Many in Minnesota’s federal workforce — from border patrol workers up north to agency managers awaiting directives from Washington — are on edge after a flurry of executive actions during President Donald Trump’s first week back in office.
Minnesota’s agriculture industry relies on migrant labor and immigration policies that allow temporary workers.
More than a dozen Minnesotans are among the nearly 1,600 participants in the Jan. 6 riot who received pardons and commutations from President Donald Trump on his first day back in office.
Plus: Pete Hegseth clears key U.S. Senate vote on his way to confirmation despite new abuse claims from ex sister-in-law.
It’s a scary thing to be targeted by your own government. That was probably the point of the executive orders pouring out of the White House in the first days of the second Trump administration. Orders targeting government employees.
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison announced Minnesota joined 21 states and San Francisco in suing Trump over his birthright citizenship order.
President Donald Trump’s early executive orders called on federal agencies to bolster U.S. mining. President Donald Trump and Republicans on Capitol Hill are poised to reverse a host of Biden-era protections and expand domestic mining, from Alaska to Minnesota. And green groups are girding for a fight.
Minnesota’s Amy Klobuchar, the only Democrat speaker at President Donald Trump’s inauguration, focused on the peaceful transfer of power and democracy during her remarks
Minnesota GOP Congressman Tom Emmer sent WCCO a statement which said, in part, "Under President Trump, the United States government will be focused on delivering results for the American people ...
A geographer explains who decides what goes on the map.
Democrats are “being more measured because people are just so tired, so there isn’t the energy to stay at an 11 for the next four years,” said Michigan state Sen. Mallory McMorrow. “My advice is, call it out, be blunt, but don’t shriek about it.”