Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Politics
Ryan Faircloth

Republican Brad Finstad leads Democrat Jeff Ettinger for southern Minnesota congressional seat

MINNEAPOLIS — Republican Brad Finstad jumped to an early lead over Democrat Jeff Ettinger Tuesday in the special election race to fill the vacant congressional seat in southern Minnesota.

Finstad, a former U.S. Department of Agriculture official, and Ettinger, the former CEO of Hormel Foods, were vying to complete the term of the late GOP U.S. Rep. Jim Hagedorn, who died in February after suffering from kidney cancer.

If elected, Finstad will represent Minnesota's 1st District until January. And he and Ettinger will hold a rematch in November, with the full two-year congressional term on the line. The two were poised to win their respective parties' primary elections, which were also held Tuesday.

"I enjoy every day I spend with my family, friends, and neighbors in southern Minnesota," Finstad tweeted Tuesday morning. "I am asking for your vote, to be your voice in Congress."

The 46-year-old Finstad was the U.S. Department of Agriculture's state director for rural development in Minnesota during the Trump administration and served in the Minnesota House from 2003-2009. He also spent time as executive director of the Center for Rural Policy and Development, and in a leading role with the Minnesota Turkey Growers Association. Finstad and his family own agronomy company Frontier Labs and have a farm where they grow soybeans and corn.

Ettinger, 63, is a first-time political candidate from Austin, Minnesota, who served as Hormel's chief executive from 2005-2016. Under Ettinger's leadership, Hormel's annual revenue nearly doubled. He's a moderate who's donated to both Democrats and Republicans in the past.

"Thanks to everyone for your remarkable support for the past five months," Ettinger tweeted shortly after polls closed Tuesday night. "No matter the results this evening, we are incredibly proud of what we have built here."

Two cannabis legalization party candidates, Haroun McClellan and Richard Reisdorf, were also on the 1st District's special election ballot.

At Finstad's election-night party in Sleepy Eye Tuesday, Bryce and Shelly Boelter of New Ulm said they liked Finstad over other candidates because of his willingness to negotiate with rather than attack Democrats.

Finstad also stood out to the Boelters because of his agricultural experience, his stance as an abortion opponent and his Christian values, they said.

"We are looking for somebody who can govern with fairness, and treat all people well, and penalize those who break the law," said Bryce Boelter, 57.

Steve Gilles, of New Ulm, said he thinks Finstad's values are in line with those living in the 1st District. Gilles, who also attended Finstad's election party, said he's known the Republican for 15 years.

"Knowing who Brad is and knowing his family values and personal values, that's what sticks out to me," said Gilles, 47.

Finstad held a dominant lead over his general election primary opponent, GOP state Rep. Jeremy Munson. Munson had challenged the GOP-endorsed Finstad against the Minnesota Republican Party's wishes.

Just after 9 p.m. Tuesday, Finstad declared victory in the Republican primary contest.

"We'll see how the rest of the night goes, but I guess we wake up tomorrow and we're going on to November," Finstad said.

Ettinger easily defeated Democratic primary opponents James Rainwater and George Kalberer, winning a spot on the November ballot.

Earlier Tuesday in Rochester, several voters said they supported Ettinger and other Minnesota Democrats in hopes they would fight for abortion and LGBTQ rights.

Erik St. Louis, 57, said he hoped an Ettinger win would bring Congress closer to codifying abortion rights into federal law.

"I think that issue spoke to me pretty heavily this year," he said.

Nancy Neumann, 73, said she wanted to see the 1st District turn blue because she feels Republicans in Congress are more interested in working for their party than the country.

"Right now, I would not touch a Republican with a 10-foot pole," Neumann said.

The boundaries of the 1st District, which includes most of southern Minnesota between the South Dakota and Wisconin borders, were redrawn this year. Under the new map, the district shed Le Sueur County and gained Goodhue and Wabasha counties.

The old map was used for Finstad's and Ettinger's special election contest. The new one will be used in November, giving Goodhue and Wabasha county residents a say in the rematch.

_____

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.