The Oklahoman

Jensen wins GOP nod for Minn. governor

Former state senator prevails on ninth ballot

- Steve Karnowski

ROCHESTER, Minn. – Dr. Scott Jensen, a skeptic of the government’s response to COVID-19, won the Minnesota GOP’s endorsemen­t after a wild ride on Saturday to challenge Democratic Gov. Tim Walz in the November election, going over the top on the ninth ballot with 65% of the vote.

Jensen, a former state senator who led on the first two ballots, regained the lead on the seventh ballot with 59%, just below the 60% needed to claim the endorsemen­t, once Lexington Mayor Mike Murphy backed him after being eliminated on the sixth ballot.

“Game over,” Jensen told the delegates, accompanie­d by his running mate, former Minnesota Viking and Baltimore Raven Matt Birk, who used repeated football metaphors to fire up their supporters.

Jensen’s comeback ended a surge by business executive Kendall Qualls, who fell to 33% on the final ballot after taking the lead on the fourth ballot. But Jensen hit a bump in the road when Qualls, who was trying to become the Minnesota GOP’s first Black gubernator­ial endorsee, told the delegates that Murphy falsely claimed that Qualls had offered to make Murphy his running mate, then took back the offer.

The claim angered some Qualls delegates and forced two extra ballots. And Qualls conspicuou­sly did not appear on stage with Jensen for the traditiona­l show of party unity, ending the convention on a note of discord.

But Qualls and most other candidates pledged to honor the party’s endorsemen­t and forego the right to run in the Aug. 9 GOP primary, and State Chairman David Hann told reporters he did not expect Jensen to face a serious challenge.

Former President Donald Trump, still a potent force within the party, has not endorsed anyone in the Minnesota races.

“Minnesota Republican­s have chosen the most extreme and dangerous candidate to lead their party in the fall,” Minnesota Democratic Party Chairman Ken Martin said in a statement. “In just the last two weeks, Scott Jensen has promised to ban abortion for rape victims and to throw one of his political opponents in jail. Minnesotan­s want their leaders to focus on helping working families, but Scott Jensen is only interested in his far-right political agenda.”

Jensen, who came into the convention as the presumptiv­e front-runner, acknowledg­ed that he got nervous when he fell behind for four ballots in a row.

“But what made me even more nervous was that I didn’t have a clue what was going to happen next,” Jensen said. “And, you know, as a physician, the last thing you want is to be in a position where you don’t have control of the situation. So it was a wild ride. I wouldn’t make any bones about it.”

The 2,100 delegates were aiming to complete their work by a soft 6 p.m. CDT Saturday deadline for vacating the Rochester Mayo Civic Center, but the relatively fast and smooth electronic voting process Friday reduced the chances of running out of time and leaving without an endorsemen­t. Delegates and party leaders are hoping at least one of their candidates becomes the first Republican elected to statewide office since Gov. Tim Pawlenty was reelected in 2006.

Jensen, a family physician from Chaska, got the earliest start in the race and raised the most money. He built a national following as he framed his COVID-19 vaccine skepticism – and opposition to mask mandates and school and business closures – as support for medical freedom. He stressed in his speech his efforts as a state senator to stand up against the Walz administra­tion’s handling of the pandemic.

“Everyone in this room has grasped at some level that Tim Walz has failed. He’s done. But who’s going to step forward? Who’s going to serve for the benefit, security and the protection of all the people? Who’s going to help Minnesota find its way back to be the bright and shining Star of the North?” Jensen said in a video preceding his speech. “The answer is you.”

Jensen was repeatedly accompanie­d on stage by Birk, who reminded delegates that he refused to visit the White House after the Ravens’ 2013 Super Bowl victory because of President Barack Obama’s support for abortion rights.

Qualls highlighte­d his rise from poverty, to going to college, to becoming an

Army officer and a business leader. He said his life is a testament to the failure of the Democratic agenda and shows that the American dream is still alive.

“The radical left thinks I shouldn’t be here. The media doesn’t think I should be here. Tim Walz wishes I wasn’t here at all,” Qualls said to loud applause. “And poor Joe Biden, he tells people that look like me that I’m not Black, that we’re not Black, we didn’t vote for him. Well, after voting for Donald J. Trump for president – both times – and I’m still Black. And I’m still Republican. And I’m going to be Joe Biden’s and Tim Walz’s worst nightmare.”

Former Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, a state senator from East Gull Lake who stressed his support for law enforcemen­t, dropped out after the third ballot and threw his support to Qualls. Sen. Michelle Benson, of Ham Lake, who had been a candidate but dropped out before the convention, joined Gazelka in backing Qualls.

However, it wasn’t known Saturday if Jensen would escape a serious primary challenge. Former Hennepin County Sheriff Rich Stanek, who had been seeking the endorsemen­t, was idled by a recent car accident, skipped the convention while he recovers and hasn’t announced a decision. Hann acknowledg­ed he hadn’t spoken recently with the Stanek campaign.

“Rich and his campaign team are evaluating all options for moving forward to beat Walz in November,” his campaign said in a statement Saturday.

On Friday night, the convention endorsed business attorney Jim Schultz for attorney general, an office Minnesota Republican­s haven’t won since 1968. He’s hoping to oust incumbent Keith Ellison, a former congressma­n who led the prosecutio­n team that won the murder conviction of former Officer Derek Chauvin in George Floyd’s death.

Schultz defeated Doug Wardlow, who was the party’s candidate in 2018 and is general counsel at MyPillow. That company’s CEO, Mike Lindell, has risen to national prominence for perpetuati­ng the claim that Trump won the 2020 election.

 ?? GLEN STUBBE/STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? Minnesota GOP gubernator­ial candidate Dr. Scott Jensen, left, takes the stage with running mate and former NFL player Matt Birk.
GLEN STUBBE/STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP Minnesota GOP gubernator­ial candidate Dr. Scott Jensen, left, takes the stage with running mate and former NFL player Matt Birk.

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