republicans are doing their work, but we’re going to need a Republican vote in order to move anything out of the Minnesota Senate,” Murphy said.

    The two DFL leaders and Walz suggested taking a vote on the assault weapons ban — even if it doesn’t have enough support to pass — so Minnesotans know where their elected officials stand on the issue.

    “I hope that in the time between now and whenever we have a special session, whenever that is, that all members of the Legislature, but particularly the Republican colleagues, are listening to what the community’s saying, what the families are saying, and taking it to heart,” Stephenson said.

    Some families have spoken out in wake of the shooting, demanding that the Legislature do something to prevent this from happening again. The mother of 9-year-old Vivian St. Clair, who was shot three times that day, held a news conference last week imploring that lawmakers to make a change.

    “To our lawmakers and people in power: Who the hell is going to do something? Who’s going to make meaningful change and take tangible steps to break the cycle?” Malia Kimbrell said.

    Walz said recently he would unveil a full, detailed package of proposals in the coming days. He is considering, in addition to the assault weapons ban, a safe storage law, liability insurance and a stronger red flag law

    The governor and leaders are expected to meet again this week. The regular session is due to start in mid-February.

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    Caroline Cummings

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  • Walz’s gun plan wouldn’t stop shootings, but it might shred civil liberties

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    Minnesota Democratic Gov. Tim Walz announced on Tuesday plans to hold a special legislative session to introduce new statewide gun control measures, including a ban on “assault weapons.” This comes in the wake of last week’s tragic mass shooting at Annunciation Catholic School in Minneapolis, which left 21 injured and 2 dead.

    Despite assurances that the proposals would not infringe upon Second Amendment rights, Walz’s proposed measures raise significant constitutional concerns. In addition to a ban, Walz proposed a law that would mandate stricter standards for safe storage, increased funding for mental health treatment, and further expansion of Minnesota’s 2023 red flag laws.

    The governor’s statements drew mixed reactions, mostly along partisan lines, with state Democrats largely supportive. Echoing Walz’s call, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter, and eight other city leaders urged repeal of Minnesota’s 1985 preemption statute, which bars local governments from enacting stricter gun laws than the state. Even if broader legislation fails, they insist cities must be able to act.

    State Republicans, despite expressing their willingness to work with Democrats to address gun violence, have predictably voiced skepticism toward the proposed measures, citing concerns about potential civil liberties violations, questioning the governor’s intentions, and ultimately doubting that a bipartisan resolution could be reached.

    Walz still seems willing to work with Republicans. But whatever kind of legislation the special session produces—particularly restrictions and/or local bans on common firearms—will likely face constitutional challenges if ratified. 

    The Supreme Court’s 2022 decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen established that all state and local-level gun regulations must align with firearm laws that were in place at the time of the Constitution’s framing. Since then, courts have overturned various state-level gun control laws, including bans on so-called “assault weapons,” for not reflecting that standard—among them, Illinois’ attempted prohibition of semiautomatic rifles and Tennessee’s ban on concealed carry in public parks.

    In Minnesota, these complexities extend further. The push to repeal the state’s preemption law—designed to prevent municipalities from passing stricter firearm ordinances than the state—would unravel decades of legal consistency, exposing residents to a fragmented landscape of local regulations and expanding the potential for municipal overreach. However, concerns over state overreach are not merely theoretical.

    Since red flag laws first emerged in 1999, civil liberties advocates have warned of due process erosion, as courts have authorized firearm seizures through ex parte orders with minimal evidentiary standards. In many cases, individuals lose their constitutional rights without being criminally charged or having a chance to dispute allegations. This lack of clarity can lead to deadly misunderstandings, as in 2018, when Maryland resident Gary Willis was killed by police while being served a red flag order issued without his knowledge. Extreme though it was, the case underscores how such laws can escalate risk and undermine core constitutional protections.

    Rather than address these deficiencies, Walz appears ready to double down, suggesting not only an expansion to his earlier red flag laws, but also broader state authority to disarm citizens based on subjective assessments of future risk. If the current trajectory continues, Minnesota may soon serve as a national test case for how far civil liberties can be curtailed in the name of safety.

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    Jacob Swartz

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  • Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz confirms he’s considering special session on guns after Annunciation shooting

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    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz on Tuesday confirmed he is talking to legislators about a potential special session to address gun violence after a mass shooting at a Minneapolis church.

    “The sad reality of it is is that what happened last week is preventable, because so many nations around the world do it,” Walz said while attending the first day of school at Deerwood Elementary in Eagan. “And we cannot resign ourselves to believe that our little ones can’t be safe in what should be and always is the most safe environments they can possibly be in.”

    A shooter firing through the windows of Annunciation Catholic Church during a school Mass killed two children and injured 21 other people — most of them also kids — on Wednesday morning. Since then, parents, community members and other elected officials have called for change. 

    The focus of the special session would be on additional gun-related measures. It would bring lawmakers back to the Capitol earlier than the start of the regular session in February. Walz said he plans to put out a proposal “in the next day or so that I think is very comprehensive, it’s been done in other places, it’s been done without infringements on people’s Second Amendment rights, but it has proven that it will help protect our students.”

    “I am not going to allow anyone to try and make the case that the United States is unique in either mental health issues or other things,” he said. “The things that make America unique in terms of shootings is we just have more guns and the wrong kinds of guns that are on the streets.”

    Walz acknowledged that the split Legislature would make passing gun laws difficult. Though Minnesota passed enhanced background checks and red flag laws in 2023, more recent efforts have failed in the divided Legislature.

    “I have made the case and I am calling through legislators to try and make sure they get there, because I can call a special session, I can’t run a special session,” Walz said. “And to be very candid, just in a very evenly divided — I’m going to need some Republicans to break with the orthodoxy and say that we need to do something on guns, and that’s the opportunity right now.”

    A senior administrative official told WCCO last week Walz was considering a special session on gun control as early as this month. GOP House Speaker Lisa Demuth and Senate Minority Leader Mark Johnson both said at the time that Walz had not spoken to them about a special session. 

    “As we work through this tragedy, we need to lead with grace and cooperation, not political rallies and vitriol. I look forward to the coming conversations on how we can most effectively address the evil we saw this week perpetrated against the most vulnerable among us,” Demuth said.  

    Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey called for a ban on assault weapons after the Annunciation shooting. In response to Frey’s comments, the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus said it “opposes any ban on commonly owned semi-automatic firearms and standard-capacity magazines. Such proposals are unconstitutional and do nothing to reduce crime.”

    Typically, only the governor can call a special session, though the Legislature can set its length. 

    “If Minnesota lets this moment slide and we determine that it’s OK for little ones not to be safe in a school environment or a church environment, then shame on us,” Walz said.

    contributed to this report.

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    Anthony Bettin

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  • Gov. Tim Walz weighs calling special session on guns in wake of Annunciation mass shooting

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    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is exploring calling a special session on gun control this fall, according to a senior administrative official familiar with the matter, and is making calls to lawmakers on the subject.

    This comes two days after a mass shooting at the Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis, in which a shooter killed two schoolchildren and injured 18 others during a morning Mass. Less than 24 hours before, a separate shooter opened fire at a south Minneapolis intersection, injuring six and killing one person.

    It is not clear the direction Walz wants the special session to take, or which policies he wants the Legislature to consider. Elected leaders, including Democratic-Farmer-Labor lawmakers and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, on Thursday called for a ban on assault weapons.

    Under most circumstances, only the governor is permitted to call a special session, though the legislature has the authority to determine its length. It is common practice for the governor and legislative leaders to agree on the business of the session before it is officially called.

    In recent years, the Minnesota Legislature has approved new gun restrictions, including a red flag law and expanded background checks. Efforts to pass other measures have failed to get the necessary support.

    GOP House Speaker Lisa Demuth said she was “disappointed to hear through social media, instead of from the governor, that he plans to call a special session.”

    “As we work through this tragedy, we need to lead with grace and cooperation, not political rallies and vitriol. I look forward to the coming conversations on how we can most effectively address the evil we saw this week perpetrated against the most vulnerable among us,” Demuth said.

    “Republicans are committed to addressing the root causes of violence, supporting safe schools, and increasing access to mental health resources. Calling for a special session without even consulting legislative leaders is not a serious way to begin. This is a partisan stunt from a governor who continues to engage in destructive political rhetoric,” said Senate Republican Leader Mark Johnson.

    WCCO reached out to DFL leadership and has not heard back yet.

    Top leaders in the on the state Senate’s public safety committee said they are establishing a working group to address comprehensive gun violence prevention efforts, hate prevention and mental health.

    “This horrific act of violence requires real action that meets the moment. Together with our colleagues, we will make gun violence prevention our most urgent priority and prevent anything like this ever happening again in any community in Minnesota. We hope that our fellow legislators join us in this critical work, and that we come together to put politics aside and put solutions in place that keep our kids and communities safe,” said DFL Sens. Ron Latz and Zaynab Mohamed in a joint statement.

    The special session could begin as soon as September, the Walz official told WCCO. One seat in the Minnesota House sits vacant following the shooting death of Rep. Melissa Hortman earlier this summer. Walz called the deaths of Hortman and her husband a “political assassination.” A special election is set for Sept. 16 to fill the seat for the northwest metro area, which leans Democrat.

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    Aki Nace

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  • DNC chair says Democrats can’t be only party that plays by the rules, urges members to fight

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    Top Democrats emphasized party unity and railed against President Trump’s policies on the first day of the Democratic National Committee’s annual summer meeting in Minneapolis Monday. CBS News correspondent Nidia Cavazos has more.

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  • Gov. Tim Walz coy on third term run as he talks to voters at Minnesota State Fair

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    Gov. Tim Walz was out at the Minnesota State Fair talking to voters about issues and their concerns.

    It’s as if he were running for office, but he insists he has not decided to run for a third term and his decision will come soon.

    Walz continues to play the Hamlet of Summit Avenue on the question of to run or not to run, his pause drawn out by the shocking assassination of Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman. The governor was a guest on WCCO Sunday Morning at 10:30 a.m. at the State Fair. 

    “I will just say personally, this one about broke me. I think it’s no secret, Melissa Hortman was a dear friend, she was an ally,” he said. 

    Walz’s approval rating in the latest Minnesota poll sits at 49%. He has a sharp gender gap, with 60% of women giving him a thumbs up and only 37% of men voicing approval.

    “We see a bit of a gender divide, but in all seriousness on it, I think this idea of access to reproductive care, we know that these are critical issues for folks,” the governor said.

    A third-term run would be a referendum on the sweeping progressive agenda passed during the Democratic trifecta in 2023. Perhaps the most impactful policy of that agenda won’t start until Jan. 1 of 2026, when a new paid family and medical leave law will provide up to 20 weeks paid leave for an illness, an illness of a relative and for the birth and adopton of a child for almost all Minnesota workers, including those who are part time. Republicans warn it will be too expensive and hurt small businesses.

    “Well, that’s absolutely false. I think folks here may know this, all but six other countries in the world already have this,” he said.

    But any campaign for a third term would be shadowed by endless attacks over the estimated billion dollars of fraud cases that have piled up on the governor’s watch. Walz has said new laws now allow him and state agencies to block alleged fraud much earlier. And the governor likes to say in a home break-in, the homeowner is not the one to blame. If Walz runs again, voters will decide how they feel about that.

    You can watch WCCO Sunday Morning with Esme Murphy and Adam Del Rosso every Sunday at 6 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.

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    Esme Murphy

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  • Harris Vies For Latino Voters, Highlighting Trump Surrogate’s Disrespect Toward Puerto Rico at Madison Square Garden

    Harris Vies For Latino Voters, Highlighting Trump Surrogate’s Disrespect Toward Puerto Rico at Madison Square Garden

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    In the final days of the campaign, both Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump’s camps have been attempting to appeal to Latino voters—a growing, key, and politically non-monolithic electorate.

    What has been a consistent competition for these votes throughout the entirety of the 2024 election cycle intensified last week when Trump surrogate and stand-up comic Tony Hinchcliffe referred to Puerto Rico as “garbage” during his time slot at the Madison Square Garden MAGA rally on Sunday.

    “I don’t know if you guys know this, but there’s literally a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean right now,” Hinchcliffe, who has said comedians should never apologize, began. “I think it’s called Puerto Rico.” During his 12-minute remarks, Hinchcliffe also said, “These Latinos, they love making babies, too, just know that. They do. They do. There’s no pulling out. They don’t do that. They come inside, just like they did to our country.”

    The pushback from Puerto Ricans across America was instantaneous. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-New York, who first responded to the comments while on a Twitch stream with Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Walz, said it was “super upsetting,” adding that her family is from Puerto Rico.

    “The thing that is so messed up that I wish more people understood, is that the things that they do in Puerto Rico are a testing ground for the policies and the horrors that they wish … that they do unveil in working-class communities across the United States,” Ocasio-Cortez said. “When you have some a-hole calling Puerto Rico ‘floating garbage,’ know that that’s what they think about you.”

    Celebrities with Puerto Rican heritage, including Jennifer Lopez and Bad Bunny, joined in, denouncing the remarks and expressing love for the islands—whose residents cannot vote in the presidential election despite being American citizens.

    “You do know he’s a COMEDIAN, and these are JOKES, right????” the Trump campaign’s national press secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote in an email to TIME magazine. “The joke does not reflect the views of President Trump or the campaign,” senior advisor Danielle Alvarez said in a statement, also to TIME.

    “Nobody loves our Latino community and our Puerto Rican community more than I do,” Trump said at a rally in Allentown, a majority Latino town.

    “Puerto Rico is home to some of the most talented, innovative, and ambitious people in our nation. And Puerto Ricans deserve a president who sees and invests in that strength,” Harris said in a video posted the same day as Trump’s MSG rally. “I will never forget what Donald Trump did and what he did not do when Puerto Rico needed a caring and a competent leader. He abandoned the island.”

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    Katie Herchenroeder

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  • Interactive Map: Where are the presidential candidates on Nov. 3?

    Interactive Map: Where are the presidential candidates on Nov. 3?

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    Interactive Map: Where are the presidential candidates on Nov. 3?

    The election is two days away, and candidates Vice President Kamala Harris, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, former President Donald Trump and Ohio Sen. JD Vance are not slowing down, with 11 public events scheduled across them today, Sunday, Nov. 3. Harris will be spending the day in Michigan, making stops in Detroit and Pontiac before speaking at a GOTV rally at Michigan State University, aimed at encouraging students to vote. Meanwhile, Trump will host rallies in three swing states: Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Georgia. For the second day in a row, Vance will be out campaigning with Donald Trump Jr., holding rallies in Raleigh, North Carolina, Aston, Pennsylvania and Derry, New Hampshire. Walz will also be campaigning with a family member of his running mate, as Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff will join him at a GOTV rally near Atlanta that will include musical performances from Jon Bon Jovi, The War and Treaty and Michael Stipe. He’ll then head to Charlotte, North Carolina, for a political event in the evening.Below is Hearst Television’s candidate tracker. Track where the presidential and vice presidential nominees have visited and held events since July 21, when Harris entered the race.

    The election is two days away, and candidates Vice President Kamala Harris, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, former President Donald Trump and Ohio Sen. JD Vance are not slowing down, with 11 public events scheduled across them today, Sunday, Nov. 3.

    Harris will be spending the day in Michigan, making stops in Detroit and Pontiac before speaking at a GOTV rally at Michigan State University, aimed at encouraging students to vote. Meanwhile, Trump will host rallies in three swing states: Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Georgia. For the second day in a row, Vance will be out campaigning with Donald Trump Jr., holding rallies in Raleigh, North Carolina, Aston, Pennsylvania and Derry, New Hampshire. Walz will also be campaigning with a family member of his running mate, as Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff will join him at a GOTV rally near Atlanta that will include musical performances from Jon Bon Jovi, The War and Treaty and Michael Stipe. He’ll then head to Charlotte, North Carolina, for a political event in the evening.

    Below is Hearst Television’s candidate tracker. Track where the presidential and vice presidential nominees have visited and held events since July 21, when Harris entered the race.

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  • Presidential candidates making stops in key battleground states with days until election

    Presidential candidates making stops in key battleground states with days until election

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    With days to go, both presidential candidates make their final push for the presidency


    With days to go, both presidential candidates make their final push for the presidency

    02:21

    HUDSON, Wis. — It’s the final weekend before election day and both campaigns make stops in key battleground states.

    Saturday, it was Gwen Walz in Hudson, Wisconsin at Hop and Barrel Brewing to persuade and turn out voters in the final stretch of the campaign.

    “I trust you Wisconsin to do everything we can, and all Minnesotans are willing to support you, Walz said. “We are good neighbors, and we are in this together.”

    In St. Paul, members of the Somali and Muslim community gathered at the state capitol to throw their support behind Former President Donald Trump.

    Many who took to the podium today say they feel left behind.

    While expressing their frustration with the Democratic party, speakers say they see the GOP as a way forward for their communities.

    “We want drugs off our streets, we want our children and our women and our girls to be protected. Those are just common core American Values that we are all fighting for and what I have seen is the Democrats have abandoned us.

    Both Governor Walz and Senator Vance are scheduled to make appearances in Wisconsin on Monday.

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    Ubah Ali

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  • Interactive Map: Where are the presidential candidates on Nov. 1?

    Interactive Map: Where are the presidential candidates on Nov. 1?

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    Interactive Map: Where are the presidential candidates on Nov. 1?

    It’s the final days of the campaign and the candidates are busier than ever, with nine public events scheduled today, Friday, Nov. 1, between Vice President Kamala Harris, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, former President Donald Trump and Ohio Sen. JD Vance. Other than one Vance event in North Carolina, all eight appearances will be in the neighboring states of Wisconsin and Michigan, putting the candidates in close proximity to each other. Harris will host a Get Out The Vote community event in Appleton, Wisconsin, followed by a “When We Vote We Win” GOTV rally in Milwaukee with remarks by Cardi B and musical performances by GloRilla, Flo Milli, MC Lyte, The Isley Brothers and DJ GEMINI GILLY. Trump is also set to host a rally in Milwaukee, as well as one in Warren, Michigan. Meanwhile, Walz will deliver remarks at three campaign events in Michigan and Vance will also host a rally in the Wolverine State. Below is Hearst Television’s candidate tracker. Track where the presidential and vice presidential nominees have visited and held events since July 21, when Harris entered the race.

    It’s the final days of the campaign and the candidates are busier than ever, with nine public events scheduled today, Friday, Nov. 1, between Vice President Kamala Harris, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, former President Donald Trump and Ohio Sen. JD Vance.

    Other than one Vance event in North Carolina, all eight appearances will be in the neighboring states of Wisconsin and Michigan, putting the candidates in close proximity to each other. Harris will host a Get Out The Vote community event in Appleton, Wisconsin, followed by a “When We Vote We Win” GOTV rally in Milwaukee with remarks by Cardi B and musical performances by GloRilla, Flo Milli, MC Lyte, The Isley Brothers and DJ GEMINI GILLY. Trump is also set to host a rally in Milwaukee, as well as one in Warren, Michigan. Meanwhile, Walz will deliver remarks at three campaign events in Michigan and Vance will also host a rally in the Wolverine State.

    Below is Hearst Television’s candidate tracker. Track where the presidential and vice presidential nominees have visited and held events since July 21, when Harris entered the race.

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