Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Minnesota congressma­n dies after cancer battle

- BY STEVE KARNOWSKI

MINNEAPOLI­S — U.S. Rep. Jim Hagedorn, a Republican from southern Minnesota who followed his father’s footsteps into Congress, has died after a battle with kidney cancer, his wife said. He was 59.

Jennifer Carnahan said in a Facebook post Friday that Hagedorn “passed away peacefully” Thursday night.

“Jim loved our country and loved representi­ng the people of southern Minnesota,” Carnahan wrote. “Every moment of every day he lived his dream by serving others. There was no stronger conservati­ve in our state than my husband; and it showed in how he voted, led and fought for our country.”

Gov. Tim Walz ordered flags flown at halfstaff through sunset Saturday in Hagedorn’s honor.

Walz is expected next week to call a spe- cial election to fill out Hagedorn’s term. It must be held on Aug. 9, which is also the date Minnesota will hold primary elections statewide. Secretary of State Steve Simon said the filing period must end by March 15, and it probably will be open for at least two weeks. A special primary will be held May 24.

The special election will take place within the 1st District’s current boundaries. November’s general election will determine who holds the seat in the next Congress under the state’s new political maps, which were released Tuesday, so candidates for the special election are likely to run in the Aug. 9 primary as well.

Hagedorn’s district leans Republican, and that didn’t change much with the updated map. Hagedorn carried the district by less than half a percentage point over Democrat Dan Feehan in 2018 and by 3 points in a rematch in 2020. President Donald Trump carried the district with nearly 54% of the vote in 2020.

Hagedorn was diagnosed with stage IV kidney cancer in February 2019, shortly after he began his first term, and just a couple months after he married Carnahan, then state chairwoman for the Minnesota Republican Party.

He underwent immunother­apy at the Mayo Clinic. The treatment knocked back his cancer enough that doctors felt safe taking out his affected kidney in December 2020, which he said removed an estimated 99% of the cancer in his body. But he announced in July 2021 that his cancer had returned.

Hagedorn represente­d the 1st District, which stretches across southern Minnesota.

He won the seat in 2018 on his fourth try, after countless appearance­s in small-town parades and county fairs, and after nearly unseating then-Rep. Walz in 2016. In both 2018 and 2020, Hagedorn touted his staunch support for Trump and conservati­ve positions.

“I want to be a partner with the president,” he was fond of saying during the 2018 campaign.

Trump noted their time spent campaignin­g together in a statement Friday, calling Hagedorn a “strong and effective legislator” who will be “greatly missed.”

In office, Hagedorn voted against certifying President Joe Biden’s election, just hours after the failed Capitol insurrecti­on, and he signed on earlier with other House Republican­s to a last gasp bid to get the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn Biden’s victory. He was actively raising money for another run in 2022.

Hagedorn was the son of former congressma­n Tom Hagedorn, who represente­d some of the same territory from 1975-83.

Condolence­s also came from Democrats. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat, called him “a passionate advocate for Southern Minnesota and his district,” noting that he pushed for completion of critical infrastruc­ture projects like the widening of U.S. Highway 14, which was long a priority for his district.

 ?? AP FILES ?? U.S. Rep. Jim Hagedorn, R-Minn., voted against certifying President Joe Biden’s victory.
AP FILES U.S. Rep. Jim Hagedorn, R-Minn., voted against certifying President Joe Biden’s victory.

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