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Can the Minnesota GOP Shock the Political World in November?

Posted on Wednesday, February 25, 2026
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by Herald Boas
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19 Comments
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Minnesota’s public image and reputation have suffered grievous blows in recent weeks and months, but the decline has been unfolding for a much longer period.

The origins of the state’s positive image came from its post-World War II liberal politics and its successful new business community. Former Minneapolis Mayor Hubert Humphrey led a group of the state’s Democrats to form the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party (DFL) that eliminated the radicals and communists from the pre-war Farmer-Labor Party.

Minnesota produced in addition to Humphrey a number of national liberal figures, including Walter Mondale and Eugene McCarthy, who helped create the natural succession to Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal coalition which had dominated U.S. politics from 1933 to 1948.

At the same time, Minnesota’s traditional grain, timber, and iron ore business base saw the creation of major new retail, food, and technology corporations such as Target, General Mills, 3M, Control Data, and Medtronic, which rapidly expanded nationally and added white-collar employment in its Minnesota home offices.

At the same time as East Coast and Rust Belt states saw their heavy industry and manufacturing plants decline, resulting in a loss of employment and population, Minnesota saw growth and population increase. The new and successful corporations, in turn, financed and encouraged local cultural organizations, including theater, music, and literary activity with national reputations beyond what might be expected from a relatively small state.

“Minnesota Nice” became the catchphrase for the state’s liberal economic and cultural boom character.

Humphrey and Mondale became U.S. Vice Presidents and later ran unsuccessfully for president. Other liberal Minnesota politicians, including McCarthy, Don Fraser, and Martin Sabo, became national figures. Minnesota musicians such as Bob Dylan and Prince became international cultural icons.

But by the time current Governor Tim Walz was chosen to be Kamala Harris’s vice presidential running mate in 2024, the euphoria of Minnesota Nice had turned into a negative “Naughty” Minnesota.

Walz himself is the personification of the decline of the Gopher State.

The Walz administration raised taxes, promoted questionable liberal welfare policies, imposed a woke educational culture, and discouraged or punished small businesses and the wealthy as more and more successful residents and companies have begun to leave the state for friendlier locations.

Staggering levels of public program fraud have been uncovered, and opponents have charged Walz and DFL Attorney General Keith Ellison with negligence in recognizing and prosecuting the widespread corruption.

Higher taxes produced inevitable outsized state budget surpluses, but Walz and the DFL legislative majorities only raised taxes higher and carelessly spent the surpluses on more pet liberal welfare projects.

Walz’s brief campaign for the vice presidency became a political parody, and the governor became a political joke within the travesty of the Democrats’ hapless presidential campaign.

No Republican has been elected statewide in Minnesota since 2006, but revelations of mismanagement and fraud in state programs have grown so great that the 2026 midterm elections could produce a red wave like the one that occurred in 1978, when a similar DFL domination of statewide elected offices produced a surprise Republican landslide that elected a GOP governor and two GOP U.S. senators.

Tim Walz had announced he would run for re-election this year, but his popularity plummeted so much that he has announced his withdrawal from the race. DFL U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar, who had launched an unsuccessful bid for president in 2020, has declared she will run for governor. She is the heavy favorite to win the DFL nomination and will be formidable in November.

But several prominent Republicans have announced for governor, including GOP Speaker of the Minnesota House Lisa Demuth, State Representative Kristin Robbins, and the 2022 GOP gubernatorial nominee, Scott Jensen. Jensen has since switched to the state auditor’s race. The likely Republican nominee will be Speaker Demuth. She is currently the underdog in hypothetical general election matchups, but if a GOP landslide occurs in November, she could win.

Incumbent DFL U.S. Senator Tina Smith is not running for re-election this year. Lt. Governor Peggy Flanagan and retiring Congresswoman Angie Craig are the principal DFLers running for the seat. Flanagan has received the major party leader endorsements so far, but Craig is likely the more formidable DFL nominee in November, based on her political success in the state’s 2nd congressional district. Flanagan, as part of the Walz administration, could be hurt by the voter backlash to the fraud scandals.

The Republicans also now have a major candidate for that U.S. Senate seat. Well-known sports broadcaster Michele Tafoya has entered the race, and although this is her first run for public office, she has quickly demonstrated her command of the political issues. The likely 2026 GOP nominee, she could win in November even if there is no landslide.

The political environment in Minnesota this year is similar to those in many other midwestern states. Voters in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul vote heavily for the DFL. Rural and most small-town voters vote heavily for Republicans. The 4-4 partisan split of the state’s congressional seats reflects this divide.

The key to the election will be the suburbs of the Twin Cities. In recent years, suburban voters, especially women, have favored the DFL. But in 2026, the GOP could have a respected black woman Speaker of the State House (Demuth) running for governor and a well-known woman media personality (Tafoya) running for U.S. senator. If the anti-fraud backlash is still in the forefront eight months from now, the conditions for a conservative sweep at the polls could be just right.

Herald Boas is a writer for AMAC Newsline.

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Diane
Diane
3 months ago

Criminal Omar needs to be removed from our Congress. Now.

Ray
Ray
3 months ago

Republicans can win if they start promoting the good values of the Republicans right now. They need to keep show the fraud of the demoncrats and take over of foreigners in Minnesota part of America’s Heartland.

anna hubert
anna hubert
3 months ago

If the voter has not opened his eyes yet to see the corruption and the rot right before his eyes, then he is hopeless. He must realize that arm of the law is paralyzed and useless to deal with the criminals, that only he, the voter can turf them out for good. He has no other option if the state and he is to survive. Better late than never.

Roseann Carpenter
Roseann Carpenter
3 months ago

I am trusting that there are more native Minnesotans, eligible to vote, than there are Somali voters. For sure I cannot imagine citizens being happy with the fraud losses incurred by this criminal element, but thats maybe asking too much from an uninformed citizenry. I blame the media that will not report this fraud.

Charlotte
Charlotte
3 months ago

Minnesota’s huge fraud by the Somali’s and the Minnesota government which looked away instead of stopping it should be enough reason to NOT vote for the radical liberals this year. But, with the media on the side of the thieves instead of the citizens of MN who knows what will happen? Walz and Frey have done a terrible thing to that state and the twin cities. One can only hope and pray that their citizens find the light!

Victoria
Victoria
3 months ago

Mr. Boas’ failure to mention grassroots gubernatorial candidate Mike Lindell is shameful and leads me to question AMAC’s America First bona fides.

Robert Mallory
Robert Mallory
3 months ago

Please make it so, Lord, please make it so!

CarrieJ
CarrieJ
3 months ago

I have friends and they will vote for any democrat no matter what has happened in their state of MN. I live in western Wisconsin and I try and stay out of that state and do my shopping locally in WI. I’m disgusted in the fraud and I believe fraud in many states stealing our hard working money. Republicans can WIN if they get out and vote and bring /inform voters to get out and vote. You can’t win sitting on your butt and ignoring local, state, and federal elections. I like DOGE and glad they are finding the corruption.

Ninarae
Ninarae
3 months ago

Our Prayers will be with them to ‘CHOOSE the RIGHT!!’

papaYEC
papaYEC
3 months ago

They would easily do so in a free and fair election, but the insurrectionist communist DemocRat Party will–as always–commit any and all crimes and atrocities to ensure elections are never free or fair.

Donna
Donna
3 months ago

Well reviewed status update of Minnesota. Praying the Republicans are elected across the board and turn around the former Dem trifecta’s trajectory of corruption, collusion, lies, cheating and deceit which is costing we taxpayers dearly.

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