MPR News AM Update
 
Temperatures warm a bit for Wednesday with low to mid-50s returning to southern Minnesota. Northern Minnesota remains colder ahead of the next system. Get the latest weather news on Updraft.

Coming up on Morning Edition: We take a look at Super Tuesday's primary results and preview the Minnesota High School Boys Hockey Tournament that starts today.

Coming up at 9 a.m.: 
Cancer is sometimes thought of as an older person’s disease. But colorectal cancer — also known as colon cancer — is becoming more common in people under 50. MPR News host Angela Davis talks with an oncologist and a cancer survivor about the signs and symptoms to watch for, and how oncologists are responding to the dizzying rise in younger patients.
 
Biden, Trump prevail in Minnesota while facing deep cracks in their party bases

President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump won presidential primary elections Tuesday in Minnesota that highlighted fissures both face within their parties as the country moves toward a rematch of the 2020 race.

Biden received 70 percent of the vote in the Democratic primary while Trump received 69 percent in the Republican primary.

While Biden dealt Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips a loss in his home state — Phillips got about 8 percent — it was the vote for no one at all that speaks louder.

The push to get people to mark “uncommitted” attracted nearly 19 percent of the vote. That showing statewide along with stronger results in urban congressional districts will result in some delegates to the Democratic National Convention that won’t be bound to Biden.
 
Around 1,000 nursing home workers strike for higher pay, better working conditions

The Service Employees International Union estimates about 1,000 nurses and employees from a dozen nursing home facilities in the state went on a one-day, Unfair Labor Practice strike Tuesday.

Jamie Gulley, president of SEIU Healthcare Minnesota and Iowa, said it’s the largest nursing home strike in state history.

“We have been working short, too long. We worked through the pandemic, and we were essential and we expect to be paid and respected for the work that we have done for this community and for the residents every single day,” Gulley said.
 
What else we're watching: 

Students gather at Capitol in support of bill banning flavored tobacco products. A bill that would ban the sale of flavored tobacco products has been referred to the House Finance Committee. Young people across Minnesota are some of the bill’s fiercest advocates.

Nikki Haley will suspend her campaign and leave Donald Trump as the last major Republican candidate. Haley will suspend her presidential campaign Wednesday after being soundly defeated across the country on Super Tuesday, according to people familiar with her decision.

The Caitlin Clark show fueled a Big Ten tournament sellout. These women are used to big crowds. From Iowa to Maryland, with Indiana and Ohio State in between, the conference has continued to stage well-attended games in a trend that suggests it has staying power long after Caitlin Clark — now the career scoring leader among all major college players — launches her last college 3-pointer.

Rethink your gardening plans with early sprouting. Even though it’s only the first week of March, gardeners across the state are seeing plants of all varieties sprouting. Who better to explain this odd gardening season than our resident Minnesota master gardener, Meg Cowden.

—Sam Stroozas, MPR News
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