Capital View Digest reporting on state and politics and government

The Daily Digest for October 17, 2016

Posted at 7:03 am by Mike Mulcahy

Good morning, and welcome to Monday and the start of another work week. There was a lot of news over the weekend, so let’s take a look at the Digest.

1. A new poll of 579 likely voters in Minnesota’s 3rd District shows Republican Congressman Erik Paulsen with a big lead over his DFL challenger state Sen. Terri Bonoff of Minnetonka. The KSTP/Survey USA poll shows Paulsen with 49 percent support and Bonoff with 38 percent, with 13 percent undecided. Bonoff’s strategy to tie Paulsen to Donald Trump doesn’t seem to be working. The poll shows Hillary Clinton leading Trump in the district 48-35. (KSTP)

2. Both Democrats Angie Craig and Republican Jason Lewis claimed victory in their first debate on Friday night, but Craig has a big cash advantage going into the final three weeks of the 2nd District Congressional campaign. Reports filed Saturday showed Craig with more than $900,000 ion hand as of Sept. 30, after raising $918,000 over the past three months. Lewis raised $340,000, but had just $57,000 on hand. In the 3rd District, Erik Paulsen had $2.9 million on hand, compared with $287,000 for Terri Bonoff. (Pioneer Press)

3.Minor parties and even a write-in candidate are hoping voters will consider them if they’re fed up with the way the campaign has been going. In all, there are nine choices for Minnesota voters on the ballot in the presidential race. Along with the Independence Party, the Green Party and Libertarian Party candidates, there are candidates from the Constitution Party, the Legal Marijuana Now Party, the Socialist Workers Party and the American Delta Party. (MPR News)

4. Emails that may have been hacked by Russia contain transcripts of three speeches Hillary Clinton delivered to Goldman Sachs a few years ago. If they’re genuine they’re some of the transcripts that Bernie Sanders called on Clinton to release during the primary campaign. They show that Clinton has called for much tougher regulations on Wall Street during the campaign than she did in those closed-door meetings. (NPR)

5. Republican vice presidential candidate Mike Pence said Sunday “we will absolutely accept” the results of the election. He and other Trump surrogates said on the Sunday morning talk shows that when Trump talks about a “rigged” election he’s referring to the media, which he says are biased against him. But shortly after Pence’s Meet the Press interview Trump took to Twitter where he wrote, “The election is absolutely being rigged by the dishonest and distorted media pushing Crooked Hillary – but also at many polling places – SAD.” (Politico)

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