Qualls to Trump: Why not butt out
MEDINA, Minn. — The gubernatorial candidate who won the state Republican convention’s endorsement for governor, Kendall Qualls, shrugged off President Trump’s intrusion into the primary election. Said Qualls:
“This race won’t be won by national endorsements. It will be decided by Minnesota Republicans.”
This week Trump threw his weight behind election conspiracist Mike Lindell of MyPillow fame. Trump called Lindell “one of America’s greatest and most hard-working patriots” but offered no supporting rationale to vote for him for governor. Lindell has no experience in public office. In business he drove MyPillow into bankruptcy. There is some irony that Qualls, like Lindell, has been consistent in supporting Trump. In responding to Trump’s decision, Qualls struck tones of betrayal. He said that Minnesota Republicans have spoken through their state convention and that Trump should respect their choice.
Earier: Lindell: I earned, didn’t seek Trump support

Qualls. Retired health insurance executive.
Airport Lake drowning victim from Cities
GOODVIEW, Minn. — The man who drowned Thursday night at the Airport Lake quarry was Michael Oluwaseun Ogunbayo, age 22, of the east St. Paul suburb of Woodbury. The Winona County sheriff’s office released the name after the family was notified. Three women on a swimming outing with Ogunbayo called called 911 about 8 p.m. Thev said hat he had grabbed the rope hanging from an iconic tree and swung out over the water — a thrilling leap that hundreds of Airport Lake swimmers have experienced for decades. He resurfaced, then disappeared, the women told first-responders. The body was located by sonar within 20 mutes or so and retrieved. There was no visible trauma, first-responders said. A small puncture wound in an ankle was attributed to the recovery process. There was no indication of alcohol or drug involvement, deputies said.
Ex-governor: Yea to Johnson, nay to Finstad
MINNEAPOLIS — The Democratic challenger to southern Minnesota’s sitting congressman, Brad Finstad, received a surprrise endorsement — from a former Republican governor of Minnesota. Arne Carlson, who was governor from 1991 to 1999, encouraged voters to support Jake Johnsn, a Rochester Democrat, to in effect run Finstad out of office. Carlson’s endorsement aimed at Finstad’s unflinching allegiance to President Trump.
“Right now, over 80% of Americans do not trust their government and that must change, and change now. That is why I am endorsing Jake Johnson for Congress. I know he will go to bat for term limits, work towards a balanced budget, and represent the people and not just the wealthy interests.”
The influence of Carlson, now 91, is hard to assess. If nothing else, the significance is symbolic. Finstad has been a lock-step Trump toady. Finstad has voted consistently to support Trump on he Iran war, his global trade war, the faltering economy, and raids on federal health and nutritional funding.
Earlier: MN-1 Democrat OK Johnson to take on Finstad
Earlier: Finstad still avoiding news reporters, townhalls
Earlier: MN-1 Democrat OK Johnson to take on Finstad
Earlier: On all-out war on Iran: Finstad stands by Trump

Carlson. Although historically a Republican, he has gravitated to political independence in his retirement years
Winona’s treacherous Airport Lake claims life
GOODVIEW, Minn. — A man missing at the Airport Lake swimming hole was found after a 40-minute search. Attempts to resuscitate the 22 -year-old man were unsuccessful. Winona County deputies delayed releasing his name until kin were notified. The 911 call had been about 8 p.m. The lake is a 12-acre gravel-mining pit that’s been decommisioned for decades and has filled with spring water. At places it’s 100 feet deep with sudden drop-offs and dramatic and unpredictable shifts in temperature at various depths. Swimming is not recommended. Even so, the shielded isolation of one cove draws young people to cool off, ,especially in hot, steamy weather.


Airport Lake. Off Theurer Boulevard at entrance to the Winona airport and the Goodview industrial park.
Musk guilty of Wisconsin vote bribery?
GREEN BAY, Wis. — Brown County prosecutor David Lasee has a choice: Whether to file criminal charges against billionaire Elon Musk for writing $1 million in checks to Wisconsin citizens to vote in a 2025 stare Supreme Court election. Like Musk, Lasee is a Republican. Last week the bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission voted 5-1 that Musk should be charged with vote bribery. Lasee has 40 days to decide. Musk, who has no Wisconsin roots, spent $20 million tota, mostly for advertising, on a Trump-backed candidate in what amounted to a showdown referendum on Trump. Trump’s candidate, Brad Schimel. lost by 10 percentage points.
Earlier: Wisconsin voters turn left on Supreme Court choice
Misery in the afternoon: Smoke, humidity, heat

Squint: Maybe you see Wisconsin. The smoky view at the Winona traffic circle looking toward the Wisconsin bluffs a little after 3 p.m. when the smoke pollution particles were at 215 — “unhealthy” for everyone. At the same time the EPA’s Duluth smoke particle sensors exceded 609 — “hazardous” for everyone. A good day for everyone here or there to stay indoors and bring out your old CoVid stockpiles of N95 masks if you absolutely need to go outside. Image: Andy Frank
Earlier: Up North wildfires thickening our air
Rattler radar /2: Apple Blossom Drive
DRESBACH Minn. — A snake wrangler removed a rattlesnake from a property just southwest of Dresbach on Oak Hill Drive up to Apple Vlossom Drive. It was the second 911 rattlesnake. call this season to the police dispatcher in Winona. The call was about 10:45 a.m.
Earlier: Rattler radar /1: Up Gilmore Creek
Cotter athlete to Big 10 coaching job
SEATTLE — A Cotter High School sports figure in Winona, Patrick Bowlin, has been named assistant women’s basketball coach at University of Washington. Bowlin, a 2008 Cotter grad, is a Minnesota High School Hall of Fame girls’ basketball coach. He ranks second in state history with 732 career victories. He graduated from St. John’s University in 2012. He has coached collegiate volleyball at Saint Benedict, Marquette, UW-Green Bay, and St. Thomas.
Lindell: I earned, didn’t seek Trump support
ROCHESTER, Minn. — At a 2020 Trump rally in Rochester, Mike Lindell let slip that he coveted the governorship of Minnesota. Trump picked up on it and encouraged Lindell. But as Trump proceeded with his presidential campaign — and as Lindell cozied up to him at every opportunity — Trump turned a cold shoulder. Lindell nonetheless persisted and campaigned enthusiastically for Trump. Even when Trump lost, Lindell didn’t slow down. With even more fervor than ever, he embraced whacky conspiracy theories that voting machines had been rigged to cheat Trump out of the presidency. During all this, Lindell’s MyPillow business, on which he had built a rags-to-riches fortune, collapsed. Retailers cancelled their pillow orders left and right to distance themselves from Lindell’s growing zaniness. Bankruptcy followed. Lindell found himself living out of a pickup truck. His dream of holding elected office persisted, however. Last December he announced he would run for governor. And although Trump was silent, Lindell kept name-dropping about Trump’s six-year-old aside of encouragement. Then out of blue this week, Trump endorsed Lindell’s bid to be Minnesota’s governor. Even Lindell was surprised. In a giddy rambling interview with MPR:
“I didn’t ask him for his endorsement. I wanted to get it based on merit, based on what I could do. And I’m really excited that he endorsed me, and it’s based on merit, and what I’ve done with my campaign so far.”
Lindell is in a large Republican field in the party’s August primary. Businessman Kendall Qualls has the party’s endorsement from the GOP state convention in May. House Speaker Lisa Demuth was runner-up. Lindell is among lesser candidacies. He sees Trump’s support as a break-through:
“Now I can concentrate. I’m not taking the primary for granted, but I want to concentrate now on getting out what I can do for Minnesota. This will raise a lot of funding. Right now we’re approaching $3 million but this should up that so we can really hit the advertising to the marketing that I have planned to go against Amy Klobuchar.”
U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar is the Democratic shoo-in for the August primary.

Lindell saga. Rags to riches to rags. Now to governor? Trump called him the “Pillow Guy” in announcing his endorsement.
So many running
Republicans still with active candidacies the August primary:
> Leaders: Kendall Qualls, Lisa Demuth, Mike Lindell.
> Longshots: Loner Blue, Raul J. Estrada, John Krhin, Ross Nova.
Does Trump matter?
Trump has intruded into state Republican gubernatorial processes so far this year in 12 states. His endorsed candidates prevailed in primaries in 10 states and lost in two. Impossible to measure is whether his thumb on the scale made a difference
How they voted: On daylight savings /1
WASHNGTON — The U.S. House voted 308-117 to abolish daylight savings time. Senate approval is still needed. The bill would put clocks on a uniform year-round standard: No more “fall back, spring ahead” confusion; Localities could opt out. Here is how the Minnesota and Wisconsin delegations voted:
For 12-month uniformity
> Angie Craig, D-Mn2 (south suburbs)
> Tom Emmer, R-Mn6 (north suburbs)
> Brad Finstad, R-MN1 (southern counties)
> Michelle Fischbach, R-Mn7 (rural west)
> Pete Stauber, R-Mn8 (Iron Range)
—
> Scott Fitzgerald, R-Wi8 (Clyman)
> Tom Tiffany, R-Wi7 (Hazelburst)
> Derrick Van Orden, R-Wi3 (Prairie du Chien)
> Tony Wied, R-Wi8 (DePere)
Against
> Betty McCollum, D-Mn4 (St. Paul)
> Kelly Morrison, D-Mn3 (west suburbs)
> Ilhan Omar, D-Mn5 (Minneapolis)
—
> Glen Grothman, R-Wi6 (Campbellsport)
> Gwen Moore, D-Wi4 (Milwaukee)
> Gwen Moore, D-Wi4 (Milwaukee)
> Mark Pocan, D-Wi2 (Madison)
Rubber residue marks road after plane crash

Talk about a thumpy landing. Tread marks on County Road 33 tell a story. Pilot guided disabled airplane onto the paved road and survived.
Federal inspectors yet to sign off on case
UTICA, Minn. — The pilot who crash-landed his light plane last week managed to line up with a rural road after his engine sputtered and he went by a 73-mph stall. Such is suggested by 100 feet jerky rubber marks on paved County Road 33 south of Utica. It was expected that the National Transportation Safety Board will credit the pilot, Glenn Edward Jackson, age 61, of Byron, with skilled airmanship. The Board’s inspectors, who visited the wreckage, are expected to report their conclusions by mid-August. A non-expert visual inspection suggests that Jackson managed to lower his landing gear before hitting the pavement. His nose gear may have crumbled by the impact, veering the craft 90 degrees into a roadside grassy patch. Although injured, Jackson climbed out. There was no fire. Uncertain is how much fuel was left in the Glasair 1RG’s 62-gallon tank. Jackson was flying out of Rochester, 30 miles away. He was alone.
Earlier: Downed plane near Utica under guard

Glasair 1RG. A tiny sports plane. Known for maneuverability. Popular with weekend fliers. “Fun to fly,” they say.

Up North wildfires thickening our air
WINONA, Minn. – People with breathing disorders will not find comfort from the weather rhe next few days Wifldres Up North jn in Minnesota and Ontario are contaminating the air quality. The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency issued an Air Quality Alert until 11 a.m. Friday for a large part of the state including southeastern Minnesota. There also was a similar alert in Wisconsin.
Health tip
People who have medical issues such as lung disease including asthma, or heart disease, should avoid prolonged or heavy exertion.
News summary at mid-week: July 15, 2026
GOVERNANCE: Minnesota objects to scheme to tame CNN
GOVERNANCE: Plan progresses for homeless beds at St. Paul’s
ENVIRONMENT: National Guard to Boundary Waters for wildfires
HEALTH: Up North wildfires thickening our air
WILDLIFE: Rattler radar /1: Up Gilmore Creek
RIVER: Some names emerge in fatal Lake Pepin accident
REMEMBRANCE: R.I.P.: Fred Nass
POLITICS: Trump to Minnesota Republicans: Vote Lindell
COMMERCE: Bridgeview Plaza update: 200 apartments
CRIME: ICU patient turns mega-violent at hospital
CRIME: Cops: Meth on homeless man after stalking report
CRIME: 0.26% breath test alarms cops, who call medics
FARM: Knee high by the Fourth of July
ACCIDENT: Winona driver dead in dump truck collision
ACCIDENT: Two teens hurt in related ATV crashes
ACCIDENT: Man in horse-drawn buggy hurt in collision
Earlier: News summary at week’s end: Huly11, 2026
Two teens hurt in related ATV crashes
RIDGEWAY, Minn. — A youth was airlifted out of remote terrain after falling from the back of a four-heeler. This was off County Road 13 near the Houston County line. The youth, age 18, suffered face cuts, said Winona County deputies. The youth was out looking for a fellow teenager who was late coming home on her own four-wheeler. This was after dark, about 9:30 p.m. The missing teen, a girl, age 13, who had overturned, was found later by deputies and taken by ground ambulance to a hospital. Deputies said the youth with the face injuries was riding in t he back rack of a four-wheeler driven by family member. As he scanned for signs of the missing girl, the door of the rack flung open. He was struck in the face. Neither his injuries nor those of the missing girl appeared life-threatening, deputies said.
Trump to Minnesota Republicans: Vote Lindell
WASHINGTON — President Trump threw his support behind MyPillow pitchman Mike Lindell in the Minnesota race for governor. Political observers responded that Trump’s endorsement might sway some Republicans in the August primary. But, they added, the endorsement unlikely to influence who wins the GOP spot on the November general election ballot. Consider:
> Trump’s plummeting influence in Minnesota, even among Republicans, especially after his brutal Metro Surge military occupation of Minneapolis and St. Paul over the winter.
> Lindell’s failure to come close to winning the GOP endorsement for governor at the state Republican convention in May. At the convention Lindell pulled less than 21% on the fourth of 10 ballots. Businessman Kendall Qualls won the endorsement. Second behind Qualls was state House Speaker Lisa Demuth. Like Lindell, Demuth has continued her primary election campaign without the convention’s endorsement.
Trump announced his support for Lindell online. He called Lindell “one of America’s greatest and most hard-working patriots”:
“Mike will be SPECTACULAR!!! He truly loves Minnesota, as do I, and wants to bring it back from oblivion and embarrassment. He can do it!”
Trump used the announcement to continue his trash-talk about current Governor Tim Walz, a Democrat. Lindell, said Trump, would replace “one of the worst and most incompetent governors in the history of the U.S.A.”
Bridgeview Plaza update: 200 apartments
LACROSSE, Wis. – Developers have a green light to replace the atrophying Bridgeview Plaza strip mall with a four-story apartment complex of 200 units. Until seven years ago, the mall had been anchored by discount retailer ShopKo, which went out of business. Now the LaCrosse City has rezoned the northside location on Rose Street for a major overhaul. The ShopKo building, now occupied by Blue Zone pickleball courts, will reman. So too the Harbor Freight tool store. New will be two major apartment structures and several outlying buildings. The plan calls for relocating North Country Steak Buffet, now next door. The new apartments will be a mix of studio, one-bedroom, two-bedroom, and three-bedroom units. Concept drawings show 90 underground parking stalls.

Good-bye, Bridgeview. The LaCrosse City Council liked what it saw in concept sketches from the Madison-based architectural firm Knothe-Bruce. Pickleball courts, Harbor Freight to remain

Heat pushing electricity usage to high levels
RUSHFORD, Minn. — With afternoon highs expected at 100 degrees, the utility MiEnergy declared a “peak alert.” Customers were asked to conserve electrical use from 2 to 6 p.m.to help keep electricity rates stable and affordable.
Threatened suicide from apartment wall averted
WINONA, Minn. — Police talked an apparently suicidal man to come down from a railing on an apartment building, where he had climbed. He was taken to the hospital for psychiatric evaluation. This was about 9:35 a.m. in the 300 block of West Howard Street. Police quoted the man that druggies were hacking his phone and following and harassing him. He had a folder with suicide notes, police said,
National Guard to Boundary Waters for wildfires
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Governor Tim Walz ordered the National Guard to respond to wildfires in northern Minnesota. Guard to personnel and equipment will assist with evacuations and support federal and state fire crews, the governor said. Unusually dry conditions and lightning have heighteend the wildfire risk. Since Friday multiple fires have broken out in Koochiching, Lake and St. Louis counties, potentially threatening lives, property and critical infrastructure.. On Saturday the U.S. Forest Service closed 225,000 acres of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness because of 17 wildfires. Multiple trails and entry points have been closed and campers evacuated out. The fires are worst between Ely and Crane Lake, north of the Echo Trail, and south of Lac LaCroix along the Canadian border.
Major muck movement at West Newton Chute
KELLOGG, Minn. — Through the end of August the Army Corps has closed the West Newton Chute boat landing on the Mississippi River. The Corps is dredging accumulated river-bottom sediment out of the main navigation channel. The sediment, above Fisher Island, is being transported to the upland Rolling Prairie dump site on the other side of Kellogg. Although the landing is closed, boating is allowed. Be advised, however, that large towboats and barges will be in the vicinity. Use extreme caution and wear life jackets, the Corps said.
Minnesota objects to scheme to tame CNN
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Minnesota’s attorney general, Keith Ellison, joined a coalition of 12 state attorneys general against media giant Paramount-Skydance acquiring fellow media giant Warner-Discovery. Among other objections, the attorneys general claim the proposed $110 billion deal would put the news network CNN under the rhumb of Trump-friendly media baron Larry Ellison (no relation). Trump, who despises CNN, has endorsed the merger. The 12-state lawsuit was filed in federal curt San Francisco. The proposed deal would combine two of Hollywood’s five major film distributors and two of the five major basic cable companies. This, the states argue, would stifle competition and undermine the media diversity hat’s essential to the public good.
Some names emerge in fatal Lake Pepin accident
PEPIN, Wis. — Three person who died when their \pontoon boat overturned Saturday night on Lake Pepin were from Wabasha, a few miles away in Minnesota. They were:
> Manuel De Angel-Sola, age 52.
> Nicholas Loechler, 46
> Ashley Monson, 37.
Two of them were volunteers with the Wabasha Fire Department. Besides Wabasha, the Department serves outlying Minnesota townships and Alma and Nelson in Wisconsin. In total the Fire Department had 30 active members. The names of three survivors, one of who, was hospitaziwed, haven’t been released. The lead accident investigator, Pepin County Sheriff Curt Struwe, has been slow with updates on what happened. The accident was reported at 10:30 p.m. on Saturday, 2-1/2 days ago.
Earlier: Wabasha firefighters died in Lake Pepin tragedy
Cops: Meth on homeless man after stalking report
WINONA, Minn. — Police arrested a man well known to them, Christoher Wayne Swinger, after a man reported being followed by Swinger, who had rummaged through his trash outside and then come inside. An argument ensued. This was about 1 a.m. in the 150 block of East Fifth Street. Police classified the incident as “an active disturbance.” Because Swinger is known to carry knives and machetes, officers attempted a pat-down for weapons. They said Swinger bristled and cursed and refused, all while sweating profusely. They managed to cuff him. In a pants pocket, they said, was a meth pipe. A fuller search found 1.9 grams. Swinger, age 50, who is homeless, was booked at jail for drug possession.
Earlier: Cops bust squatters from Broadway house

Swinger. Didn’t want pat-down.
0.26% breath test alarms cops, who call medics
WINONA, Minn. — Police found a 19-year-old Winona man flat on the ground near Fifth and Center streets with a banged-up face. A breath test showed Reilly Joseph Larson’s blood was almost 0.26% alcohol — more than triple the state’s base intoxication level. He had no idea he was at, where he lived, or which direction to go to get there, officers said. Medics were called to determine whether he needed transport to the hospital to have his stomach pumped. After being cleared medically, he was turned over to a friend to take home — and issued a ticket for underage consumption. About his face injuries, the friend said they werevslow to heal from a from a fall at Steamboat Days 1-1/2 weeks ago.
Knee high by the Fourth of July

What about July 14th? The corn is tasseling at seven-plus feet along Engen Road in Wisconsin’s southern Trempealeau County. Image: Steve Lunde
WELCOME
The worthiest goal of journalism is to promote intelligent citizen involvement. Such is our goal with Winona Journal. We focus on local issues so you can go about your daily activities with confidence that you can be a genuine and valued part of informed public dialogue on the kind of community we’re building.
Although Winona-centric, we are attentive also to regional issues. Our community doesn’t exist in a vacuum.
You will find opinion here. We quote and paraphrase with attribution so you know the source and can assess ideas and thoughts. Sometimes you will find our commentary but always clearly labeled.
As journalists we are committed to accuracy but not perfect. Please let us know if you spot an error, whether substantive or even just a dumb typo. We’ll get errors squared away promptly.
We’re glad you’re with us.