Former longtime television sports reporter and conservative commentator Michele Tafoya has officially entered the 2026 U.S. Senate race in Minnesota, launching a Republican bid to flip a Democratic-held open seat. In an exclusive interview in Minneapolis, Tafoya framed her campaign as a response to what she described as a profound “crisis of leadership” in her home state.
Tafoya is running for the seat being vacated by retiring Democratic Sen. Tina Smith, a race national Republicans see as a key opportunity to expand their current Senate majority. Though Minnesota has leaned blue in recent cycles, Tafoya argued that frustration with one-party rule has created an opening for a political outsider willing to challenge the status quo.
“We are suffering a crisis here in Minnesota,” Tafoya said, criticizing what she characterized as entrenched career politicians who have failed to address rising instability. Positioning herself as a candidate of “sanity” and “normalcy,” she said voters must choose “not between right versus left, but right versus wrong.”
Her announcement comes amid heightened political tensions in Minnesota, now a focal point of the national debate over President Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement efforts. A large-scale deployment of federal agents from the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement has sparked protests across Minneapolis and beyond. The situation escalated further following the fatal shooting of a demonstrator, an event that intensified scrutiny of both federal and local leadership.
Tafoya expressed sympathy for the victim’s family while placing blame on state and city officials, including Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey. She accused them of “fanning the flames” and creating an atmosphere of hostility toward law enforcement rather than working to de-escalate tensions.
The controversy has deepened as the Justice Department issued subpoenas to Walz, Frey, and other officials as part of a federal investigation into whether state leaders impeded immigration enforcement. Walz dismissed the probe as a “partisan distraction,” while Frey accused the federal government of abusing its authority.
Beyond immigration, Tafoya highlighted another issue she says exemplifies Minnesota’s leadership failures: a massive COVID-era fraud scandal. More than 90 people have been charged in what prosecutors describe as the largest pandemic-related fraud case in U.S. history, involving alleged misuse of funds tied to food, housing, childcare, and Medicaid programs. The total losses, authorities say, could approach $9 billion.
Calling the scandal “epic” and far from over, Tafoya argued it underscores the need for sweeping political change. As she embarks on her Senate campaign, she is betting that voter fatigue with controversy and corruption will outweigh Minnesota’s recent Democratic tilt—and that her high-profile media background can help rewrite the state’s political script.