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Indigenous nation to get $7,250-per-person payments as a mine advances upstream of Alaska

The Stikine River Flats area in the Tongass National Forest is viewed from a helicopter on July 19, 2021. The Stikine River flows from British Columbia to Southeast Alaska. It is one of the major transboundary rivers impacted by mines in British Columbia. Alaska tribes and communities are seeking some new protection to avoid downstream impacts. (Photo by Alicia Stearns/U.S. Forest Service)

By: Max Graham, Northern Journal

This story is co-published by the Wrangell Sentinel and Northern Journal.

An Indigenous community is locked in a debate about the pros and cons of a major new mine on their traditional lands — and a big cash payment promised by the developer.

There is strong support, and fierce opposition. A lot of money to be made, and a wild river to protect. The community faces a pivotal choice.

Though this story sounds like it could be unfolding in rural Alaska, a version of it has actually been playing out just across the border with Canada, in northwest British Columbia. Still, it has implications for the Alaskans who live downstream from the proposed mine site.

In a referendum after weeks of heated debate, members of the Tahltan Nation earlier this month voted overwhelmingly to approve a deal with a Canadian mining company that hopes to revive a huge gold and silver mine, called Eskay Creek, which stopped producing in 2008. The project is located above the Unuk River, which flows into Alaska near Ketchikan.

The Tahltans’ backing is a major step forward for the project, and it comes as the Canada and B.C. governments intensify efforts to build more mines in the name of national security and economic growth. Several of the projects are near the border with Alaska, where state and federal elected officials are separately pushing mines that could help wean the U.S. off a foreign supply of minerals used in energy, electronics and weapons.

Just one day after the Tahltan vote, Canada’s federal government announced that it had approved a merger between two multinational mining firms with a condition that calls for advancing two other proposed mines in Tahltan territory. Both projects sit above tributaries of the Stikine River, a major, salmon-bearing waterway that straddles Canada and the U.S. and empties into the ocean near the small Southeast Alaska town of Wrangell.

Louie Wagner Jr., a Tsimshian and Tlingit resident of Metlakatla, a Native community at the southern tip of Alaska’s panhandle, said he’s concerned about the health of the Unuk River and its future with mines in its watershed.

Wagner and his family have fished and hunted moose along the Unuk for generations.

“That little river cannot handle it,” Wagner said in a recent phone interview. The Unuk is notable, he added, for its abundance of eulachon, a small, oily fish also known as hooligan that’s a staple for Indigenous communities in Southeast Alaska.

Though rarely discussed in Alaska circles, the Tahltan Nation’s approach to mining has major implications for the industry’s future in the transboundary region. A top U.S. Department of Interior official visited the region last year to learn more about models for how Indigenous nations can partner with mining companies.

There are more than a dozen early-stage mining projects in Tahltan territory, many above rivers that flow into Alaska. And the Eskay Creek vote could serve as a preview of future deals between the Tahltan government and the for-profit mining companies promoting development.

For months, members of the First Nation debated whether to approve a deal, known as an impact benefit agreement, that Tahltan elected leaders had negotiated with Vancouver-based Skeena Resources, the company pushing Eskay Creek.

The Eskay Creek mine is accessible off British Columbia’s Stewart-Cassiar Highway. (Photo by Max Graham/Northern Journal)

The specifics of the agreement have not been made public. But Tahltan officials have said it guarantees benefits worth more than $1 billion over the life of the mine, mostly in cash but also in contracts and wages.

The deal also calls for an upfront payment from Skeena, intended to be distributed to individual Tahltan members — to the tune of $7,250 each, according to Tahltan officials. And the agreement reportedly gives the First Nation government some environmental oversight over the mine.

The nation backed the deal with support from more than 77% of the roughly 1,750 Tahltans who voted, according to the Tahltan Central Government. Payments are expected to go out to members in 2026.

“Tahltan Central Government is not standing on the sidelines,” Tahltan president Kerry Carlick said in a statement after the vote.  “We are embedding ourselves directly into the governance of environmental protection.”

Tahltan leaders have long worked to navigate political tensions between an expanding mining industry and efforts to protect traditional lands and wildlife.

The Tahltan government has entered into a number of agreements with mining companies. But it also has opposed efforts to mine coal and drill for natural gas near the headwaters of major rivers in the region.

And some Tahltan members have been outspoken critics of the Eskay Creek project and the company promoting it.

In the leadup to the recent vote, arguments erupted on social media, and relationships among community members grew strained, some Eskay Creek opponents said in interviews.

“This is causing internal conflicts,” said Tamara Quock, a Tahltan member who lives in northern B.C. some 350 miles east of the mine site.

Quock said she thinks the promise of the direct payments “enticed” some people to vote in favor of the agreement. Debate over the project, she added, grew more intense after that condition was added to the deal.

Quock said she feels Skeena is “using the Tahltan people” to generate its own profits.

She and other critics have voiced concerns about a perceived lack of transparency and potential conflicts of interest within the First Nation’s government. They also say they are worried about possible environmental impacts from the project, which would involve digging two open pits and storing millions of tons of mining waste above the Unuk River.

Skeena didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Alaska Native leaders, fishermen and environmental advocates who live downstream, in Southeast Alaska, for years have expressed concerns about Eskay Creek and other proposed mines in the region, saying they don’t trust Canadian regulators to safeguard Alaskan interests.

“You can’t cut these watersheds in half and expect to adequately protect them,” said Guy Archibald, executive director of the tribally led Southeast Alaska Indigenous Transboundary Commission. “Right now they’re cutting the baby in half and ignoring the effects on the Alaska side of the border.”

The commission last month filed a legal challenge in B.C. court, asserting that regulators had failed to consult Alaska tribes on several proposed mines in the region, including Eskay Creek.

Meanwhile, after a major spill last year at a Canadian gold mine in the Yukon River watershed, Alaska’s congressional delegation called for more oversight of Canadian mines near transboundary rivers like the Unuk and Stikine. The statement from the delegation — which has strongly supported mine development in Alaska — called for “binding protections, financial assurances, and strong transboundary governance.”

“As British Columbia seeks to advance numerous mines just upstream from Alaska, we are still asking them to fully remediate legacy sites and firmly commit to binding protections for Alaska interests,” Joe Plesha, a spokesperson for U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, said in a recent statement. “Senator Murkowski is actively considering new ways to make our B.C. neighbors take Alaskans’ concerns seriously.”

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s office says she’s pushing the British Columbia provincial government on protections for Alaska interests as Canada advances mining projects in transboundary watersheds. (Photo by Nathaniel Herz/Northern Journal)

Ottawa and B.C.’s provincial government, meanwhile, are funding new infrastructure projects and prioritizing permitting for energy and resource development projects, including Eskay Creek and the expansion of a huge copper and gold mine in the Stikine watershed, called Red Chris.

Canadian officials say existing regulations are geared to minimize impacts in the shared watersheds. Major projects undergo thorough environmental assessments before they’re approved, a spokesperson with the B.C. agency that leads those reviews, the Environmental Assessment Office, said in an email.

“Making sure large-scale projects are properly assessed is critical to making sure development is sustainable — to ensure good jobs and economic growth while also protecting the environment and wildlife, and keeping communities healthy and safe,” said the spokesperson, Sarah Plank.

Tahltan officials declined an interview request and did not respond to questions about Alaskans’ concerns or the First Nation’s agreement with Skeena.

Supporters of Eskay Creek say it could be transformational for the Tahltan Nation. Among proponents of the deal is Chad Norman Day, a former Tahltan president who has worked in the mining industry and now runs a consulting firm that does mining-related business.

“The benefits which flow to the Tahltan Nation from here will empower the people and territory unlike anything we have ever seen,” Day said in a statement after the vote.

Many Tahltan people work in mining, and the First Nation already generates revenue from Red Chris and another large operating mine, Brucejack, which started producing gold in 2017.

In 2019, Tahltan citizens voted in favor of an agreement with a different mining company pushing another, much bigger proposed mine partially in the Unuk watershed, called KSM. The outcome of that vote was nearly identical to the recent Eskay one, with about the same percentage in favor.

The first nation also, in the past five years, has entered into two joint decisionmaking agreements with the B.C. government for regulatory reviews of mining projects, including Eskay Creek.

Before it can start producing, Eskay Creek needs an environmental approval from the provincial government. A decision is expected early next year.

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Entertainment

Donald Trump Demands CBS Cancel Stephen Colbert… RIGHT NOW!

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Donald Trump is in the giving spirit.

By which we mean the following:

Donald Trump is in the spirit of giving it once again to a late night talk show host that has dared to say something mean about the Commander-in-Chief.

Stephen Colbert attends the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights ‘Ripple of Hope Awards Gala’ in New York City, on December 9, 2025. ((Photo by ANGELA WEISS / AFP via Getty Images)

On Tuesday night, after CBS aired the Kennedy Center Honors ceremony — hosted, naturally, by President Trump — the leader of the free world decided to take aim at Stephen Colbert.

“Stephen Colbert is a pathetic trainwreck, with no talent or anything else necessary for show business success,” Trump wrote in a post at 12:16 a.m. ET on his Truth Social platform.

“Now, after being terminated by CBS, but left out to dry, he has actually gotten worse, along with his nonexistent ratings. Stephen is running on hatred and fumes ~ A dead man walking! CBS should, ‘put him to sleep,’ NOW, it is the humanitarian thing to do!”

Some background may be required here…

Stephen Colbert attends the 2025 GQ Men Of The Year party at Chateau Marmont on November 13, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images)

Back in July, CBS announced The Late Show will be coming to an end in 2026. Many observers believe it did so due to pressure from the Trump administration.

In the time since, Colbert has only increased his jokes at the expense of the world’s most sensitive head of state.

On December 23, meanwhile, CBS aired a rerun of The Late Show… an episode that originally aired on December 8 and which included the host taking numerous shots at Trump — including his takeover of the Kennedy Center and his move to seize hosting duties at the Kennedy Center Honors.

“This year’s Kennedy Center Honors ceremony is the very first since Trump installed himself as chair of the Kennedy Center’s board,” Colbert said in his monologue, eliciting boos from the audience.

In response, Colbert said:

“Yeah, I kind of agree. It seems like the commander-in-chief shouldn’t have enough time to run a theater. ‘Mr. President, Mr. President, Russia has just launched another round of missiles. But first, dress rehearsal for ‘Oklahoma’ is underway, and the blocking is uninspired.’”

Donald Trump takes questions from journalists after announcing the US Navy’s new Golden Fleet initiative, unveiling a new class of warships, at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, on December 22, 2025. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP via Getty Images)

Elsewhere on this episode, Colbert made fun of Trump for receiving the “fake” inaugural FIFA Peace Prize award “after years of campaigning unsuccessfully for the Nobel Peace Prize.”

The comedian said Trump’s FIFA Peace Prize is “like for Christmas if you ask your mom for a Super Nintendo and she gets you something called ‘Super Retendo.’ It comes with ‘Super Marion Brothers’ and ‘Legend of Kelvin.’”

Colbert emphasized that FIFA president Gianni Infantino “pulled on all the stops for Trump’s Big Boy Trophy Party,” adding that in a photo featuring Trump picking up the medal Infantino awarded him, the president “looks like a goblin asking if it’s okay to eat a third baby.”

(Photo Credit: Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Trump, who previously tried to get Jimmy Kimmel yanked off the air, continued to rant and rave on Truth Social last night.

“Who has the worst Late Night host, CBS, ABC, or NBC??? They all have three things in common: High Salaries, No Talent, REALLY LOW RATINGS!” he wrote.

Trump also reiterated his (totally normal and legal) call for the American government to revoke TV broadcasters’ licenses.

“If Network NEWSCASTS, and their Late Night Shows, are almost 100% Negative to President Donald J. Trump, MAGA, and the Republican Party, shouldn’t their very valuable Broadcast Licenses be terminated?” he went on.

“I say, YES!”

Then, three minutes after that post, the president shared, “MERRY CHRISTMAS!!!”

Donald Trump Demands CBS Cancel Stephen Colbert… RIGHT NOW! was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Megan Thee Stallion Pregnant? The Rumor & The Truth

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Megan Thee Stallion is one of the music industry’s most beloved musicians.

In addition to being talented and full of engaging interests, she also happens to be incredibly hot.

Recently, she has shown off her domestic side to fans.

Now, reports are circulating amidst mounting fan speculation. Is she pregnant?

Megan Thee Stallion at the 2025 Met Gala.
Singer Megan Thee Stallion attends the 2025 Met Gala Celebrating “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 05, 2025. (Photo Credit: Savion Washington/Getty Images)

Is Megan Thee Stallion pregnant?

It’s no wonder why fans have been whispering that Megan Thee Stallion might be pregnant.

In November 2025, she showed off her Thanksgiving spread, gushing about how she’d cooked for her boyfriend’s family to show them how much she loves him.

(The boyfriend in question being Klay Thompson, an athlete who plays for a sports team called the Dallas Mavericks)

A woman in her 30s being financially stable, in a loving relationship, and increasingly flaunting her domestic skills could just be someone who’s very happy with where she is in life.

However, people on social media have observed that we could also be seeing hints that she’s ready to start a family — if she hasn’t already.

There is more to the suspicion that Megan might be pregnant than her masterful culinary skills.

She and Klay seem like an incredible match.

Both are attractive and wealthy enough that they could, for better or for worse, be targets for someone who simply wants unlimited financial security.

But with both Megan and Klay worth tens of millions, neither really has to worry about that. They’re both rich-rich.

Fans are declaring that love is in the air — and wedding bells in the future. This isn’t just in Megan’s comments, but all across social media.

Megan Thee Stallion in January 2025.
Megan Thee Stallion attends the Giambattista Valli Haute Couture Spring-Summer 2025 show as part of Paris Fashion Week on January 27, 2025. (Photo Credit: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images for Giambattista Valli)

This isn’t just fan speculation, either

Additionally, there are reports claiming that Megan Thee Stallion is pregnant.

As recently as December 14, one Facebook report alleged that she and Klay are expecting their first child together.

If true, it appears to be very recent news — as there is no sign of a baby bump, hidden or otherwise, in her most recent appearances.

Megan has not confirmed the report. She also has not, as far as we can tell, publicly refuted it.

It is possible that she has not seen it. It wasn’t on TMZ or People or other more reputable sites. Or even on one of the usual, less reputable ones.

Megan Thee Stallion in March 2025.
Megan Thee Stallion attends the 2025 Vanity Fair Oscar Party Hosted By Radhika Jones at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on March 02, 2025. (Photo Credit: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for Vanity Fair)

In recent years, Megan has had to debunk pregnancy rumors.

This issue dates back to 2023.

Which shows that these claims circulated well before her entanglement with Klay.

Megan clapped back at pregnancy theorists, telling them that it was “not pregnant girl summer.”

This time around, she hasn’t shut down the rumors like that. Not yet, anyway. Is she building up to debunk the claim … or to make a very special announcement?

Unfortunately, we have to burst your bubble …

Despite social media hype and unconfirmed reports, there is not currently any evidence that Megan Thee Stallion is pregnant.

We get it: she’s super hot and widely beloved except by weirdo jerks. Of course fans are invested in her future.

Obviously, some fans want to impregnate her. Some fans want her to (somehow) impregnate them. (Yes, in conducing our research, we found a lot of that aspiration)

Both types of fans will need to keep dreaming.

One day, maybe Megan will choose to have kids. We suspect that she’ll let fans know, if they show that they can be normal about the big news.

Megan Thee Stallion Pregnant? The Rumor & The Truth was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Pat Finn Cause of Death: ‘Friends,’ ‘Seinfeld’ Star Was 60

Reading Time: 2 minutes

We have tragic news to report from the world of television today.

Pat Finn — the actor who appeared in several of TV’s most beloved sitcoms — has passed away.

He was just 60 years old.

Pat Finn attends "Diamond in the Rough" premiere at NeueHouse Los Angeles on June 29, 2022 in Hollywood, California.
Pat Finn attends “Diamond in the Rough” premiere at NeueHouse Los Angeles on June 29, 2022 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Araya Doheny/Getty Images for Creator+)

News of Finn’s passing comes courtesy of a statement issued by his family.

“It is with profound sadness and grief that the Finn family announces the passing of beloved comedic actor, Pat Finn,” reads the statement, first published by The New York Post.

“In 2022, Pat battled bladder cancer, went into remission, but the cancer returned and metastasized. He was a warrior in every sense of the word.”

Finn was a full-time cast member on The George Wendt Show, and he had a recurring role on Murphy Brown as Phil Jr. from 1995 to 1997.

Actor Pat Finn arrives at Nickelodeon's 2012 TeenNick HALO Awards at Hollywood Palladium on November 17, 2012 in Hollywood, California.
Actor Pat Finn arrives at Nickelodeon’s 2012 TeenNick HALO Awards at Hollywood Palladium on November 17, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Charley Gallay/Getty Images For Nickelodeon)

He also appeared on The Drew Carey Show and That ’70s Show.

Finn played Joe Mayo on the classic “Reverse Peephole” episode of Seinfeld in 1998 and Courteney Cox’s boyfriend, Dr. Roger, in two episodes of Friends.

He also accumulated numerous film credits, including roles in Dude, Where’s My Car?, Funky Monkey, Cloud 9, I Love You, Beth Cooper, and It’s Complicated.

Countless friends and colleagues have paid tribute to Finn on social media in the wake of his tragic passing.

“I don’t like to be the guy who post pics with celebrities that pass. But this guy wasn’t just a celebrity to me. He was a friend,” comedian Jeff Dye wrote on X (formerly Twitter), adding:

Actor Pat Finn arrives at Nickelodeon's 2012 TeenNick HALO Awards at Hollywood Palladium on November 17, 2012 in Hollywood, California.
Actor Pat Finn arrives at Nickelodeon’s 2012 TeenNick HALO Awards at Hollywood Palladium on November 17, 2012 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Charley Gallay/Getty Images For Nickelodeon)

“One of the best dudes I knew with a PERFECT sense of humor. I love you Pat Finn and I’ll see again in the after, we can sing together and shake our heads about all the meannes in the used to be.”

Finn is survived by his wife Donna, and their children Cassidy, Caitlin, and Ryan, as well as his parents and five siblings.

Our thoughts go out to Pat Finn’s loved ones during this incredibly difficult time.

Pat Finn Cause of Death: ‘Friends,’ ‘Seinfeld’ Star Was 60 was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Kate Beckinsale Divorced: Her History of Marriage, Explained

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Kate Becksinsale has been married and divorced multiple times throughout her career.

Truth be told, some of the ins and outs of her relationship history have been … complex.

Her entanglements have also made headlines.

Here’s a rundown of Beckinsale’s history, and where things stand today.

Kate Beckinsale in November 2016.
Actress Kate Beckinsale attends the Berlin to photocall for ‘Underworld: Blood Wars’ wearing a dress by Elie Saab on the terrace at Akademie der Kuenste on November 22, 2016. (Photo Credit: Brian Dowling/Getty Images for Sony Pictures)

Did Kate Beckinsale marry Michael Sheen?

From 1995, Kate Beckinsale and Michael Sheen were an item.

The London-born actress and the Welsh actor met as castmates in a touring production of The Seagull.

Soon, they had moved in together. They would go on to work together on multiple projects, including voicing a Romeo and Juliet audiobook in 1997.

In 1999, they welcomed their daughter, Lily Mo Sheen.

Many remember these two as a wedded couple. However, Kate Beckinsale and Michael Sheen never married (or divorced, obviously).

Michael Sheen in 2003.
Actor Michael Sheen attends the premiere of ” Young Adam ” at the Warner Village Cinema Leicester Square on September 18, 2003. (Photo Credit: Steve Finn/Getty Images)

In 2001, Beckinsale admitted that she felt “embarrassed” that Sheen had never actually proposed.

She felt that they were married. And many in the public incorrectly remember them as having been married. But it never happened.

In 2003, they appeared together in Underworld, which is perhaps the most consummately 2003 film to ever exist. (Is it good? Yes and no. It’s a classic)

Beckinsale had convinced the director (more on him in a moment) to cast Sheen. However, the relationship ended soon after filming.

She has praised Sheen and remained close with him for many years. However, their romantic relationship ended.

Michael Sheen, Kate Beckinsale, and Len Wiseman in 2014.
Actors Michael Sheen, Kate Beckinsale, and director Len Wiseman on January 12, 2014. (Photo Credit: Ari Perilstein/Getty Images for The Weinstein Company)

Kate Beckinsale did marry Len Wiseman

Underworld‘s director was Len Wiseman. He is the one who cast Sheen in the film at Beckinsale’s urging.

However, on set, Beckinsale and Wiseman apparently fell in love.

Yes, that’s a complex timeline. Certainly, Wiseman’s now ex-wife, a kindergarten teacher named Dana, felt so.

She accused her husband of infidelity.

Regardless of whatever the circumstances of their love story, Wiseman and Beckinsale married in May of 2004.

Len Wiseman and Kate Beckinsale in 2014.
Director Len Wiseman (L) and actress Kate Beckinsale, wearing Gucci, attend the 2014 LACMA Art + Film Gala honoring Barbara Kruger and Quentin Tarantino presented by Gucci at LACMA on November 1, 2014. (Photo Credit: Jason Kempin/Getty Images for LACMA)

In November of 2015, Wiseman filed to divorce Beckinsale.

The court documents noted that he cited “irreconcilable differences” as the reason for the split.

In November 2019, they finalized their breakup.

While Kate Beckinsale was waiting to be officially divorced, she briefly dated Matt Rife, a comedian, in 2017 and 2018.

Rife would not be the last comedian to cross her path, as you may recall.

Pete Davidson on December 6, 2021.
Pete Davidson attends TUBI’s “The Freak Brothers” Experience at Fred Segal on December 06, 2021. (Photo Credit: Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

Remember Pete Davison? The person, no the Ariana Grande song

From January of 2019 until April of 2019, Kate Beckinsale — while not officially legally divorced just yet — dated Pete Davidson.

This was in his fairly fresh post-Ariana Grande era.

The comedian had become something like a status symbol within the entertainment industry.

Beckinsale remains one of the best known women to have dated the newly minted DILF.

Good for her!

Kate Beckinsale Divorced: Her History of Marriage, Explained was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Politics

The nation’s cartoonists look back on the year that was.

Every week political cartoonists throughout the country and across the political spectrum apply their ink-stained skills to capture the foibles, memes, hypocrisies and other head-slapping events in the world of politics. The fruits of these labors are hundreds of cartoons that entertain and enrage readers of all political stripes. Here’s a look back on the past year through the eyes of the cartoonists. Edited by Matt Wuerker.

​Politics

Categories
Politics

Donald Trump and Mike Lindell are targeting Tim Walz. Some Republicans are worried that could backfire.

Minnesota has been the white whale for Republicans in the Trump era. And 2026 could be the year they finally break through — if President Donald Trump and one of the most prolific peddlers of conspiracy theories about the 2020 election don’t sink their chances.

Republicans are growing optimistic about their chances of unseating Democratic Gov. Tim Walz next year, as he seeks a historic third term. But Trump’s increasingly caustic attacks on Walz and disparagement of Minnesota’s Somali community — and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell’s entrance into the gubernatorial race — could hurt Republicans’ chances of regaining ground in the state, some party strategists argue.

“When the president comes in with a flamethrower and just throws that type of rhetoric, there’s no oxygen, and there’s no space for the Republican to offer suggestions and to be thoughtful in that space, because the rhetoric of the president just paints them into a corner,” said Michael Brodkorb, a former deputy chair of the Minnesota GOP who backed the Democratic ticket in 2024.

Republicans have insisted they can be competitive statewide in the blue-leaning Minnesota ever since Trump lost Minnesota by less than 2 points in 2016. But since then, winning the state has beguiled both the president — who faced a 7-point loss in 2020 and a 4-point loss in 2024 — and Republicans in other statewide races, including two fairly comfortable wins for Walz in 2018 and 2022.

Still, Republicans see an opportunity to win back the Minnesota governor’s seat for the first time since 2006 by hammering Walz, who is running despite scrutiny into his oversight of state benefits and a star turn as the Democratic vice presidential nominee that put him in the crosshairs of Republicans across the country.

At the same time, Trump has also used the arrests of some Somali immigrants in federal fraud cases to broadly characterize the state’s Somali population as criminals — leaning on his trademark use of divisive rhetoric that some Republicans worry will fall flat.

That risk, insiders warn, could be exacerbated if Lindell, a Trump ally, wins the Republican nomination.

“We’d be cooked,” said Dustin Grage, a Minnesota Republican strategist. “I’d be moving to Florida very shortly. We would lose pretty badly if Mike Lindell were to get the nomination.”

Those close to the president strenuously disagree, arguing the state remains on the map. House GOP Whip Tom Emmer, the most high-profile Minnesota Republican and an ally of the president, said he’s spoken to Trump about the governor’s race and is confident that any of the 13 Republicans seeking the party’s nomination could defeat Walz.

“We should be able to beat Tim Walz with a dog,” Emmer told POLITICO in an interview.

The White House declined to comment. At a rally in North Carolina on Friday, Trump praised Lindell and said he “deserves to be the governor of Minnesota.”

Walz faces a tricky path to reelection, with no Minnesota governor winning three consecutive terms in the state’s history. That’s been made more difficult by several investigations during his tenure leading the state that revealed a ring of alleged fraudsters siphoning money from public programs. In 2022, federal prosecutors charged dozens of people for pocketing $250 million from a federally funded child nutrition program overseen by the Minnesota Department of Education during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The massive scope of the fraud allegations (the Justice Department called it the “largest Covid-19 fraud scheme in the United States”) triggered a state audit that found the Walz administration “did not effectively exercise its authority” to prevent the fraud.

In September, federal prosecutors charged eight people with defrauding a Minnesota housing and health benefits program of millions of dollars by submitting inflated and fake reimbursement claims. Six additional people were charged for participating in the scheme in December. That same month, a defendant previously charged in the pandemic program fraud pleaded guilty to attempting to steal $14 million from a Minnesota health care program that offers services to children with autism.

Prosecutors have broadened their inquiry into benefits fraud in the state to investigate billions of dollars in flagged billings of 14 public programs supported by Medicaid.

In response to a request for comment to a Walz spokesperson, Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party Chair Richard Carlbom said in a statement that Walz “heads into reelection with a record focused squarely on working people and kitchen-table issues.”

“While the GOP clown-car primary remains consumed by infighting and loyalty tests for Donald Trump, Minnesota families are falling behind as Republicans unleash higher grocery prices, skyrocketing health care bills, and giant tax breaks for billionaires,” Carlbom said. “Minnesotans see the difference — a governor delivering for working families, or Republicans delivering loyalty to Donald Trump and a Washington agenda that puts billionaires first.”

In recent weeks, Trump has ramped up his efforts to link Walz to the abuse of government programs — while using incendiary rhetoric directed at the governor and the Somali community. In a social media post on Thanksgiving, he called Walz “seriously retarded” and accused Somali refugees of seeking to “prey” on Minnesotans. And at an early December rally in Pennsylvania, he again denigrated the Somali community while discussing “the great big Minnesota scam with one of the dumbest governors ever in history.”

Emmer, who said he spoke with Trump about the governor’s race as early as July, said he believes the president recognizes an opportunity in Walz’s vulnerability. “I think the president knows that Tim Walz is the weakest he’s ever been in his political career,” Emmer said.

Former Minnesota House Speaker Kurt Daudt, a Republican, said the fraud investigations are part of the risk for Walz in seeking a third consecutive term.

“If you can lay out a case that, ‘Well, you’ve been elected now for eight years, and you haven’t fixed these problems,’ or ‘You haven’t accomplished what you said you were going to’ … it kind of makes it an easier case to say, ‘Maybe it’s time for someone new,’” Daudt said.

But the rhetoric Trump is using to highlight the fraud may reframe the issue to the detriment of Walz’s Republican opponent, said Brodkorb,the former party official. He believes Minnesotans are eager to weigh ideas on immigration policy and how to tackle abuse of public programs.

“The problem is when the president comes in and says things like, ‘Everyone in the entire Somali community is garbage,’” Brodkorb said.

Emmer, who adamantly defended Trump’s approach and his rhetoric attacking both Walz and the Somali community, credited him with shining a light on the state.

“If he hadn’t said it exactly the way it is, and if he hadn’t been so out there direct, guess what? Nobody would have covered it,” Emmer said.

The barrage directed at Walz and the state — including attacks from Trump allies, targeted probes from Cabinet officials and an immigration crackdown in Minneapolis — underscores the governor’s newfound national prominence since campaigning as former Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate in last year’s presidential race.

Walz has emerged as a vocal critic of the second Trump administration, prompting a feud between the two. After a Democratic lawmaker was killed by a gunman and a second was seriously injured earlier this year, Trump said he would not “waste time” calling the “whacked out” governor.

Walz’s growing national profile both makes him a high-profile target in the 2026 midterms worthy of trying to defeat, GOP strategists say — but Trump’s intense focus on the race could also backfire given the state’s political makeup.

“Having Donald Trump being active in the race for a particular Republican may not be helpful, but it would be extremely helpful to raise the attention on Tim Walz and his record here in the state,” Daudt said.

And if Trump’s ends up throwing his weight behind Lindell — who conspired with Trump in 2020 to advance false claims that the presidential election was stolen — Republicans worry that could give Walz a clearer path to reelection.

“If [Lindell] is the candidate, that’s what the election will be about,” Daudt said. “It’ll definitely be easier for Walz to make the election about Trump if Mike Lindell is the candidate. No question.”

Trump, who continues to claim the 2020 election was rigged, touted Lindell’s efforts to reverse the election results at the North Carolina rally, and empathized with how Lindell “suffered” as a result.

“He was just a guy that said, ’This election was so crooked, it was so rigged.’ He fought like hell,” Trump told his supporters.

Lindell’s campaign did not respond to requests for comment.

Some Minnesota Republicans hope that the party will back a more moderate candidate that can highlight Walz’s vulnerabilities.

But Emmer said candidates should do what they can to win the endorsement of the hundreds of highly engaged party activists who serve as delegates at the party’s nominating convention next year.

“I’m going to tell you the way you win this race. You go run your race to get an endorsement,” Emmer said. “As soon as you are the endorsed Republican candidate, you have won the primary in August, you are going to win the governor’s race.”

​Politics

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