Minnesota’s Chaos—and Why Iowa Is Different
Thu Jan 22 2026
Chris Hagenow is joined in-studio by returning guest Alan Ostergren for a wide-ranging episode that quickly locks onto the political backdrop shaping Iowa’s 2026 cycle: money, organization, and the reality that statewide races are now fought on presidential-scale budgets and media saturation.
They break down the latest Iowa campaign finance reports and what the numbers actually signal—especially on the Democrat side, where State Auditor Rob Sand is treated as the inevitable nominee and is sitting on an eye-popping cash position. Alan and Chris discuss how donor networks, list-building, national money, and burn rate matter just as much as topline fundraising totals, and why “grassroots” alone rarely reaches the low-information but reliable primary voter without paid media.
On the Republican side, they walk through the emerging contours of the primary: Randy Feenstra’s strong off-year fundraising position, the role of personal loans for late-entering candidates, and how consultant-heavy “Powerball ticket” spending can drain campaigns before the decisive stretch. The conversation also hits turnout dynamics and enthusiasm—why registration advantages can evaporate if one side is simply more motivated on Election Day.
They then pivot to Minneapolis as a case study in governance: fraud, immigration enforcement, ICE operations, and protest tactics that escalate confrontation. The episode contrasts Minnesota’s posture with Iowa’s legal framework requiring cooperation with federal immigration authorities, and closes with a lighter segment on Big Ten college football, NIL-era weirdness, and a quick Formula 1 primer (including a “Drive to Survive” recommendation).
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Chris Hagenow is joined in-studio by returning guest Alan Ostergren for a wide-ranging episode that quickly locks onto the political backdrop shaping Iowa’s 2026 cycle: money, organization, and the reality that statewide races are now fought on presidential-scale budgets and media saturation. They break down the latest Iowa campaign finance reports and what the numbers actually signal—especially on the Democrat side, where State Auditor Rob Sand is treated as the inevitable nominee and is sitting on an eye-popping cash position. Alan and Chris discuss how donor networks, list-building, national money, and burn rate matter just as much as topline fundraising totals, and why “grassroots” alone rarely reaches the low-information but reliable primary voter without paid media. On the Republican side, they walk through the emerging contours of the primary: Randy Feenstra’s strong off-year fundraising position, the role of personal loans for late-entering candidates, and how consultant-heavy “Powerball ticket” spending can drain campaigns before the decisive stretch. The conversation also hits turnout dynamics and enthusiasm—why registration advantages can evaporate if one side is simply more motivated on Election Day. They then pivot to Minneapolis as a case study in governance: fraud, immigration enforcement, ICE operations, and protest tactics that escalate confrontation. The episode contrasts Minnesota’s posture with Iowa’s legal framework requiring cooperation with federal immigration authorities, and closes with a lighter segment on Big Ten college football, NIL-era weirdness, and a quick Formula 1 primer (including a “Drive to Survive” recommendation).