Every Friday morning, my 92-year-old Democratic-leaning father has breakfast with "the guys," all of whom are unapologetically Republican, although they do feel they need to apologize for President Donald Trump. These guys simply cannot and will not vote for Trump in the upcoming election. I ask my dad, "Who will they vote for?" He tells me that they have agreed that they would all vote for Sen. Amy Klobuchar, that Sen. Bernie Sanders "scares them to death" ("Sanders grabs win in N.H.," front page, Feb. 12). So, if we Democrats nominate Bernie as our candidate, will these guys stay home, or vote for Trump, or hold their noses and vote for Bernie? I'm pretty sure they will stay home or vote for Trump.
I agree with so many of Bernie's beliefs and policies, and I wish he could have the opportunity to carry out his vision. But now is not the time to put an ultraliberal Democrat against the sitting president. These guys sitting at the breakfast counter in midwest Wisconsin, along with other disaffected Trump voters, will never vote for Sanders, and we'll be left with this despicable president for four more years.
MARTHA WEGNER, St. Paul
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Klobuchar's New Hampshire performance demonstrates that she can win this election for our country. A combination of experience, savvy, grit, resilience and "Minnesota nice" should put Trump in the history pamphlets where he belongs. Her "salad moments" are behind her. Most voters will view that old story as a minor indiscretion compared to the myriad travesties in our current administration. Substance matters in our state, and she has it.
Running third in a long race is a very sound bet. Make it.
Ken Klein, North Oaks
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I really have to chuckle when I read news reports of Klobuchar going up in the ratings because she is so moderate.
Wasn't she a cosponsor of the Green New Deal who voted to impeach Trump when he committed no crimes? If this isn't enough, she supports and defends anti-Semitic Rep. Ilhan Omar and the new socialist leaders in Congress.
Bob Maginnis, Edina
THE VINDMANS
Employers, don't copy White House
It is ridiculously irresponsible for a letter writer to defend President Donald Trump's treatment of the Vindman brothers as a "practical, fully justified, human-resources move" ("Reassignment, not punishment," Feb. 12). As every HR professional and employment lawyer knows, demoting or even merely transferring an employee because the employee testified, under subpoena, in a manner that the employer finds displeasing will almost always expose the employer to liability for retaliation. This is particularly true when the demotion or transfer is accompanied by public statements from the employee's superiors confirming the employer's retaliatory motive — for example, gratuitous statements that the employee was insubordinate, had poor judgment, and deserved to be fired because of the testimony.