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Republican Kendall Qualls launches bid for Minnesota governor

The U.S. Army veteran and business executive from Medina announced his second run for governor in 2026.

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Republican Kendall Qualls, former U.S. Army veteran and business executive from Medina, launches his bid for governor at Rojo Mexican Grill in St. Louis Park on Tuesday, May 13, 2025.
Mary Murphy / Forum News Service

ST. LOUIS PARK, Minn. — Republican Kendall Qualls launched his bid for governor Tuesday, May 13, making him the first high-profile Republican to throw their hat into the race.

Qualls, a U.S. Army veteran and business executive from Medina, launched his campaign Tuesday night at Rojo Mexican Grill in St. Louis Park. The event drew roughly 300 supporters, according to the campaign, and featured remarks from Qualls, his wife, Sheila, and former Minnesota Senate President David Osmek.

“Our state deserves better,” Qualls told Forum News Service on Tuesday. “We’re a better state than the leadership that we currently have. We’re now in a budget deficit, more violent crime than we’ve ever had in our state — that never used to be the character of Minnesota.”

Qualls had an unsuccessful bid for governor in 2022 when he lost in the primary to former state Sen. Scott Jensen. He also unsuccessfully ran for Minnesota’s 3rd Congressional District in 2020. Qualls grew up in Harlem, New York, and a trailer park in Oklahoma, according to his campaign . He later served as an artillery officer in the Army before earning his MBA from the University of Michigan.

Qualls spoke to Gov. Tim Walz’s tenure during his remarks Tuesday. Walz said he is weighing a bid for governor for what would be a rare third-term bid, and said on April 30 that he won’t make a decision at least until the legislative session is over on May 19.

“Tim Walz’s failures are well known locally,” Qualls said to his supporters Tuesday. “We knew about him way before he made it in the national scene. We know exactly what we’re gonna get from this governor, or whoever the Democrats decide to put in his place.”

Richard Carlbom, chair of the Minnesota DFL, said in a statement Monday that Qualls is “a far-right culture warrior.”

“Minnesotans don’t want leaders who embrace that kind of extremism, which is why they have already rejected Kendall Qualls twice,” Carlbom said. “If he manages to survive the chaotic and divisive Republican primary, the Minnesota DFL will be ready to hold Kendall Qualls accountable for his plans to bring the chaos and extremism of the Trump administration to Minnesota government.”

Other candidates to officially throw their hat into the race are Phillip Parrish , a former U.S. naval intelligence officer from Kenyon, and Brad Kohler , a former UFC heavyweight professional fighter from Bloomington.

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A Republican hasn’t won statewide office in Minnesota since 2006, when Gov. Tim Pawlenty won his bid for governor. Qualls said Tuesday that he thinks Republicans will win not just the governor’s race in 2026, but that “every statewide race down ballot into the dog catcher is going to vote Republican.”

More from Mary Murphy
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A look at some of what got done in the regular session, what didn’t and what’s still up in the air as the Legislature poises for a special session
With policy negotiations ongoing and fewer than half of all budget bills passing through the Legislature, there is still work ahead for lawmakers, who were scheduled to complete the session Monday

Mary Murphy joined Forum Communications in October 2024 as the Minnesota State Correspondent. She can be reached by email at mmurphy@forumcomm.com.
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