Minnesota
Related: About this forumJudge rules DFL House candidate did not meet residency requirements, won't be sworn in
By KSTP
Updated: 1 hour ago
Published: December 20, 2024 - 1:15 PM
House 40B candidates Paul Wikstrom, left, and Curtis Johnson. (Campaign photos)
A judge on Friday granted a Republican candidates contest of the results of a Minnesota House race after finding his Democratic opponent did not establish residency in House District 40B.
DFL candidate Curtis Johnson won the election in the district that includes parts of Roseville and Shoreview by more than 7,500 votes, but his opponent, Republican Paul Wikstrom, found Johnson was still living in Little Canada in the months leading up to the event.
Johnson had signed a lease at a Roseville apartment complex earlier in the year, but Wikstroms campaign built a body of evidence suggesting he had never moved in. Investigators took photos of Johnsons car, a blue Mitsubishi, consistently parked in the driveway of the home he and his wife own in Little Canada.
Based on testimony from Johnson and witnesses who had surveilled Johnsons whereabouts, District Judge Leonardo Castro found Johnson spent scant time at the Roseville apartment until Oct. 15. State law requires candidates to reside in the district they represent for at least six months before the general election.
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in2herbs
(3,217 posts)MichMan
(13,513 posts)MichMan
(13,513 posts)Pretty stupid of Johnson to be disqualified for something like this that was easily in his control.
I wonder how people that volunteered and put time and effort into his campaign feel right now.
question everything
(49,034 posts)dflprincess
(28,522 posts)Not much is going to get done this session even if we had that seat.
nmmi
(197 posts)dflprincess
(28,522 posts)and a special election will be called.
The Republican, who lost by a wide margin, will not be declared the winner. It's not like he's the runner up in the Miss America Pageant.
nmmi
(197 posts)to take office, and so a do-over election is held (in the reverse situation, a heavily "R" district) -- then I think we would be mad as hell. I would.
But maybe that's my "Miss America Pageant" mentality.
nmmi
(197 posts)Johnson has 10 days to appeal the ruling to the Minnesota Supreme Court. House Democrats are optimistic an appeal will be successful.
The court erred as a matter of law in not dismissing this case. A residency issue must be resolved before an election and is not an appropriate basis for an election contest. We will appeal to the Minnesota Supreme Court, and expect the Supreme Court will dismiss the case, House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, said in a statement.
JMCKUSICK
(568 posts)The whole thing from candidate to House Speaker just stinks of rules don't apply to us, sound familiar?