Tag: tina smith
Sen. Mike Lee

Senate Staffer Issues Viral Blast Of Mike Lee For Ugly Remarks On Hortman Killing

Sen. Tina Smith’s (D-MN) chief of staff sharply criticized Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) in a strongly worded email on Monday, after Lee circulated right-wing conspiracy theories regarding the recent shooting of two Minnesota Democratic lawmakers and their spouses, which left one couple dead.

Former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark were killed in the shooting Sunday that Democratic Gov. Tim Walz described as “politically motivated.”

Smith claimed in an interview Sunday that she was on a list of the alleged shooter’s targets.

In an email to Lee’s office, Smith’s chief of staff Ed Shelleby slammed the GOP senator for making light of the matter.

“I knew Melissa Hortman. Many people in this office did. She was a longtime friend of Senator Smith’s, who had seen her hours before she was murdered,” he wrote.

“So you’ll forgive my candor as I speak through enormous grief,” Shelleby added. "Why would you use the awesome power of a United States Senate Office to compound people's grief? Is this how your team measures success? Using the office of a US Senator to post not just one but a series of jokes about an assassination — is that a successful day of work on Team Lee? Did you come into the office Monday and feel proud of the work you did over the weekend?

“I pray to God that none of you ever go through anything like this," Shelleby added. "I pray that Senator Lee and your office begin to see the people you work with in this building as colleagues and human beings.”

He continued: “And I pray that if God forbid, you ever find yourselves having to deal with anything similar, you find yourselves on the receiving end of the kind of grace and compassion that Senator Mike Lee could not muster.”

Shelleby’s letter has gone viral on social media where journalists and commentators are praising him for confronting the senator over his controversial remarks following Sunday’s incident.

“Just re-read this. As a Hill staffer, it’s especially gut-wrenching to read Senator Smith’s staffer appeal to the humanity of another colleague in Senator Mike Lee’s office following Lee’s heartless comments over the weekend following the horrific violence in MN,” wrote Robert Julien, a staffer for Rep. Sylvia Garcia (D-TX) on the social platform X.

Writer Pam Fessler said: “Good for this staffer. There’s no place in our political discourse for Lee’s despicable posts.”

“Read this. And then think of the cruelty and lack of humanity from Mike Lee,” said Democratic activist Rebecca Katz.

Reprinted with permission from Alternet.

Tina Smith

Smith Retirement Will Open Up Senate Seat In Minnesota

Democratic Sen. Tina Smith of Minnesota announced on Thursday that she won’t seek reelection in 2026.

“This decision is not political, it is entirely personal,” she said in a statement, citing that while she entered the Senate with no grandchildren, she and her husband now have four who live nearby. “But it's not lost upon me that our country is in need of strong, progressive leadership—right now maybe more than ever.”

“We have a deep bench of political talent in Minnesota, a group of leaders that are more than ready to pick up the work and carry us forward,” she added.

Smith, age 66, was appointed to the seat following then-Sen. Al Franken’s resignation in 2017. She subsequently won the seat’s 2018 special election and its 2020 election for a full term.

Shortly after Smith’s announcement, Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan jumped into the race.

“I love Minnesota and my intention is to run for United States Senate and continue to serve the people of this state,” she said in a statement. “I’ll make a formal announcement later this month. In the meantime, I’m talking with community and my family and friends. I will have more to say soon.”

Meanwhile, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, who ran as vice president on the 2024 Democratic ticket, is also considering entering the Senate race, according toPolitico.

Minnesota is a blue-leaning state, but it’s not the safest place on the map. Republican candidates have won five of 16 Senate races since 1980, and in 2008, Democrat Al Franken eked out a victory, winning by 0.01 percentage points—just 312 votes—over Republican Norm Coleman. And last year, Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris won the state by just over fourpoints.

The state is a must-win for Democrats in 2026 if they want any shot at retaking the Senate majority. The chamber currently stands at 53 Republicans to 47 Democrats.

Smith is the second Democratic senator to announce they won’t seek reelection, opening up a path for the party to bring in younger, fresher voices.

In January, Sen. Gary Peters of Michigan announced he won’t seek reelection in 2026, after serving two terms. This means that 2026 will be the second election cycle in a row where Democrats must defend an open Senate seat in Michigan, a state Trump took in 2024. Last year, Democrat Elissa Slotkin won her Senate race by just 0.3 points.

The Cook Political Report, a reliable race-rating outlet, considers Peters' Michigan seat to be a toss-up, along with the seat held by Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff of Georgia.

As Daily Kos reported in December, winning back the Senate for Democrats is a long, treacherous road. They must not only defend six seats in 2026 and 2028 that were decided by fewer than 5 points, but they must also gain three to four seats to reach the majority in 2028, depending on whether a Democrat or Republican wins the White House that year.

Now, with Smith and Peters set to exit, there will be many opportunities for new leaders with fresh ideas to introduce themselves.

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos.

Jason Lewis

Senate Candidate Known For Anti-Semitic Outbursts Compares ‘Leftists' To Nazis

Jason Lewis, the Republican contender for Tina Smith's (D-MN) Senate seat who has a history of making anti-Semitic remarks, has stooped to a new low with a campaign ad comparing "leftists" to Nazis.

In the ad, a leather-jacket-clad Lewis — wielding a handgun — intones that "first the radical left came for the Republicans like me."

His spouse, a retired St. Paul, Minnesota, police officer, chimes in.

"Then the radical left came after police officers like me," Leigh Lewis said.

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