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2024 Minnesota House of Representatives election

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2024 Minnesota House of Representatives election

← 2022 November 5, 2024 (2024-11-05) 2026 →

All 134 seats in the Minnesota House of Representatives
68 seats needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader Melissa Hortman Lisa Demuth
Party Democratic (DFL) Republican
Leader since January 3, 2017 January 3, 2023
Leader's seat 34B–Brooklyn Park 13A–Cold Spring
Seats before 70 64
Seats after 67 67
Seat change Decrease 3 Increase 3
Popular vote 1,545,213 1,530,797
Percentage 49.95 49.48
Swing Decrease 0.96 pp Increase 1.19 pp


Speaker before election

Melissa Hortman
Democratic (DFL)

Elected Speaker

TBD

The 2024 Minnesota House of Representatives election was held in the U.S. state of Minnesota on November 5, 2024, to elect members to the House of Representatives of the 94th Minnesota Legislature. Primaries took place on August 13, 2024.[1]

In the previous legislature, the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party (DFL) leveraged their existing trifecta to enact significant legislative reforms, including paid family leave, universal free school meals, a progressive child tax credit, increased sales and gas taxes for housing and transportation respectively, codified abortion rights, established a commission to redesign the state flag, and eliminated public university tuition for families earning under $85,000. The slim majorities held by the DFL were maintained by narrow victories in key battleground districts. They won control of the chamber following the 2018 election and entered this cycle with a majority of 5 seats.[2]

The DFL lost 3 seats in Greater Minnesota to the Republicans, resulting in a tie with both parties winning 67 seats.[3] Two seats, in 14B in Saint Cloud and 54A in Shakopee, were won by the DFL within a 0.5% margin and held hand recounts, which confirmed the initial winners.[4]

Republicans are challenging two seat results. In District 54A, 21 ballots went missing due to human error on the first day of absentee ballot processing, and the margin between candidates was only 15 votes after a recount.[5][6]In District 40B, Republicans seek to invalidate DFL winner Curtis Johnson's election certificate, claiming Johnson does not meet residency requirements.[7]

Retiring members

[edit]
Retiring members
     DFL member retiring
     Republican member retiring

DFL

[edit]

Republican

[edit]

Primary elections results

[edit]

A primary election was held in 19 districts to nominate Republican and DFL candidates. 15 Republican nominations and 7 DFL nominations were contested. Eight incumbents faced challenges for their party's nomination, with Brian Johnson (R-Cambridge), being the only incumbent who lost their party's nomination.[25][26]

Primary results by district
District Party Candidates Votes %
6B Republican Josh Heintzeman (incumbent) 2,032 91.04
Matthew Eric Zinda 200 8.96
7B Republican Matt Matasich 485 15.78
Cal Warwas 2,588 84.22
8 A DFL Jordon Johnson 614 17.24
Peter Johnson 2,947 82.76
B Republican Timothy L. Meyer 561 38.19
Shawn Savela 908 61.81
9A Republican Jeff Backer (incumbent) 3,151 65.73
Boone Carlson 1,643 34.27
10A Republican Ron Kresha (incumbent) 2,295 50.38
Diane Webb-Skillings 2,260 49.62
17A Republican Dawn Gillman (incumbent) 2,093 84.02
Wayne Olson 398 15.98
19B Republican Michael J. Ditlevson 875 33.47
Thomas J. Sexton 1,739 66.53
24B Republican Jesse O'Driscoll 631 42.84
Dan Sepeda 842 57.16
26 A Republican S. James Doerr 345 13.31
Aaron Repinski 2,247 86.69
DFL Sarah Kruger 2,162 51.97
Dwayne Voegeli 1,998 48.03
B Republican Gregory M. Davids (incumbent) 1,933 52.73
Gary M. Steuart 1,733 47.27
DFL Eric M. Leitzen 325 18.23
Allie Wolf 1,458 81.77
28A Republican James "Jimmy" Gordon 2,561 65.99
Brian Johnson (incumbent) 1,320 34.01
36B DFL Brion Curran (incumbent) 1,854 62.59
T.J. Malaskee 1,108 37.41
38 A Republican Yelena S. Kurdyumova 64 10.16
Brad Olson 566 89.84
DFL Huldah Hitsley 1,005 51.28
Wynfred Russell 955 48.72
B Republican Chris Chubb 98 26.85
Robert Marvin 267 73.15
41A Republican Wayne A Johnson 1,152 53.88
Grayson McNew 986 46.12
49A DFL Kissy C Coakley 798 25.13
Alex Falconer 2,377 74.87
61A DFL Katie Jones 3,956 43.15
Isabel Rolfes 1,872 20.42
Will Stancil 3,340 36.43
67B Republican Sharon Anderson 172 51.96
AJ Plehal 159 48.04
[26]

Predictions and polls

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
CNalysis[27] Likely D October 30, 2024

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s) administered Sample MOE DFL Rep. Other Undecided
KSTP/SurveyUSA[28] February 23–28, 2024 1,603 (LV) ± 3.0% 46% 41% 3% 11%
KSTP/SurveyUSA[29] April 3–7, 2024 608 (LV) ± 4.9% 44% 45% 3% 8%
KSTP/SurveyUSA[30] May 8–11, 2024 625 (LV) ± 4.3% 43% 45% 4% 8%
KSTP/SurveyUSA[31] June 12–16, 2024 626 (LV) ± 4.5% 47% 45% 1% 7%
KSTP/SurveyUSA[32] July 23–25, 2024 656 (LV) ± 4.1% 50% 40% 2% 7%
KSTP/SurveyUSA[33] August 27–29, 2024 635 (LV) ± 4.5% 48% 43% 2% 8%
KSTP/SurveyUSA[34] September 23–26, 2024 646 (LV) ± 4.3% 47% 43% 3% 8%
KSTP/SurveyUSA[35] October 24–28, 2024 728 (LV) ± 4.0% 48% 43% 1% 7%

Summary of results

[edit]
Districts won
     Democratic–Farmer–Labor win
     Republican win
Party Candidates Votes Seats
No. % ± No. ± %
Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party 133 1,545,213 49.95 -0.96 67 –3 50.0
Republican Party of Minnesota 128 1,530,797 49.48 +1.19 67 +3 50.0
Independence–Alliance Party of Minnesota 1 3,517 0.11 -0.07 0 ±0 0.0
Libertarian Party of Minnesota 1 1,298 0.04 +0.01 0 ±0 0.0
Green Party of Minnesota 1 3,284 0.11 +0.11 0 ±0 0.0
Independent 2 1,560 0.05 -0.03 0 ±0 0.0
Write-in N/A 7,814 0.25 -0.09 0 ±0 0.0
Total 3,093,483 100 N/A 134 N/A 100
Source: Minnesota Secretary of State[36]

Close and competitive districts

[edit]
District gains by party
     Republican gain

Major Minnesota news outlets published lists of House districts that were expected to be competitive in 2024 based on past results and campaign spending. The Minnesota Star Tribune considered 15 races competitive, MPR News listed 14 as districts to watch, MinnPost and the Minnesota Reformer both cited 16 districts.[37][38][39][40]

21 districts were decided by margins below 10 points, 16 races under 5 points, and 4 separated by less than 1%.[36] The closest contest was in District 54A, where Brad Tabke currently led by 14 votes on election night (0.06%); this margin was extended to 15 votes after a hand recount. Districts 54A and 14B both saw their results confirmed in recounts.[41][42]

District Incumbent 2024 Results
Incumbent
Name
Retiring Party First
elected
2022
margin (pp)[43]
Winner Margin (pp)[36] Result
2A Matt Grossell Yes Rep. 2016 8.8 Bidal Duran Jr 3.83 Rep. hold
3B Natalie Zeleznikar No Rep. 2022 0.15 Natalie Zeleznikar 0.60 Rep. hold
7B Dave Lislegard Yes DFL 2018 2.36 Cal Warwas 12.78 Rep. gain
11A Jeff Dotseth No Rep. 2022 2.45 Jeff Dotseth 2.78 Rep. hold
14A Bernie Perryman No Rep. 2022 1.39 Bernie Perryman 12.85 Rep. hold
14B Dan Wolgamott No DFL 2018 3.66 Dan Wolgamott 0.96[a] DFL hold
18A Jeff Brand No DFL 2018 2.20 Erica Schwartz 3.37 Rep. gain
26A Gene Pelowski Yes DFL 1986 10.19 Aaron Repinski 5.70 Rep. gain
32B Matt Norris No DFL 2022 2.33 Matt Norris 1.73 DFL hold
33B Josiah Hill No DFL 2022 8.03 Josiah Hill 2.70 DFL hold
34A Danny Nadeau No Rep. 2022 6.76 Danny Nadeau 7.08 Rep. hold
35A Zack Stephenson No DFL 2018 4.97 Zack Stephenson 3.82 DFL hold
35B Jerry Newton Yes DFL 2008 1.35 Kari Rehrauer 1.22 DFL hold
36A Elliott Engen No Rep. 2022 2.82 Elliott Engen 8.23 Rep. hold
36B Brion Curran No DFL 2022 7.1 Brion Curran 3.28 DFL hold
41A Mark Wiens Yes Rep. 2022 0.55 Wayne Johnson 1.09 Rep. hold
41B Shane Hudella Yes Rep. 2022 2.18 Tom Dippel 2.08 Rep. hold
45A Andrew Myers No Rep. 2022 6.09 Andrew Myers 10.13 Rep. hold
47B Ethan Cha No DFL 2022 6.32 Ethan Cha 8.95 DFL hold
48B Lucy Rehm No DFL 2022 2.00 Lucy Rehm 0.87 DFL hold
54A Brad Tabke No DFL 2018 8.29 Brad Tabke 0.06[b] DFL hold
55A Jessica Hanson No DFL 2020 6.14 Jessica Hanson 6.77 DFL hold
57B Jeff Witte No Rep. 2022 3.33 Jeff Witte 4.79 Rep. hold
58A Kristi Pursell No DFL 2022 9.02 Kristi Pursell 4.95 DFL hold

Results by district

[edit]

1A1B2A2B3A3B4A4B5A5B6A6B7A7B8A8B9A9B10A10B11A11B12A12B13A13B14A14B15A15B16A16B17A17B18A18B19A19B20A20B21A21B22A22B23A23B24A24B25A25B26A26B27A27B28A28B29A29B30A30B31A31B32A32B33A33B34A34B35A35B36A36B37A37B38A38B39A39B40A40B41A41B42A42B43A43B44A44B45A45B46A46B47A47B48A48B49A49B50A50B51A51B52A52B53A53B54A54B55A55B56A56B57A57B58A58B59A59B60A60B61A61B62A62B63A63B64A64B65A65B66A66B67A67B

Source: Minnesota Secretary of State[26][36]

District 1A

[edit]

District 1A is located in the northwest corner of the state and includes all or portions of Kittson, Marshall, Pennington, and Roseau counties. The incumbent, Republican John Burkel, has served since 2021 and was re-elected with 76.07% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]
  • John Burkel (R), incumbent[45]
  • James Sceville (DFL)[46]

Results

[edit]
District 1B vote share by county
District 1A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican John Burkel (incumbent) 17,420 76.07
Democratic (DFL) James Sceville 5,466 23.87
Write-in 14 0.06
Total votes 22,900 100.0
Republican hold

District 1B

[edit]

District 1B is located in northwestern Minnesota and includes East Grand Forks, Crookston, and Red Lake Falls. The incumbent is Republican Debra Kiel, who was first elected in 2010. She was re-elected in 2022 with 71.13% of the vote. Kiel announced that she was retiring at the end of the term and would not be seeking re-election.

Republican Steve Gander won the election with 67% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]
  • Mike Christopherson (DFL)[47]
  • Steve Gander (R)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 1B vote share by county
District 1B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Steve Gander 13,939 67.20
Democratic (DFL) Mike Christopherson 6,791 32.74
Write-in 14 0.07
Total votes 20,744 100.0
Republican hold

District 2A

[edit]

2A is located in northwestern Minnesota, stretching as far south as Bemidji and as far north as the Northwest Angle. Incumbent Matt Grossell (R) won in 2022 with 54.35% of the vote. Grossell is not seeking re-election.[48] Republican Bidal Duran Jr won with about 52% of votes cast.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 2A vote share by precinct
District 2A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Bidal Duran Jr 11,518 51.86
Democratic (DFL) Reed Olson 10,667 48.03
Write-in 26 0.12
Total votes 22,211 100.0
Republican hold

District 2B

[edit]

District 2B is in north-central Minnesota, including the towns of Bagley and Mahnomen.[51] Incumbent Matt Bliss (R), first elected in 2016, won with 63.73% of the vote.[43]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 2B vote share by county
District 2B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Matt Bliss 14,372 63.73
Democratic (DFL) Michael Reyes 8,168 36.22
Write-in 10 0.04
Total votes 22,550 100
Republican hold

District 3A

[edit]

Incumbent Roger Skraba (R) was first elected in 2022, when he won by a 15-vote margin, earning 49.98% of votes.[43] District 3A is located in northeastern Minnesota, covering large portions of the Iron Range and the northern Arrowhead Region. Cities in the district include International Falls, Ely, Silver Bay, and Grand Marais. It is the largest house district by area.[52]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 3A vote share by precinct
District 3A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Roger Skraba 14,443 55.54
Democratic (DFL) Harley Droba 10,779 41.45
Forward Rich Tru 712 2.74
Write-in 73 0.28
Total votes 26,007 100

District 3B

[edit]

Incumbent Natalie Zeleznikar (R) was first elected in 2022, winning by 33 votes (50.01%) and ousted longtime DFL Rep. Mary Murphy.[43] District 3B contains the suburbs and townships around Duluth including Two Harbors, Hermantown and Rice Lake.[54] Voters in the district opted for President Joe Biden in the 2020 election and Walz in 2022.[55]

Mark Munger, a former Proctor city attorney and a retired judge for the Sixth Judicial District, is her DFL opponent. Munger also owns a publishing company, the Cloquet River Press, and has authored 14 books, according to his publishing website.[55] Munger's years on the bench and past judicial decisions have come under some scrutiny from conservative organizations.[56]

Candidates

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Mark Munger
U.S. senators

Organizations

Natalie Zeleznikar

Results

[edit]
District 3B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Natalie Zeleznikar 13,481 50.25
Democratic (DFL) Mark Munger 13,321 49.65
Write-in 27 0.10
Total votes 26,828 100.00

District 4A

[edit]

District 4A is located in Moorhead.[62] Incumbent Heather Keeler (DFL) was first elected in 2020 and won 58.58% of votes in 2022.[43]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 4A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Heather Keeler 11,072 58.50
Republican Joshua Zincke 7,822 41.33
Write-in 32 0.17
Total votes 18,926 100.00

District 4B

[edit]

District 4B is located in northwestern Minnesota, surrounding the city of Moorhead and including Glyndon and Detroit Lakes.[64] Incumbent Jim Joy (R) won 62.88% of the vote in 2022.[43]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 4B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jim Joy 15,273 66.41
Democratic (DFL) Thaddeus Laugisch 7,709 33.52
Write-in 16 0.07
Total votes 22,998 100.00

District 5A

[edit]

District 5A is located in north central Minnesota. The largest city in 5A is Park Rapids.[66] Incumbent Krista Knudsen (R) was first elected in 2022 with 70.49% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 5A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Krista Knudsen 18,885 71.34
Democratic (DFL) Brian Hobson 7,551 28.57
Write-in 22 0.08
Total votes 26,428 100.00

District 5B

[edit]

The district is located in central Minnesota and covers all of Todd County plus portions of Morrison, Cass, and Wadena counties. Republican Mike Wiener was first elected in 2022 with 75.36% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 5B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Mike Wiener 17,604 75.38
Democratic (DFL) Gregg Hendrickson 5,729 24.53
Write-in 21 0.09
Total votes 23,354 100.00

District 6A

[edit]

District 6A, located in north central Minnesota, stretches from Grand Rapids to Garrison.[71] Incumbent Ben Davis (R) was first elected in 2022 with 62.30% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 6A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ben Davis 17,765 66.04
Democratic (DFL) Earl Butenhoff 9,116 33.89
Write-in 19 0.07
Total votes 26,900 100.00

District 6B

[edit]

District 6B is in Crow Wing County and includes Brainerd and some smaller towns near it. Incumbent Josh Heintzeman (R) won the Republican primary.

Candidates

[edit]
  • Josh Heintzeman (R), incumbent[25]
  • Emily LeClaire (DFL)[25]
  • Troy Kenneth Scheffler (I)[25]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Matthew Eric Zinda (R)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 6B DFL primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Emily LeClaire 1,062 100%
Total votes 1,062 100%
District 6B Republican primary[72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Josh Heintzeman (incumbent) 2,032 91.04%
Republican Matthew Eric Zinda 200 8.96%
Total votes 2,232 100%
District 6B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Josh Heintzeman (incumbent) 15,744 63.4
Democratic (DFL) Emily LeClaire 8,209 33.06
Americans First Troy Kenneth Scheffler 848 3.41
Write-in 32 0.13
Total votes 24,833 100.00

District 7A

[edit]

District 7A is located in northeastern Minnesota, including portions of Itasca, Aikin, and St. Louis Counties.[73]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 7A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Spencer Igo 14,422 60.31
Democratic (DFL) Aron Schnaser 9,467 39.59
Write-in 23 0.1
Total votes 23,912 100.00

District 7B

[edit]

District 7B is located in the northeastern Iron Range of Minnesota, and includes the cities of Virginia, Chisholm, Eveleth, and other rural townships in St. Louis County. The incumbent, DFLer Dave Lislegard, decided to not run for re-election.[75] The seat was predicted as a likely flip,[55] and Republican Cal Warwas won by over 12 points.

The winning Republican candidate is Cal Warwas, an Iron Range native who works at U.S. Steel’s Minntac mine in Mountain Iron.[76] He serves in local government for Clinton Township. DFL candidate Lorrie Janatopoulos worked in the Department of Employment and Economic Development.[77]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Lorrie Janatopoulos (DFL)[25]
  • Cal Warwas (R)[25]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Matt Matasich (R)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 7B DFL primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Lorrie Janatopoulos 2,701 100%
Total votes 2,701 100%
District 7B Republican primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Cal Warwas 2,588 84.22%
Republican Matt Matasich 485 15.78%
Total votes 3,073 100%
District 7B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Cal Warwas 13,781 56.34
Democratic (DFL) Lorrie Janatopoulos 10,655 43.56
Write-in 23 0.09
Total votes 24,459 100.00
Republican gain from Democratic (DFL)

District 8A

[edit]

District 8A covers west Duluth. Incumbent Liz Olson (DFL) is not seeking re-election.[9] DFL-endorsed Peter Johnson won the DFL primary against Jordon Johnson.

Candidates

[edit]
  • Peter Johnson (DFL)[78]
  • Mark McGrew (R)[25]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Jordon Johnson (DFL)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 8A DFL primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Peter Johnson 2,947 82.76%
Democratic (DFL) Jordon Johnson 614 17.24%
Total votes 3,561 100%
District 8A Republican primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Mark McGrew 985 100%
Total votes 985 100%
District 8A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Peter Johnson 15,006 68.22
Republican Mark McGrew 6,962 31.65
Write-in 29 0.13
Total votes 21,997 100.0

District 8B

[edit]

District 8B covers east Duluth. Incumbent Alicia Kozlowski (DFL) was first elected in 2022 with 70% of the vote.[9] She will beat Republican Shawn Savela in the general election.

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Timothy L. Meyer (R)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 8B DFL primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Alicia Kozlowski (incumbent) 3,818 100%
Total votes 3,818 100%
District 8B Republican primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Shawn Savela 908 61.81%
Republican Timothy L. Meyer 561 38.19%
Total votes 1,469 100%
District 8B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Shawn Savela 7,954 31.25
Democratic (DFL) Alicia Kozlowski (incumbent) 17,440 68.53
Write-in 55 0.22
Total votes 25,449 100.00

District 9A

[edit]

District 9A covers Grant, Traverse and Wilkin Counties and parts of Otter Tail County in western Minnesota.[79]

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Boone Carlson (R)

Results

[edit]
District 9A DFL primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Michael Ziomko 1,639 100%
Total votes 1,639 100%
District 9A Republican primary[72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jeff Backer (incumbent) 3,151 65.73%
Republican Boone Carlson 1,643 34.27%
Total votes 4,794 100%
District 9A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jeff Backer (incumbent) 15,587 68.76
Democratic (DFL) Michael Ziomko 7,042 31.06
Write-in 41 0.18
Total votes 22,670 100.00

District 9B

[edit]

District 9B is located in Douglas and Otter Tail Counties in western Minnesota.[80]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 9B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tom Murphy 19,366 71.61
Democratic (DFL) Jason Satter 7,661 28.33
Write-in 18 0.07
Total votes 27,045 100.00

District 10A

[edit]

District 10A is located around Mille Lacs Lake in central Minnesota.[81]

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Diane Webb-Skillings (R)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 10A DFL primary[72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Julia Samsal Hipp 1,320 100%
Total votes 1,320 100%
District 10A Republican primary[72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ron Kresha (incumbent) 2,295 50.38%
Republican Diane Webb-Skillings 2,260 49.62%
Total votes 4,555 100%
District 10A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ron Kresha (incumbent) 17,957 71.12
Democratic (DFL) Julia Samsal Hipp 7,159 28.35
Write-in 134 0.53
Total votes 25,250 100.00

District 10B

[edit]

District 10B is located in central Minnesota, northeast of St. Cloud.[82]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 10B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Isaac Schultz 19,959 79.64
Democratic (DFL) JoEllen Burns 5,079 20.27
Write-in 24 0.10
Total votes 25,062 100.00

District 11A

[edit]

District 11A is located in Northeast Minnesota, just south of Duluth.[83]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Jeff Dotseth (R), incumbent[25]
  • Pete Radosevich (DFL)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 11A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jeff Dotseth 12,252 51.19
Democratic (DFL) Pete Radosevich 11,588 48.41
Write-in 96 0.40
Total votes 23,936 100.00

District 11B

[edit]

District 11B is located on the eastern border of Minnesota, midway between the Twin Cities and Duluth.[84]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 11B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nathan Nelson 16,047 68.62
Democratic (DFL) Eric Olson 7,320 31.30
Write-in 20 0.09
Total votes 23,387 100.00

District 12A

[edit]

District 12A is located in western Minnesota, stretching from Big Stone County into western Stearns County.[85]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 12A vote share by county
District 12A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Paul Anderson (incumbent) 17,110 73.80
Democratic (DFL) Becky K. Parker 6,058 26.13
Write-in 15 0.06
Total votes 23,183 100.00

District 12B

[edit]

District 12B is located in western Minnesota, including Alexandria and nearby areas.[86]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 12B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Mary Franson (incumbent) 18,571 76.73
Democratic (DFL) Judd Hoff 4,946 20.44
Write-in 685 2.83
Total votes 24,202 100.00

District 13A

[edit]

District 13A is located in Stearns County in Central Minnesota, west of St. Cloud.[87]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 13A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Lisa Demuth 19,215 75.30
Democratic (DFL) Cindy Aho 6,282 24.62
Write-in 20 0.08
Total votes 25,517 100.00

District 13B

[edit]

District 13B is located northwest of St. Cloud in Central Minnesota, including much of Sauk Rapids.[88]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 13B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tim O'Driscoll (incumbent) 16,467 68.63
Democratic (DFL) Dusty Bolstad 7,505 31.28
Write-in 23 0.10
Total votes 23,995 100.00

District 14A

[edit]

District 14A includes about half of St. Cloud and the cities of St. Joseph and St. Augusta. The district has experienced significant demographic changes due to an influx of immigrants, particularly from East Africa, in the last decade. About 68% of residents are non-Hispanic White, 20% are Black or African American, and 5% are Hispanic or Latino.[89]

First-term representative Bernie Perryman won the 2022 election over her DFL opponent by 199 votes. Perryman is a small business owner and chair of the St. Cloud Chamber of Commerce. She was also a regional vice president for Anheuser-Busch for 20 years.[90]

Abdi Daisane, a Somali American business owner, is the DFL challenger. Daisane moved to St. Cloud in 2013 to attend St. Cloud State University.[91] His priorities, according to his campaign website, include supporting affordable housing, increasing funding for the state's child care centers and advocating for climate justice.[92]

Candidates

[edit]
Withdrawn
[edit]
  • Tami Calhoun (DFL)[95]

Results

[edit]
District 14A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Bernie Perryman (incumbent) 10,967 56.31
Democratic (DFL) Abdi Daisane 8,463 43.46
Write-in 45 0.23
Total votes 19,475 100.00

District 14B

[edit]

District 14B represents the other half of St. Cloud as well as part of Sauk Rapids. The results fell within the margin for a hand recount in some precincts. A recount confirmed Wolgamott's re-election and reduced his vote total by one.[41]

Incumbent Dan Wolgamott (DFL) won his 2022 race by 540 votes.[55] The three-term legislator ran for reelection. Last year, Wolgamott pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor DWI charge after he was suspected of drinking alcohol in the parking lot of a liquor store.[96]

GOP challenger Sue Ek ran for a St. Cloud House seat during a special election in 2005, but the state Supreme Court removed her from the ballot after agreeing with a lower court that she didn't live in St. Cloud long enough to meet the state's residency requirements.[97]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 14B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Sue Ek 9,814 49.40
Democratic (DFL) Dan Wolgamott (incumbent) 10,004 50.36
Write-in 48 0.24
Total votes 19,867 100.00
A hand recount confirmed the results.[98]

District 15A

[edit]

District 15A is in southwest Minnesota, including Lac Qui Parle, Lyon, and Yellow Medicine counties and the city and township of Granite Falls.[99]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 15A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Chris Swedzinski (incumbent) 16,111 71.68
Democratic (DFL) Anthony M Studemann 6,347 28.24
Write-in 18 0.08
Total votes 22,476 100.00

District 15B

[edit]

District 15B is in southwest Minnesota, comprising Brown County, Redwood County, and the northwest of Blue Earth County.[101]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 15B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Paul Torkelson (incumbent) 16,814 72.65
Democratic (DFL) Tom Kuster 6,315 27.29
Write-in 14 0.06
Total votes 23,143 100.00

District 16A

[edit]

District 16A is in western Minnesota.[102] Incumbent Dean Urdahl (R), who took 73% of the vote in 2022, is not running for re-election.[18]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Scott Van Binsbergen (R)[25]
  • Kathy Hegstad (DFL)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 16A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Scott Van Binsbergen 16,039 71.60
Democratic (DFL) Kathy Hegstad 6,338 28.29
Write-in 24 0.11
Total votes 22,401 100.00

District 16B

[edit]

District 16B is in Kandiyohi County in west-central Minnesota.[103]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 16B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dave Baker (incumbent) 16,847 76.10
Democratic (DFL) Josiah Ampian 5,271 23.81
Write-in 20 0.09
Total votes 22,138 100.00

District 17A

[edit]

District 17A is located in south-central Minnesota, including the city of Hutchinson.[105]

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 17A DFL primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Chad Tschimperle 725 100%
Total votes 725 100%
District 17A Republican primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dawn Gillman (incumbent) 2,093 84.02%
Republican Wayne Olson 398 15.98%
Total votes 2,491 100%
District 17A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dawn Gillman (incumbent) 17,053 71.03
Democratic (DFL) Chad Tschimperle 6,930 28.87
Write-in 24 0.10
Total votes 24,007 100.00

District 17B

[edit]

District 17B is located in Carver, Sibley and McLeod Counties, covering southwest exurbs of the Twin Cities.[106]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 17B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Bobbie Harder (incumbent) 17,424 70.03
Democratic (DFL) Jennifer Nuesse 7,431 29.87
Write-in 25 0.10
Total votes 24,880 100.00

District 18A

[edit]

District 18 includes parts of Mankato and the cities of North Mankato and Kasota. Incumbent representative Jeff Brand (DFL) lost his bid for re-election to Republican candidate Erica Schwartz.

Brand was previously a St. Peter City Council member and board member of the Coalition of Greater Minnesota Cities. Erica Schwartz lives in Nicollet, where she works at a local convenience store owned by her husband; Schwartz ran on inflation, law enforcement and education.[108] Schwartz was heard in a side conversation after a fundraiser saying that Democratic are leading the U.S. towards another Holocaust. She apologized for the comment.[109]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 18A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Erica Schwartz 12,282 51.60
Democratic (DFL) Jeff Brand (incumbent) 11,480 48.23
Write-in 42 0.18
Total votes 23,804 100.00
Republican gain from Democratic (DFL)

District 18B

[edit]

District 18B is in Southern Minnesota, primarily located in Mankato.[110]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 18B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dar Vosburg 8,650 44.18
Democratic (DFL) Luke Frederick 10,892 55.64
Write-in 35 0.18
Total votes 19,577 100.00

District 19A

[edit]

District 19A is in and around Faribault in southern Minnesota.[111] Incumbent Brian Daniels (R), who won with 64.9% of votes in 2022, is not seeking re-election.[19]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Keith Allen (R)[25]
  • Jessica Navarro (DFL)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 19A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Keith Allen 13,366 64.59
Democratic (DFL) Jessica Navarro 7,311 35.33
Write-in 16 0.08
Total votes 20,693 100.00

District 19B

[edit]

District 19B is located in and around Owatonna in southern Minnesota. Incumbent John Petersburg (R), who won 70% of votes in 2022, is not seeking re-election.[20]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Thomas J. Sexton (R)[25]
  • Edelgard Fernandez Mejia (DFL)[25]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Michael J. Ditlevson (R)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 19B DFL primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Edelgard Fernandez Mejia 869 100%
Total votes 869 100%
District 19B Republican primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Thomas J. Sexton 1,740 66.54%
Republican Michael J. Ditlevson 875 33.46%
Total votes 2,615 100%
District 19B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Thomas J. Sexton 14,620 66.03
Democratic (DFL) Edelgard Fernandez Mejia 7,495 33.85
Write-in 28 0.13
Total votes 22,143 100.00

District 20A

[edit]

District 20A is located in Southeastern Minnesota along the Mississippi River, including the city of Red Wing.[112]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 20A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Pam Altendorf (incumbent) 14,333 57.60
Democratic (DFL) Heather Arndt 10,535 42.34
Write-in 15 0.06
Total votes 24,883 100.00

District 20B

[edit]

District 20B is in Southeastern Minnesota, including areas north and east of Rochester.[114]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 20B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Steven E Jacob (incumbent) 16,854 66.85
Democratic (DFL) Michael Hutchinson 8,333 33.05
Write-in 24 0.10
Total votes 25,211 100.00

District 21A

[edit]

District 21A is in the southwest corner of the state. Incumbent Joe Schomacker (R) has been serving since 2011, and was re-elected with 83 percent of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Creedence Petroff
State officials

Organizations

Results

[edit]
District 21A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Joe Schomacker (incumbent) 18,669 83.89
Independence Creedence Petroff 3,517 15.80
Write-in 67 0.30
Total votes 22,253 100.00
Republican hold

District 21B

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 21B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Marj Fogelman (incumbent) 11,983 66.30
Democratic (DFL) Jon Wilson 6,078 33.63
Write-in 12 0.07
Total votes 18,073 100.00

District 22A

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 22A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Bjorn Olson (incumbent) 15,699 69.42
Democratic (DFL) Marisa Ulmen 6,896 30.49
Write-in 21 0.09
Total votes 22,616 100.00

District 22B

[edit]

Incumbent Brian Pfarr (R) is not seeking re-election.[21]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Terry M. Stier (R)[25]
  • Sara Nett-Torgrimson (DFL)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 22B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Terry M. Stier 17,053 68.74
Democratic (DFL) Sara Nett-Torgrimson 7,740 31.20
Write-in 16 0.06
Total votes 24,809 100.00

District 23A

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 23A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Peggy Bennett (incumbent) 15,554 67.75
Democratic (DFL) Joe Staloch 7,379 32.14
Write-in 26 0.11
Total votes 22,959 100.00

District 23B

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 23B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Patricia Mueller 11,465 58.34
Democratic (DFL) Joseph Pacovsky 8,174 41.60
Write-in 12 0.06
Total votes 19,651 100.00

District 24A

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 24A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Duane Quam (incumbent) 15,661 63.40
Democratic (DFL) Heather Holmes 9,019 36.51
Write-in 23 0.09
Total votes 24,703 100.00

District 24B

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Tina Liebling (DFL), incumbent[63]
  • Dan Sepeda (R)
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Jesse O'Driscoll (R)

Results

[edit]
District 24B DFL primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Tina Liebling (incumbent) 2,201 100%
Total votes 2,201 100%
District 24B Republican primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dan Sepeda 842 57.16%
Republican Jesse O'Driscoll 631 42.84%
Total votes 1,473 100%
District 24B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dan Sepeda 9,369 42.10
Democratic (DFL) Tina Liebling (incumbent) 12,863 57.80
Write-in 21 0.09
Total votes 22,253 100.00

District 25A

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 25A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ken Navitsky 10,260 43.89
Democratic (DFL) Kim Hicks (incumbent) 13,085 55.98
Write-in 29 0.12
Total votes 23,374 100.00

District 25B

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 25B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Wes Lund 7,184 35.79
Democratic (DFL) Andy Smith (incumbent) 12,847 64.01
Write-in 40 0.20
Total votes 20,071 100.00

District 26A

[edit]

District 26A includes the college town of Winona, the towns Goodview and Stockton, and surrounding townships. The district was predcted as a potential flip for Republicans.[128] Longtime representative Gene Pelowski (DFL) did not seek re-election after his 19th term.[10] The seat showed one of the largest rightward shifts in the state, with Republican Aaron Repinski winning a seat that Pelowski had won by over 10 points.

Republican candidate Aaron Repinski, a Winona City Council member, .[129] defeated DFL candidate Sarah Kruger, the chief of staff for FairVote Minnesota, after she had beaten Dwayne Voegeli, chair of the Winona County Board of Commissioners, in the primary.[55]

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Dwayne Voegeli (DFL)[78]
  • S. James Doerr (R)

Results

[edit]
District 26A DFL primary [72]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Sarah Kruger 2,162 51.97%
Democratic (DFL) Dwayne Voegeli 1,998 48.03%
Total votes 4,160 100%
District 26A Republican primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Aaron Repinski 2,247 86.69%
Republican S. James Doerr 345 13.31%
Total votes 2,592 100%
District 26A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Aaron Repinski 12,240 52.74
Democratic (DFL) Sarah Kruger 10,916 47.04
Write-in 52 0.22
Total votes 23,208 100.00
Republican gain from Democratic (DFL)

District 26B

[edit]

District 26B is located in the southeast corner of the state and includes the cities of La Crescent, Chatfield, Caledonia, Spring Valley and Rushford. Long-time incumbent representative Greg Davids (R) is running for re-election; he narrowly won his primary after having lost the Republican Party's endorsement to newcomer Gary Steuart.

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Gary M. Steuart (R)[131]
  • Eric M. Leitzen (DFL)[25]
Endorsements
[edit]
Gary Steuart

Results

[edit]
District 26B DFL primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Allie Wolf 1,458 81.77
Democratic (DFL) Eric Leitzen 325 18.23
Total votes 1,783 100
District 26B Republican primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Gregory M. Davids (incumbent) 1,933 52.73
Republican Gary M. Steuart 1,733 47.27
Total votes 3,666 100
District 26B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Gregory M. Davids (incumbent) 15,714 63.32
Democratic (DFL) Allie Wolf 9,044 36.44
Write-in 59 0.24
Total votes 24,817 100

District 27A

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 27A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Shane Mekeland (incumbent) 17,597 71.38
Democratic (DFL) Kathryn A. Geary 7,026 28.50
Write-in 31 0.13
Total votes 24,654 100

District 27B

[edit]

District 27B covers parts of Anoka, Isanti, Sherburne, and Mille Lacs counties. It includes the cities of Princeton, Zimmerman, St. Francis, and Bethel.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 27B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Bryan Lawrence (incumbent) 18,229 74.09
Democratic (DFL) Andrew Scouten 6,338 25.76
Write-in 36 0.15
Total votes 24,603 100

District 28A

[edit]

District 28A includes parts of North Branch, Cambridge, and Isanti in eastern Minnesota. Incumbent representative Brian Johnson (R) lost the Republican primary to Isanti mayor Jimmy Gordon, who won the GOP endorsement.

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
Endorsements
[edit]
James "Jimmy" Gordon

Results

[edit]
District 28A DFL primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Tim Dummer 999 100
Total votes 999 100
District 28A Republican primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican James "Jimmy" Gordon 2,561 65.99
Republican Brian Johnson (incumbent) 1,320 34.01
Total votes 3,881 100
District 28A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican James "Jimmy" Gordon 17,550 68.11
Democratic (DFL) Tim Dummer 8,163 31.68
Write-in 54 0.21
Total votes 25,767 100

District 28B

[edit]

District 28B covers most of Chisago County and includes Wyoming, Lindström, Center City, Chisago City, Taylors Falls, Shafer, Stacy, and eastern North Branch. It also covers the townships of Sunrise, Chisago Lake, Shafer, Amador, and Franconia. It is represented by Republican Anne Neu Brindley who was first elected in a 2017 special election.[135] She announced she is not running for re-election in 2024.[22]

Candidates

[edit]
Endorsements
[edit]
Max Rymer
State legislators

Organizations

Results

[edit]
District 28B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Max Rymer 16,768 65.06
Democratic (DFL) Mary J Murphy 8,983 34.85
Write-in 22 0.09
Total votes 25,773 100

District 29A

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 29A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Joe McDonald (incumbent) 18,788 70.74
Democratic (DFL) Chris Brazelton 7,750 29.18
Write-in 21 0.08
Total votes 26,559 100

District 29B

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 29B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Marion (O'Neill) Rarick 15,741 66.46
Democratic (DFL) Colton Kratky 7,909 33.39
Write-in 35 0.15
Total votes 23,685 100

District 30A

[edit]

District 30A is located in the northwestern metro and includes the cities of St. Michael, Otsego, and Albertville, and parts of Hennepin and Wright counties.[138][139] Incumbent Walter Hudson (R) won his re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 30A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Walter Hudson (incumbent) 16,763 62.74
Democratic (DFL) Sonja Buckmeier 9,936 37.19
Write-in 18 0.07
Total votes 26,717 100

District 30B

[edit]

District 30B is located in east central Minnesota and includes the cities of Elk River and Otsego and parts of Anoka, Sherburne, and Wright counties.[140][141] Incumbent Paul Novotny (R) is running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 30B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Paul Novotny 17,075 65.87
Democratic (DFL) Paul Bolin 8,825 34.04
Write-in 22 0.08
Total votes 25,922 100

District 31A

[edit]

District 31A is in the north metro and includes the cities of Ramsey and Andover in Anoka County, Minnesota.[143][144] Incumbent Harry Niska (R) is running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 31A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Harry Niska (incumbent) 15,461 61.11
Democratic (DFL) Dara Grimmer 9,802 38.74
Write-in 39 0.15
Total votes 25,302 100

District 31B

[edit]

District 31B is in the northern Twin Cities metropolitan area, which includes the cities of Andover and East Bethel and parts of Anoka and Isanti counties. Incumbent Peggy Scott (R) is running for re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 31B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Peggy Scott (incumbent) 18,727 70.49
Democratic (DFL) Gadisa Berkessa 7,799 29.36
Write-in 40 0.15
Total votes 26,566 100

District 32A

[edit]

District 32A, in the northern metro, includes the city of Blaine and parts of Anoka County.[145][146] Incumbent Nolan West (R) was re-elected.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 32A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nolan West (incumbent) 14,816 58.15
Democratic (DFL) Ashton Ramsammy 10,620 41.68
Write-in 45 0.18
Total votes 25,481 100

District 32B

[edit]

District 32B includes the cities of Blaine and Lexington. Freshman representative Matt Norris (DFL) ran for reelection. Norris won his 2022 race by 413 votes.[147]

Norris’ Republican challenger Alex Moe ran for the state Senate in 2022 in Duluth. Moe worked in the Anoka County courts system.[148]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 32B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Alex Moe 11,620 49.04
Democratic (DFL) Matt Norris (incumbent) 12,030 50.77
Write-in 44 0.19
Total votes 23,694 100

District 33A

[edit]

District 33A is in the northeast metro, located in Washington County.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 33A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Patti Anderson (incumbent) 15,262 58.01
Democratic (DFL) Jake Ross 11,020 41.89
Write-in 25 0.10
Total votes 26,307 100.00

District 33B

[edit]

District 33B is in the easternmost part of the Twin Cities metro along the border with Wisconsin. It contains Stillwater, Bayport, Scandia, and Oak Park Heights.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 33B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jessica L. Johnson 12,913 48.6
Democratic (DFL) Josiah Hill (incumbent) 13,631 51.3
Write-in 28 0.11
Total votes 26,572 100.00

District 34A

[edit]

District 34A includes Rogers, Dayton and Champlin. Incumbent Danny Nadeau won in 2022 by a significant margin and secured re-election in 2024. Nadeau is a contract manager with Hennepin County.[150]

Nadeau expanded his lead against DFL challenger, Brian Raines, who had lost to Nadeau by about seven percentage points in 2022. Raines works for the state's carpenters union.[151]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 34A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Danny Nadeau (incumbent) 15,261 53.48
Democratic (DFL) Brian Raines 13,240 46.40
Write-in 33 0.12
Total votes 28,534 100.00

District 34B

[edit]

District 34B is in the north metro, mostly in Brooklyn Park, with pieces of Coon Rapids and Champlin. Incumbent Melissa Hortman (DFL) was first elected in 2010 and has served as Speaker of the Minnesota House since 2019.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 34B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Scott Simmons 7,950 36.74
Democratic (DFL) Melissa Hortman (incumbent) 13,649 63.08
Write-in 40 0.18
Total votes 21,639 100.00

District 35A

[edit]

District 35A includes Anoka and Coon Rapids. Incumbent Zack Stephenson (DFL) won re-election by 3.8 percentage points, a narrower margin than his 2022 victory by about five percentage points. Stephenson, who chairs the House Commerce Finance and Policy Committee, is a prosecutor for Hennepin County.[55]

Josh Jungling was the Republican challenger. Jungling is the charitable gambling manager for the Anoka Ramsey Athletic Association.[152]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 35A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Josh Jungling 10,950 48.01
Democratic (DFL) Zack Stephenson (incumbent) 11,822 51.83
Write-in 37 0.16
Total votes 22,809 100.00

District 35B

[edit]

District 35B is in the northwest metro and includes Coon Rapids and Andover. Incumbent Jerry Newton (DFL) is retiring.[9]

DFL candidate Kari Rehrauer, a member of the Coon Rapids City Council and a teacher,[55] narrowly defeated Republican Steve Pape, a Navy veteran and CEO of an engineering consulting firm.[153]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 35B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Steve Pape 11,280 49.29
Democratic (DFL) Kari Rehrauer 11,560 50.51
Write-in 47 0.21
Total votes 22,887 100.00

District 36A

[edit]

District 36A is in the north metro and includes North Oaks, Lino Lakes and Circle Pines. Incumbent Elliott Engen (R), who won reelection, previously worked for a nonprofit environmental organization and is one of the state's youngest legislators.[55]

Engen defeated DFL challenger Janelle Calhoun, previously an executive director for a cancer research nonprofit.[55]

Candidates

[edit]
Did not file
[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 36A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Elliott Engen 14,998 54.06
Democratic (DFL) Janelle Calhoun 12,714 45.83
Write-in 29 0.10
Total votes 27,741 100.00

District 36B

[edit]

District 36B is located in the northeast metro and contains White Bear Lake. Incumbent Brion Curran was first elected in 2022 with 53.48% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • T.J. Malaskee (DFL)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 36B DFL primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Brion Curran (incumbent) 1,852 62.59
Democratic (DFL) T.J. Malaskee 1,107 37.41
Total votes 2,959 100
District 36B Republican primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Patty Bradway 1,084 100
Total votes 1,084 100
District 36B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Patty Bradway 12,152 48.29
Democratic (DFL) Brion Curran (incumbent) 12,977 51.57
Write-in 37 0.15
Total votes 25,166 100.00

District 37A

[edit]

District 37A is located in the northwestern part of Hennepin County. Incumbent Kristin Robbins (R) was first elected in 2018 and took 56.11% of the vote in 2022.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 37A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kristin Robbins (incumbent) 15,817 57.12
Democratic (DFL) Laurie Wolfe 11,851 42.8
Write-in 22 0.08
Total votes 27,690 100.00

District 37B

[edit]

District 37B is located in Maple Grove in the northwest metro. Incumbent Kristin Bahner (DFL) won with 55.61% of the vote in 2022.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 37B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican John R. Bristol 11,841 44.54
Democratic (DFL) Kristin Bahner (incumbent) 14,726 55.39
Write-in 18 0.07
Total votes 26,585 100.00

District 38A

[edit]

District 38A is located in the northeast metro area and includes the cities of Brooklyn Park and Osseo. Huldah Hiltsley (DFL) defeated Brad Olson (R) in the general election.

The district is characterized by a diverse demographic breakdown: 38% White, 33% Black, 18% Asian, and 9% Hispanic. 27% of the population is foreign-born, predominantly from Africa.[1] Kenyan American Huldah Hiltsley defeated Liberian American Wynfred Russell in the DFL primary to succeed the retiring incumbent Michael Nelson (DFL).[11][156]

Hiltsley ran in the DFL primary for Senate District 38 in 2022, but lost to Susan Pha.

Candidates

[edit]
  • Huldah Hiltsley (DFL)[95]
  • Brad Olson (R)[25]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Yelena S. Kurdyumova (R)[25]
  • Wynfred Russell (DFL)[25]

Results

[edit]
DFL primary results by precinct:
  Hiltsley
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
  Russell
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
District 38A DFL primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Huldah Hiltsley 1,005 51.3
Democratic (DFL) Wynfred Russell 955 48.7
Total votes 1,960 100.0
District 38A Republican primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brad Olson 566 89.8
Republican Yelena S. Kurdyumova 64 10.2
Total votes 630 100.0
District 38A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brad Olson 5,410 34.94
Democratic (DFL) Huldah Hiltsley 10,030 64.78
Write-in 42 0.27
Total votes 15,482 100.00

District 38B

[edit]

District 38B in the north metro represents all of Brooklyn Center and parts of Brooklyn Park. Incumbent Samantha Vang was first elected in 2018.

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 38B DFL primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Samantha Vang (incumbent) 1,790 100.0
Total votes 1,790 100.0
District 38B Republican primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Robert Marvin 267 73.2
Republican Chris Chubb 98 26.8
Total votes 365 100.0
District 38B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Robert Marvin 3,793 25.42
Democratic (DFL) Samantha Vang (incumbent) 11,078 74.25
Write-in 48 0.32
Total votes 14,919 100.00

District 39A

[edit]

District 39A is located in Anoka County in the north metro, mostly in the city of Fridley. Incumbent Erin Koegel (DFL) has served since 2017.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 39A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Rod Sylvester 6,749 36.37
Democratic (DFL) Erin Koegel (incumbent) 11,751 63.33
Write-in 55 0.30
Total votes 18,555 100.00

District 39B

[edit]

District 39B is directly northeast of Minneapolis and includes all of Saint Anthony and parts of Columbia Heights and New Brighton. Incumbent Sandra Feist has been in office since 2021.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 39B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kt Jacobs 5,875 28.88
Democratic (DFL) Sandra Feist (incumbent) 14,427 70.91
Write-in 44 0.22
Total votes 20,346 100.00

District 40A

[edit]

District 40A is in the north metro, containing Arden Hills, Blaine, Mounds View, and parts of New Brighton and Shoreview. Incumbent Kelly Moller (DFL) has served since 2019. Moller ran unopposed.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 40A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Kelly Moller (incumbent) 16,869 95.87
Write-in 727 4.13
Total votes 17,596 100.00

District 40B

[edit]

District 40B is in the northeastern Twin Cities metro. Incumbent Jamie Becker-Finn (DFL) retired after having served since 2017.[9] Curtis Johnson (DFL) won with 65.19% of the vote.

Republicans have challenged this election result. Republican candidate Paul Wikstrom alleges that Johnson doesn't meet residency requirements, claiming that he primarily lives outside the district and rents a local apartment for appearances. Republicans seek to invalidate Johnson's election certificate and hold a special election like the one in 2017. [7]

Candidates

[edit]
Withdrawn
[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 40B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Curtis Johnson 15,963 65.19
Republican Paul Wikstrom 8,460 34.55
Write-in 63 0.26
Total votes 24,486 100.00

District 41A

[edit]

District 41A includes Afton, Lake Elmo and Cottage Grove. Incumbent Mark Wiens (R) did not seek reelection.[23] In 2022, Wiens narrowly carried the district, while Tim Walz won by nearly five percentage points.[55] Republican Wayne Johnson won the seat by a margin just over 1%.

Lucia Wroblewski, a retired St. Paul police officer, was the DFL candidate. On her campaign site, Wroblewski said she was a use-of-force expert for 24 years and a field training officer for 22 years. She is also an Afton City Council member.[159]

The Republican Party endorsed Grayson McNew, a school voucher advocate backed by the Action 4 Liberty PAC, for the Republican primary.[160][161] McNew lost the primary election to the more moderate Republican candidate Wayne Johnson.

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]

Results

[edit]
GOP primary results by precinct:
  Johnson
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  McNew
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
District 41A DFL primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Lucia Wroblewski 1,670 100.0
Total votes 1,670 100.0
District 41A Republican primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Wayne Johnson 1,101 53.5
Republican Grayson McNew 956 46.5
Total votes 2,057 100.0
District 41A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Wayne Johnson 15,167 50.49
Democratic (DFL) Lucia Wroblewski 14,840 49.40
Write-in 32 0.11
Total votes 30,039 100.00
Republican hold

District 41B

[edit]

District 41B includes Cottage Grove and Hastings. Incumbent Shane Hudella (R) retired.[22] Hudella won in 2022 by 418 votes.

The Republican candidate, Tom Dippel, a previous state Senate candidate, won the seat against Jen Fox, a Hastings City Council member and acting mayor of the city.[55] Dippel is another Action 4 Liberty-endorsed candidate and founded the Minnesota Dental Lab in Newport.[160]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Jen Fox (DFL), Hastings city councilor[162]
  • Tom Dippel (R)[160]

Results

[edit]
District 41B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tom Dippel 12,529 50.94
Democratic (DFL) Jen Fox 12,019 48.86
Write-in 50 0.20
Total votes 24,598 100.00

District 42A

[edit]

District 42A is in the northwest metro area, composed of parts of Plymouth and Maple Grove. Incumbent Ned Carroll (DFL) was first elected in 2022 with 58% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 42A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kathy Burkett 10,617 42.58
Democratic (DFL) Ned Carroll (incumbent) 14,288 57.3
Write-in 31 0.12
Total votes 24,936 100.00

District 42B

[edit]

District 42B is located in Plymouth. Incumbent Ginny Klevorn (DFL) was first elected in 2018.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 42B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Perry Nouis 8,757 35.96
Democratic (DFL) Ginny Klevorn (incumbent) 15,561 63.91
Write-in 31 0.13
Total votes 24,349 100.00

District 43A

[edit]

District 43A is in the northwest metro, including New Hope and most of Crystal.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 43A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Todd Hesemann 6,999 33.53
Democratic (DFL) Cedrick B. Frazier 13,845 66.33
Write-in 29 0.14
Total votes 20,873 100.00

District 43B

[edit]

District 43B is in the northwest suburbs of Minneapolis, including Golden Valley, Robbinsdale, and parts of Crystal and Plymouth.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 43B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Steve Merriman 6,232 24.63
Democratic (DFL) Mike Freiberg (incumbent) 19,023 75.19
Write-in 45 0.18
Total votes 25,300 100.00

District 44A

[edit]

District 44A is in Ramsey County, north of St. Paul. It includes Little Canada and the northernmost parts of Maplewood.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 44A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Karla J. Nelson 7,255 37.45
Democratic (DFL) Peter M Fischer (incumbent) 12,085 62.37
Write-in 35 0.18
Total votes 19,375 100.00

District 44B

[edit]

District 44B is in the eastern metro, including the suburbs of Oakdale and North St. Paul.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 44B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Bill Dahn 8,254 37.6
Democratic (DFL) Leon M. Lillie (incumbent) 12,369 56.35
Libertarian TJ Hawthorne 1,298 5.91
Write-in 29 0.13
Total votes 21,950 100.00

District 45A

[edit]

District 45A is located in the west metro and includes Minnetonka, Excelsior and Orono. Incumbent Andrew Myers (R), an attorney and small business owner, won his re-election against Tracey Breazeale (DFL), a Minnetonka Beach City Council member and former business executive.[55]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 45A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Andrew Myers (incumbent) 15,897 55.02
Democratic (DFL) Tracey Breazeale 12,972 44.89
Write-in 26 0.09
Total votes 28,895 100.00

District 45B

[edit]

District 45B is in western Hennepin County and contains parts of Minnetonka. Incumbent Patty Acomb, first elected in 2018, ran unopposed.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 45B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Patty Acomb (incumbent) 19,625 95.18
Write-in 994 4.82
Total votes 20,619 100.00

District 46A

[edit]

District 46A is fully located within Saint Louis Park, just west of Minneapolis.[166] Incumbent Larry Kraft (DFL) was first elected in 2022, when he ran unopposed.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 46A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican John Nagel 6,168 24.84
Democratic (DFL) Larry Kraft 18,627 75.02
Write-in 34 0.14
Total votes 24,829 100.00

District 46B

[edit]

District 46B is in the south metro, containing all of Hopkins and parts of Saint Louis Park and Edina. Incumbent Cheryl Youakim (DFL) has served since 2015 and ran unopposed in 2022.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 46B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kim Rich 7,863 32.21
Democratic (DFL) Cheryl Youakim (incumbent) 16,510 67.62
Write-in 42 0.17
Total votes 24,415 100.00

District 47A

[edit]

District 47A in the east metro contains parts of Woodbury and Maplewood. Incumbent Amanda Hemmingsen-Jaeger was first elected in 2022 with 60.18% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 47A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Teresa Whitson 9,143 39.29
Democratic (DFL) Amanda Hemmingsen-Jaeger (incumbent) 14,106 60.62
Write-in 21 0.09
Total votes 23,270 100.00

District 47B

[edit]

District 47B includes most of southern and eastern Woodbury.[167] Incumbent Ethan Cha (DFL) won re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 47B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dwight Dorau 11,867 45.46
Democratic (DFL) Ethan Cha (incumbent) 14,202 54.41
Write-in 35 0.13
Total votes 26,104 100.00

District 48A

[edit]

District 48A is located in Carver County in the southwest metro. Incumbent Jim Nash (R) was first elected in 2014; he defeated Nathan Kells (DFL) with 59.66% of the vote in 2022.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 48A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jim Nash (incumbent) 16,818 60.41
Democratic (DFL) Nathan Kells 11,000 39.51
Write-in 23 0.08
Total votes 27,841 100.00

District 48B

[edit]

District 48B includes Chaska, Chanhassen and Shorewood. Incumbent Lucy Rehm (DFL) won reelection in a close race. Rehm is a former teacher and Chanhassen City Council member. In 2022, she won the election by 417 votes; in 2024, she won by 225.[55] Caleb Steffenhagen, an officer in the Minnesota Army National Guard and a teacher, was the GOP candidate.[168]

Candidates

[edit]
Withdrawn
[edit]
  • Haley Schubert (R), Chanhassen city councilor[170]

Results

[edit]
District 48B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Lucille "Lucy" Rehm (incumbent) 12,953 50.39
Republican Caleb Steffenhagen 12,728 49.52
Write-in 22 0.09
Total votes 25,703 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 49A

[edit]

District 49A is located in the southwest metro and includes portions of Minnetonka and Eden Prairie. Incumbent Laurie Pryor (DFL) is retiring.[12] Alex Falconer, campaign manager for the Campaign to Save the Boundary Waters, defeated Minnetonka City Council member Kissy Coakley in the DFL primary and then defeated Stacy L. Bettison in the general election.[171]

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Kissy C Coakley (DFL)[95]

Results

[edit]
District 49A DFL primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Alex Falconer 2,377 74.9
Democratic (DFL) Kissy C Coakley 798 25.1
Total votes 3,175 100.0
District 49A Republican primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Stacy L. Bettison 920 100.0
Total votes 920 100.0
District 49A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Alex Falconer 16,104 60.81
Republican Stacy L. Bettison 10,342 39.05
Write-in 37 0.14
Total votes 26,483 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 49B

[edit]

District 49B is located in Eden Prairie. Incumbent Carlie Kotzya-Witthun (DFL) has served since 2019 and was re-elected with 57% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 49B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Carlie Kotyza-Witthuhn (incumbent) 13,529 57.11
Republican Wendi Russo 10,138 42.8
Write-in 21 0.09
Total votes 23,688 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 50A

[edit]

District 50A is located in Edina and parts of Bloomington. Incumbent Heather Edelson (DFL) did not seek re-election as she was elected to the Hennepin County Board of Commissioners in a 2024 special election.[13] Democrat Julie Greene was elected with 64.57% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 50A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Julie Greene 16,766 64.57
Republican Owen Michaelson 9,161 35.28
Write-in 40 0.15
Total votes 25,967 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 50B

[edit]

District 50B is in Bloomington. Incumbent Steve Elkins (DFL) has served since 2019 and was re-elected with 63% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 50B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Steve Elkins (incumbent) 16,524 63.18
Republican Bob Gust 9,596 36.69
Write-in 33 0.13
Total votes 26,153 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 51A

[edit]

District 51A is located in Richfield and the southeasternmost part of Minneapolis. Incumbent Michael Howard (DFL), a member since 2019, won his re-election with 73.4% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]
Withdrawn
[edit]
Endorsements
[edit]
Michael Howard
Loretta Arradondo (withdrawn)
Organizations
  • Women Winning

Results

[edit]
District 51A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Michael Howard (incumbent) 15,440 73.44
Republican Jeffrey Thompson 5,533 26.32
Write-in 51 0.24
Total votes 21,024 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 51B

[edit]

District 51B is located in Bloomington. Incumbent Nathan Coulter (DFL) won a second term.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 51B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Nathan Coulter (incumbent) 13,244 64.08
Republican Lion Dale Johnson 7,373 35.67
Write-in 51 0.25
Total votes 20,668 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 52A

[edit]

District 52A covers parts of Eagan and Burnsville in Dakota County. Incumbent Liz Reyer was first elected in 2020 and won re-election by over 20 points.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 52A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Liz Reyer (incumbent) 13,784 60.88
Republican Diane Anderson 8,833 39.01
Write-in 26 0.11
Total votes 22,643 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 52B

[edit]

District 52B is located in northern Dakota County, including parts of Eagan and Mendota Heights. Incumbent Bianca Virnig (DFL) was first elected by special election in December 2023 and was re-elected with 60.6% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 52B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Bianca Virnig (incumbent) 15,857 60.57
Republican Douglas Willetts 10,291 39.31
Write-in 31 0.12
Total votes 26,179 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 53A

[edit]

District 53A is located in Dakota County in the south metro, including much of Inver Grove Heights. Incumbent Mary Frances Clardy (DFL) was re-elected by a 15-point margin.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 53A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Mary Frances Clardy (incumbent) 14,011 57.73
Republican Nathan Herschbach 10,226 42.14
Write-in 33 0.15
Total votes 24,268 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 53B

[edit]

District 53B is located in the southeast metro, including parts of Dakota and Washington counties. Incumbent Rick Hansen (DFL) was first elected in 2004 and won re-election by 19 points.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 53B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Rick Hansen (incumbent) 13,203 59.37
Republican Aaron M. Brooksby 9,002 40.48
Write-in 33 0.15
Total votes 22,238 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 54A

[edit]

District 54A is in the south metro and encompasses much of Shakopee. Incumbent Brad Tabke (DFL) ran for a third term. In 2022, Tabke won his seat back by eight percentage points over right-wing Republican Erik Mortensen.[174] Mortensen had defeated him narrowly in 2020.

Republican Aaron Paul, a police officer and former school resource officer, ran a very close race against Tabke. Initial results showed Tabke as winning by 0.06%, with a 14-vote margin, a result close enough to warrant an automatic recount. The recount confirmed his victory, extending his lead to 15 votes.[4][41]

The Republican Party is challenging this result in court due to 21 missing absentee ballots.[6] 21 more absentee voters were checked in than the number of ballots received in Shakopee, 20 of them in Precinct 10. The Scott County Attorney's investigation showed that those ballots were likely in-person early votes, thrown out in error on the first day of absentee ballot counting.[5] Excepting these ballots, Shakopee Precinct 10 voted in favor of Tabke by around 200 votes or 15 percentage points.[175][176] Voters were identified, and at the trial in December, six voters testified that they had voted for Tabke, while six testified they had voted for Paul.[177]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Brad Tabke (DFL), incumbent[63]
  • Aaron Paul (R), Bloomington Police sergeant

Results

[edit]
District 54A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Brad Tabke (incumbent) 10,980 49.95
Republican Aaron Paul 10,965 49.89
All other ballots 1,035 4.50%
Total votes 22,980 100.0
Democratic (DFL) hold
A recount confirmed Tabke's victory, extending his lead from 14 to 15 votes.[175]

District 54B

[edit]

District 54B is located in Scott County in the south Twin Cities metropolitan area. Incumbent Ben Bakeberg (R) is seeking re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 54B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ben Bakeberg (incumbent) 15,807 61.94
Democratic (DFL) Jean Lee 9,696 37.99
Write-in 18 0.07
Total votes 25,521 100.00
Republican hold

District 55A

[edit]

District 55A contains the city of Savage and part of Burnsville, in the south Twin Cities metropolitan area. Incumbent Jessica Hanson (DFL), first elected in 2020, was re-elected by a 7-point margin.

Candidates

[edit]

General election

[edit]
District 55A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Jessica Hanson (incumbent) 12,114 53.33
Republican Gabriela Kroetch 10,576 46.56
Write-in 24 0.11
Total votes 22,714 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 55B

[edit]

District 55B is located Burnsville. Incumbent Kaela Berg (DFL), first elected in 2020, was re-elected with 59.24% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 55B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Kaela Berg (incumbent) 11,616 59.24
Republican Van Holston 7,968 40.64
Write-in 24 0.12
Total votes 19,608 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 56A

[edit]

District 56A is located in Apple Valley. Incumbent Robert Bierman won re-election by over 22 percentage points.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 56A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Robert Bierman (incumbent) 13,750 61.22
Republican Angela Zorn 8,687 38.68
Write-in 24 0.11
Total votes 22,461 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 56B

[edit]

District 56B is located in the north of Dakota County. Incumbent John Huot (DFL) has served since 2019 and won his re-election with 55.97% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 56B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) John Huot (incumbent) 14,736 55.97
Republican Angeline Anderson 11,575 43.96
Write-in 19 0.07
Total votes 26,330 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 57A

[edit]

District 57A is located in Scott and Dakota counties, including portions of Lakeville. Incumbent Jon Koznick has served since 2015 and won re-election with 62.55% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]
Endorsements
[edit]
Veda Kanitz
Organizations
  • DFL Environmental Caucus[178]
  • DFL Rural Caucus[179]
  • Women Winning

Results

[edit]
District 57A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jon Koznick (incumbent) 16,479 62.55
Democratic (DFL) Veda Kanitz 9,848 37.38
Write-in 18 0.07
Total votes 26,345 100.00
Republican hold

District 57B

[edit]

District 57B covers Lakeville. Incumbent Jeff Witte (R) won his 2022 race by 676 votes and won his re-election by a wider margin.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 57B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jeff Witte (incumbent) 13,781 52.35
Democratic (DFL) Brian Cohn 12,520 47.56
Write-in 24 0.09
Total votes 26,325 100.00
Republican hold

District 58A

[edit]

District 58A is located in Scott, Rice, and Dakota counties, including the city of Northfield. Incumbent Kristi Pursell (DFL) won her first re-election, receiving 52.43% of the vote, a decreasing from her 54.48% victory in 2022.[43]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 58A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Kristi Pursell (incumbent) 13,325 52.43
Republican Rita Hillmann Olson 12,067 47.48
Write-in 22 0.09
Total votes 25,414 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 58B

[edit]

District 58B is located in the southeastern part of the Twin Cities metro. It includes portions of Dakota County. The district covers the cities of Farmington and portions of Lakeville. Incumbent Pat Garofalo (R) did not seek re-election.[24] Republican Drew Roach won the seat by a 19-point margin.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 58B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Drew Roach 14,886 59.84
Democratic (DFL) Ian English 9,962 40.05
Write-in 29 0.12
Total votes 24,877 100.00
Republican hold

District 59A

[edit]

District 59A covers Camden and parts of Near North in north Minneapolis.[182] Incumbent Fue Lee (DFL) is running unopposed. He was first elected in 2016 and won his second consecutive unopposed race[43] at 97.93%.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 59A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Fue Lee (incumbent) 11,672 97.93
Write-in 247 2.07
Total votes 11,919 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 59B

[edit]

District 59B is located in Near North, Central, and parts of the East Bank neighborhood in Minneapolis .[184] Incumbent Esther Agbaje was first elected in 2020 and ran unopposed in 2022.[43] She was re-elected with 82.34% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 59B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Esther Agbaje (incumbent) 16,791 82.34
Republican Kenneth Smoron 3,549 17.4
Write-in 52 0.26
Total votes 20,392 100.0
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 60A

[edit]

District 60A is located in Northeast Minneapolis.[185] Incumbent Sydney Jordan (DFL), who was first elected in a 2020 special election, is running for re-election. Jordan was elected with 84.59% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 60A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Sydney Jordan (incumbent) 19,684 84.59
Republican Mary Holmberg 3,535 15.19
Write-in 51 0.22
Total votes 23,270 100.0
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 60B

[edit]

District 60B is located in Southeast Minneapolis and includes all or parts of the neighborhoods Cedar-Riverside, Prospect Park, Marcy-Holmes, Como, as well as the University of Minnesota campus. The incumbent is DFLer Mohamud Noor, who was first elected in 2018 and won his re-election with 82.7% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 60B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Mohamud Noor (incumbent) 9,993 82.70
Republican Abigail Wolters 2,041 16.89
Write-in 50 0.41
Total votes 12,084 100.0
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 61A

[edit]
Candidates for endorsement at the SD61 DFL convention, left to right: Trevor Turner, Isabel Rolfes, Katie Jones, Dylan McMahon, Jared Brewington, and Will Stancil

District 61A is located in downtown and Calhoun-Isles in south Minneapolis, including neighborhoods such as Uptown, Loring Park, Bryn Mayr, Lowry Hill, and Cedar-Isles-Dean.[186] Incumbent Frank Hornstein (DFL), first elected in 2002, is retiring.[14]

District 61A was the only contested DFL primary for a House seat in Minneapolis or Saint Paul. The primary drew attention for its online activity: candidate Will Stancil, known for his Twitter presence, attracted the attention of media and of right-wing extremists who made threats to multiple candidates.[187][188]

Katie Jones, an engineer, first won the DFL primary over attorney Will Stancil and legislative aide Isabel Rolfes, then won the seat over Green Party candidate Toya López with 83.92% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
Withdrawn
[edit]
  • Jared Brewington (DFL)[191]
  • Trevor Turner (DFL)[192]
  • Dylan McMahon (DFL)[193]
Endorsements
[edit]
Will Stancil (eliminated)

State legislators

Municipal officials

Katie Jones

State officials

State legislators

Organizations

  • DFL Environmental Caucus[195]
  • DFL Progressive Caucus[195]
Isabel Rolfes (eliminated)

State legislators

Organizations

Declined to endorse

Results

[edit]
DFL primary results by precinct:
  Jones
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  Stancil
  •   60–70%
District 61A DFL primary [198]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Katie Jones 3,956 43.15
Democratic (DFL) Will Stancil 3,340 36.43
Democratic (DFL) Isabel Rolfes 1,872 20.42
Total votes 9,168 100.0
District 61A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Katie Jones 18,234 83.92
Green Toya López 3,284 15.11
Write-in 209 0.96
Total votes 21,727 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 61B

[edit]

District 61B is located in southwest Minneapolis.[199] Incumbent Jamie Long (DFL), the house majority leader, won his re-election with 89.09% of the vote. Long was first elected in 2018 and ran unopposed in 2022.[43]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 61B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Jamie Long (incumbent) 23,864 89.09
Republican Bob "Again" Carney Jr 2,861 10.68
Write-in 61 0.23
Total votes 26,786 100.0
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 62A

[edit]

District 62A is located in South Minneapolis and includes the neighborhoods of Whittier, Stevens Square-Loring Heights, West Phillips, Lyndale and Kingfield.[200] Incumbent Aisha Gomez (DFL) was first elected in 2018 and won re-election with 90.07% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]
Endorsements
[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 62A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Aisha Gomez (incumbent) 13,349 90.07
Republican Alexandra (ZaZa) Hoffman Novick 1,434 9.68
Write-in 38 0.26
Total votes 14,821 100.0
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 62B

[edit]

District 62B is located in South Minneapolis, comprising much of Phillips and Powderhorn.[202] Incumbent Hodan Hassan (DFL), first elected in 2018, is retiring.[15] In 2022, Hassan was re-elected with 90.28% of the vote.[43]

Anquam Mahamoud (DFL) defeated Republican Bob Sullentrop, winning 87.23% of the vote. Mahamoud is the former COO of Twin Cities Health Services, a mental health and substance use treatment center in the Twin Cities. The center filed for bankruptcy on June 17, 2024, citing over $3 million in debts, including $721,000 to the IRS and over $39,000 to the Minnesota Department of Revenue, and had its license revoked for licensing violations prior to Mahamoud's tenure as COO. Mahamoud served as COO from October 2023 to April 2024.[203]

Candidates

[edit]
Withdrawn
[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Londel French (withdrawn)
State officials

State legislators

Municipal officials

  • Aisha Chughtai, Minneapolis city councillor
  • Robin Wonsley, Minneapolis city councillor

Organizations

  • DFL Progressive Caucus
  • Stonewall DFL
Bill Emory (withdrawn)
Municipal officials
  • Heidi Garrido, Hopkins city councillor[210]
  • Jeremy Schroeder, former Minneapolis city councillor[210]
  • Amy Brendmoen, former Saint Paul city councillor[210]
Anquam Mahamoud
U.S. representatives

State legislators

Municipal officials

  • Jason Chavez, Minneapolis City Councillor[217]

Organizations

Ira Jorurdain (withdrawn)
Organizations

Results

[edit]
District 62B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Anquam Mahamoud 14,747 87.23
Republican Bob Sullentrop 2,093 12.38
Write-in 66 0.39
Total votes 16,906 100.0
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 63A

[edit]

District 63A is located in south Minneapolis, mostly in Greater Longfellow.[221] Incumbent Samantha Sencer-Mura (DFL)[63] won an unopposed race with 98.76% of the vote.[25] Sencer-Mura was first elected in 2022 at 90.16%.[43]

Candidates

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Samantha Sencer-Mura
Organizations

Results

[edit]
District 63A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Samantha Sencer-Mura 20,289 98.76
Write-in 255 1.24
Total votes 20,544 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 63B

[edit]

District 63B is located in south Minneapolis, mostly in the Nokomis area.[223] Incumbent Emma Greenman (DFL), first elected in 2020, won re-election.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 63B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Emma Greenman (incumbent) 22,790 85.27
Republican Diane Napper 3,878 14.51
Write-in 58 0.22
Total votes 26,726 100.0
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 64A

[edit]

District 64A is located in western Saint Paul, mostly in Union Park and Mac-Groveland.[225] Incumbent Kaohly Vang Her (DFL), first elected in 2018, won re-election with 83.17% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 64A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Kaohly Her (incumbent) 20,441 83.17
Republican Dan Walsh 4,080 16.60
Write-in 56 0.23
Total votes 24,577 100.0
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 64B

[edit]

District 64B is located in southwestern Saint Paul, mostly in Highland Park.[226] Incumbent Dave Pinto (DFL) was first elected in 2014 and won the 2024 election with 80.1% of the vote.[43]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 64B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Dave Pinto (incumbent) 20,922 80.10
Republican Peter Donahue 5,152 19.72
Write-in 47 0.18
Total votes 26,121 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 65A

[edit]

District 65A is located in Saint Paul, mostly in Frogtown and Summit-University.[227] Incumbent Samakab Hussein (DFL) ran unopposed and won with 97.07% of the vote.[25] Hussein was first elected in 2022, earning 71.21% of the vote.[43]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Samakab Hussein (DFL), incumbent[228]

Results

[edit]
District 65A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Samakab Hussein (incumbent) 10,068 97.07
Write-in 304 2.93
Total votes 10,372 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 65B

[edit]

District 65B stretches from downtown and the West Side of Saint Paul into the suburb of West Saint Paul.[229] Incumbent María Isa Pérez-Vega (DFL), first elected in 2022, was re-elected with 76.51% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]
  • María Isa Pérez-Vega (DFL), incumbent[63]
  • Mike Hilborn (R)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 65B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) María Isa Pérez-Vega (incumbent) 15,100 76.51
Republican Mike Hilborn 4,572 23.17
Write-in 63 0.32
Total votes 19,735 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 66A

[edit]

District 66A includes the cities of Falcon Heights, Lauderdale, Roseville and Saint Paul (neighborhoods of St. Anthony Park, Como, and Hamline-Midway).[230] Incumbent Leigh Finke, the first transgender legislator in Minnesota,[231] was re-elected with 80.99% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]
  • Leigh Finke (DFL), incumbent[63]
  • Fadil Jama (R)[25]

Results

[edit]
District 66A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Leigh Finke (incumbent) 18,166 80.99
Republican Fadil Jama 4,180 18.64
Write-in 84 0.37
Total votes 22,430 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 66B

[edit]

District 66B is located in north central Saint Paul.[232] Incumbent Athena Hollins (DFL), first elected in 2020, was re-elected with 76.12% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]
  • Athena Hollins (DFL), incumbent[63]
  • Greg Copeland (R)[25]

Endorsements

[edit]
Athena Hollins

State legislators

Municipal officials

Individuals

Organizations

Results

[edit]
District 66B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Athena Hollins (incumbent) 10,864 76.12
Republican Greg Copeland 3,370 23.61
Write-in 38 0.27
Total votes 14,272 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 67A

[edit]

District 67A is in the northeast corner of Saint Paul.[235] Incumbent Liz Lee was re-elected, receiving 73.96% of the vote.[43]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 67A general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Liz Lee (incumbent) 9,133 73.96
Republican Scott Hesselgrave 3,178 25.74
Write-in 37 0.30
Total votes 12,348 100
Democratic (DFL) hold

District 67B

[edit]

District 67B is located in the easternmost part of Saint Paul.[236] Incumbent Jay Xiong (DFL), first elected in 2018, received 75.17% of votes in 2022.[43] Xiong was re-elected with 74.70% of the vote.

Candidates

[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]

Results

[edit]
District 67B DFL primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Jay Xiong (incumbent) 1,151 100.0
Total votes 1,151 100.0
District 67B Republican primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Sharon Anderson 172 52.0
Republican AJ Plehal 159 48.0
Total votes 331 100.0
District 67B general election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Jay Xiong (incumbent) 10,610 74.70
Republican Sharon Anderson 3,538 24.91
Write-in 56 0.39
Total votes 14,204 100.00
Democratic (DFL) hold

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ A hand recount confirmed Wolgamott's victory, reducing his lead by one vote.[41]
  2. ^ After an initial 14-vote margin, a hand recount confirmed Tabke's victory, extending his lead by one vote.[44][41]

References

[edit]
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 This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (license statement/permission). Text taken from The key 2024 races that will determine control of the Minnesota Legislature, Christopher Ingraham, Minnesota Reformer. https://minnesotareformer.com/2024/06/28/key-races-to-watch-in-2024/.