Voters in the Twin Cities’ east metro cast ballots in Tuesday’s race to represent Minnesota’s Fourth Congressional District.
East metro casts ballots in race between Democrat Betty McCollum and GOP’s May Lor Xiong
McCollum, Minnesota’s longest-serving member of Congress, has won the DFL stronghold with more than 60% of the vote in the last three elections.
Democratic U.S. Rep. Betty McCollum, Minnesota’s longest-serving member of Congress, is seeking her 13th term.
She is challenged in a rematch with Republican candidate May Lor Xiong. The Fourth Congressional District covers Ramsey County and much of Washington County.
McCollum is the dean of Minnesota’s congressional delegation and the lead Democrat on the House Defense Appropriations Subcommittee. Her campaign emphasizes the environment; gun safety measures, including a ban on assault weapons and required background checks for gun purchases; strengthening the Affordable Care Act; and protecting reproductive rights, among other progressive policies.
Xiong was born in a refugee camp in Thailand and moved to the United States at age 8. She is the first Hmong American to win a Republican primary in the U.S.
Her background includes work as a St. Paul public school teacher. Her campaign focuses on issues including securing the southern border, inflation and education. Xiong told the Star Tribune in a voter guide interview that she believes abortion should be under state jurisdiction.
Both candidates said they would accept the results of the 2024 presidential election.
Their race has not been on political forecasters’ lists as one to watch. In the previous three elections, McCollum has won more than 60% of the vote. In 2022, McCollum won with 68% of the vote to Xiong’s 32%. While the district has changed shape over time with redistricting, it has long centered around DFL-stronghold St. Paul and has not been represented by a Republican since the 1940s.
Emmer defeated Hendricks by more than 24 percentage points two years ago in the Sixth Congressional District.