Minnesota Supreme Court Chief Justice Natalie Hudson and Justice Karl Procaccini both won election in the only two contested races on the state's high court.

Throughout the whole statewide judiciary, only nine sitting judges were up for election against challengers, and the results of some of those races were released Wednesday morning. Six of the contests involved district judges in the Twin Cities, central Minnesota and up north.

On the state's Court of Appeals, Judge Diane Bratvold comfortably beat Jonathan Woolsey of Chaska. She began serving on the Appeals Court in 2016 and was elected to a six-year term in 2018.

Supreme Court

Hudson, appointed as the court's first Black chief justice last fall, was challenged by Stephen Emery, who has run for multiple offices. Hudson garnered about 63% of the vote. She has served as an associate justice on the Supreme Court since 2015 and previously served 13 years on the state's Court of Appeals.

Procaccini, appointed in August 2023 by Gov. Tim Walz, was running against lawyer Matthew R. Hanson, who two years ago ran unsuccessfully against Scott County Judge Charles Webber. Procaccini served as general counsel to Walz for four years beginning in 2019, helping the governor navigate the pandemic.

Hanson stressed in his campaign that he would be independent from the governor's office. He drew almost 43% of votes to 57% for Procaccini.

Supreme Court Justice Anne McKeig, first appointed in 2016 and elected in 2018, was on the ballot without opposition.

District Courts

In the 10th Judicial District, Judge Helen Brosnahan won her first election after being appointed to the bench by Walz in 2022. Her challenger, Nathan Hansen, is a solo practitioner who received Republican Party assistance as the party's recommended candidate. The 10th Judicial District covers Anoka, Washington, Chisago, Isanti, Kanabec, Pine, Sherburne and Wright counties.

Hansen trailed Brosnahan by 11 percentage points. She graduated from the University of Minnesota Law School and worked as an assistant county attorney in Olmsted and Dakota counties before becoming a judge. Hansen stressed in his campaign that Brosnahan's seat should be filled by someone who is popularly elected, not appointed.

In the Second Judicial District, two Ramsey County judges won new terms. Judge Timothy Carey attended Mitchell Hamline School of Law and was appointed to the bench by Walz in 2022. Challenger Paul Yang, a first-generation Hmong immigrant, started his own law firm in 2016.

In the second Ramsey County race, Judge Timothy Mulrooney was challenged by Winona Yang, who worked as an adjunct professor at Mitchell Hamline School of Law and served as an assistant to a Ramsey County commissioner. Mulrooney gained the seat in 2016 by appointment from former Gov. Mark Dayton. He was elected to a six-year term in 2018. Mulrooney had 59% of the vote.

In the Fourth Judicial District, Hennepin County Judge Matthew Frank has served since 2023, when he was appointed by Walz. Prior to his time on the bench, Frank worked for more than two decades in the Minnesota Attorney General's Office. Frank received about 72% of the vote, comfortably beating challenger Christopher Leckrone is a legal and compliance executive.

Voters in the sprawling Seventh Judicial District, which covers 10 counties across central and western Minnesota, had the option to re-elect Judge Timothy Churchwell, who was appointed to the bench in 2017 and elected in 2018. Challenger Joel Novak, an attorney who lives in Alexandria, has run for other offices in the state, including the Seventh Congressional District as a Republican in 2020. Churchwell won in a close race, garnering just under 51% of the vote.

In a rare open judicial race in northeastern Minnesota, two candidates went head to head this November after prevailing in a five-way primary in the Sixth Judicial District. Shawn Reed won about 54% of the vote, beating Gunnar Johnson. Johnson spent much of his career working for the state Attorney General's Office in northeastern Minnesota and as city attorney for Duluth. He currently works in private practice. Reed, who worked on contract for the city of Hermantown after college and as a partner and shareholder in three law firms, is currently practicing out of his own firm, Bray & Reed Ltd.

Briana Bierschbach, Rochelle Olson and Liz Navratil contributed to this report.








Staff writers Briana Bierschbach and Rochelle Olson contributed to this report.