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Former sportscaster Michele Tafoya runs for US Senate as Republican

【微信950216】欧博公司客服怎么联系2026-01-26 04:18:51【探索】0人已围观

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Michele Tafoya details Senate run in Minnesota

Former NFL reporter Michele Tafoya joins 'The Brian Kilmeade Show' to discuss her bid for Senate, her issues with current Minnesota lawmakers and more.

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Former sportscaster Michele Tafoya announced her bid for the U.S. Senate as a Republican, stating that Minnesota needs an outsider "with a spine who's going to hold politicians accountable."

Tafoya said Minnesota has sustained "a failure of leadership at just about every level," blaming career politicians for allowing fraud to flourish and letting "the far left" turn the state into a "war zone."

Michele Tafoya has launched a Republican Senate campaign

Michele Tafoya is seen before an NFL football game when she worked as an NBC Sports reporter, on Nov. 25, 2021, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Tyler Kaufman, File)

"This isn't really right versus left. This is right versus wrong. And I want to get us back to that common sense, that normalcy that built Minnesota and really built this country, instead of the craziness and the corruption," Tafoya said Wednesday on the "Brian Kilmeade Show."

She said witnessing the fraud, rioting and "total failure of the political elites" in Minnesota pushed her to leave her sportscasting career and dive into politics.

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"These politicians aren't doing the job," she said. "I'm going to try to step up and do it. If not now, when?"

Michele Tafoya in Fox News Channel studio

Former sportscaster turned political activist and commentator Michele Tafoya is seen at the Fox News Channel studios on April 18, 2024, in New York City.  (Roy Rochlin/Getty Images)

She asserted that Minnesota's problems were solvable, that law and order could be restored and that the middle class could thrive, but that time was of the essence.

"I fear that if we don't do it here in the midterms, it may not get done. So we're going to need everyone to help. We need all hands on deck," Tafoya said.

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Minnesota's most recent Republican senator, Norm Coleman, served from 2003 to 2009. 

When asked why she believed she could be elected as the state's first Republican senator in more than 20 years, she responded with a bit of humor from the sports industry.

"Indiana University was not supposed to win a national championship in football, ever, and they just did. So I think the timing is ripe," Tafoya said. "I think that Minnesotans are exhausted by what's been going on. I talk to Minnesotans every day, and they don't want to leave this state, but many of them are considering it."

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