Updated
Updated · Duluth News Tribune · May 29
6 Minnesota GOP Governor Hopefuls Clash Over Fraud, Healthcare and Schools Before 2,000-Delegate Convention
Updated
Updated · Duluth News Tribune · May 29

6 Minnesota GOP Governor Hopefuls Clash Over Fraud, Healthcare and Schools Before 2,000-Delegate Convention

6 articles · Updated · Duluth News Tribune · May 29
  • Six Republican gubernatorial candidates used a Duluth debate to sharpen contrasts before Minnesota’s convention, with fraud in state programs emerging as the dominant issue ahead of Saturday’s endorsement vote.
  • More than 2,000 delegates are gathering for the two-day convention, and only Patrick Knight, Lisa Demuth and Kendall Qualls said they would abide by the delegates’ choice if they were not endorsed.
  • Fraud debate centered on Gov. Tim Walz’s tenure: Qualls and Knight rejected creating an inspector general, while Demuth backed one and Phil Parrish argued tighter controls could quickly cut off suspect NGO spending.
  • Healthcare and education rounded out the forum, with candidates unanimously attacking Obamacare, citing household costs as high as $25,000 a year, and pushing school reforms as fewer than half of public students read at grade level.
  • Donald Trump’s influence still loomed over the race: all six welcomed his endorsement, and only Knight named a policy disagreement, pointing to the national debt.
As Minnesota debates a new Inspector General, how will it navigate conflicting state and federal anti-fraud efforts?
Could Mississippi's controversial literacy reforms, like holding back third-graders, truly fix Minnesota's schools?
With Minnesota's housing shortage worsening, what is the path forward for zoning reform after recent legislative failures?