Lawmakers respond to attacks on Minnesota officials
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The suspect in the killing of a Minnesota lawmaker and her husband has been captured, an ingredient to add to smoothies if you want protein but hate protein powder, and more from TODAY for June 16, 2025.
Leaders responded to the politically motivated set of attacks on the homes of two Minnesota leaders, which killed Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband.
"It is painful, it is frightening and it should never happen in a democracy," the Democratic Party of Illinois said in a Facebook post.
The cohosts reacted to the allegedly politically-motivated violence that took place over the weekend and the response by a key official.
Minnesota law enforcement officials said June 14 a list of individuals, potentially targets, was found in one of Boelter's vehicles, NPR reported. At a press conference, officials said the names on the list were largely in midwestern states, including Michigan.
Minnesota State Rep. and Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, were killed Saturday in what officials are calling "targeted" attacks.
Lawmakers across the country shared their reaction to the two separate shootings which left one Minnesota lawmaker dead and one Minnesota lawmaker injured over the weekend.
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Iowa politicians disavowed political violence and offered condolences to the families of two Minnesota lawmakers after a pair of shootings on June 14.
Elected leaders described the shootings as an attack on democracy and called on Americans to reject political violence.
Massachusetts political leaders are condemning political violence after 55-year-old Minnesota state Sen. Melissa Hortman, a Democratic lawmaker, was assassinated on Saturday. Hortman was an alumnae of Boston University and the Harvard Kennedy School.