The Politics Chicks Podcast

🌟 Welcome to Episode #29 of The Politics Chicks Podcast! 🌟

Today we’re joined by Mark Legvold, Democratic candidate for Minnesota Senate District 58. A lifelong farmer, military veteran, educator, firefighter, law enforcement officer, and community leader, Mark has spent decades serving others both in and out of uniform. In this wide-ranging conversation, we discuss Minnesota agriculture, public education, military service, leadership, rural communities, economic challenges facing working families, and why treating people with dignity and respect remains at the center of his campaign. If you’re interested in Minnesota politics, rural issues, public service, or the future of state government, this is a conversation you won’t want to miss.

🎙️ Before politics, Mark was learning lessons on a family farm in southern Minnesota—lessons about hard work, sacrifice, cooperation, and community. Those experiences shaped a lifetime of service that eventually led him to the military, public education, emergency response, law enforcement, and now a campaign for the Minnesota Senate.

🐓 IN THIS EPISODE:

🌽 Growing Up on a Minnesota Farm

Mark shares stories from his childhood on a family farm, where summers were spent baling hay, caring for cattle, and learning the value of hard work. He explains how farming taught him responsibility, resilience, cooperation, and the importance of helping neighbors when times get tough.

🚜 Farming, Tariffs, and the Challenges Facing Rural Minnesota

We discuss the economic realities facing farmers today, including rising fuel and fertilizer costs, shrinking commodity prices, and the impact international trade policies have had on Minnesota agriculture. Mark explains why rebuilding agricultural markets is critical for rural communities.

🤝 What Rural Communities Can Teach America

Mark talks about growing up in a community where neighbors shared equipment, labor, and responsibility regardless of political differences. He shares why he believes America needs to rediscover the value of cooperation and community.

🎖️ Thirty Years of Military Service

Mark reflects on his three decades of military service, the mentors who shaped him, and the leadership lessons he learned serving alongside people whose lives depended on one another. He also discusses the importance of service, accountability, and building strong teams.

🔥 Firefighting, Law Enforcement, and Public Safety

After serving as a firefighter for much of his military career, Mark transitioned into military law enforcement. We discuss what he learned about leadership, responsibility, and the importance of training, accountability, and thoughtful decision-making when people are entrusted with the use of force.

🏫 Public Education and Supporting Students

As a former teacher and school administrator, Mark shares stories from his years working in public schools. We discuss student hunger, poverty, educational opportunity, and why he strongly supports ensuring every child has access to meals at school.

⚖️ The Five Core Values Driving His Campaign

Mark outlines the five values at the center of his campaign:

• Work Hard
 • Act with Integrity
 • Serve Others
 • Value Learning
 • Treat Everyone with Care and Respect

We discuss why these principles have guided his life and why he believes they should guide public service as well.

🏛️ Why He’s Running for the Minnesota Senate

After retiring from military service, Mark felt called to continue serving his community. He explains why he entered politics and why he believes now is the time for experienced, community-focused leaders to step forward.

🌾 Understanding Senate District 58

Mark discusses the unique needs of a district that includes farms, small towns, rural communities, and growing suburban areas. He explains why listening to constituents and building relationships remains one of his highest priorities.

👩 Respecting Women Who Serve

One of the most powerful moments of the conversation centers on Mark’s reaction to the cancellation of an event honoring women who died while serving their country. We discuss military service, respect, honoring sacrifice, and why decency should never be partisan.

💙 Finding Hope in Difficult Times

Despite political division and uncertainty, Mark shares why conversations with everyday Minnesotans continue to give him hope for the future and why he believes most people still want kindness, competence, and government that works.

📍 Learn More About Mark Legvold

🌐 Campaign Website:
 https://www.legvold4mnsenate58.com

💙 Support the Campaign:
 https://secure.actblue.com/donate/mark-legvold-for-senate-1

🎧 ABOUT THE POLITICS CHICKS

The Politics Chicks Podcast is hosted by Christy Branham and Monica Healy—two Midwestern moms who refused to stand back and watch democracy die.

Each week we sit down with candidates, advocates, organizers, experts, journalists, and everyday people working to strengthen their communities and protect democratic institutions. We believe politics is personal because policy impacts real people.

If you enjoyed this conversation, please subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with a friend. It helps us continue bringing important voices and stories to a wider audience.

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What is The Politics Chicks Podcast?

The Politics Chicks is a progressive politics podcast and politics news show hosted by Christy Branham and Monica Healy.

Every week, we sit down with candidates, elected officials, journalists, historians, policy experts, advocates, and everyday Americans shaping the future of our democracy. We go beyond the headlines with thoughtful interviews, fact-based analysis, and candid conversations about the issues that affect our lives—from elections and public policy to healthcare, education, civil rights, and the economy.

Whether we’re interviewing members of Congress, first-time candidates, medical experts, or community leaders, our mission is the same: to inform, challenge, and inspire.

If you’re looking for a politics podcast that values evidence over outrage, curiosity over division, and hope over cynicism, welcome home.

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@ThePoliticsChicks

CHRISTY: Welcome to the Politics Chicks podcast. I'm Christy Branham

Monica: And I'm Monica Healy

CHRISTY: Today we're joined by Mark Legvold, candidate for Minnesota Senate District 58. Mark's career has been defined by service as a farmer, military veteran, educator, firefighter, law enforcement officer, and community leader

Monica: One of the things that stood out for us about Mark is that every chapter of his life seemed rooted in helping other people. Whether serving his country, teaching students, or advocating for his community, he spent decades putting service before self

CHRISTY: We also wanted to talk about leadership, respect, and community. Recently, Mark spoke out after the cancellation of an event honoring women who died while serving their country, reflecting a deep respect for women, military service, and the people who strengthen our communities every day

Monica: Today we want our audience to get to know the person behind the

Monica: campaign and learn more about what he hopes to bring to the Minnesota Senate. Welcome to the show, Mark

MARK: Thank you, Christy. Thanks, Monica. I'm really thrilled to be here

Monica: Good to have

CHRISTY: we're so excited to have you. We've been looking forward to this interview because we've gotten to know you a little bit, We've met you at, the event that we hosted, and we've had a couple conversations, and you're

CHRISTY: just, you're such an engaging person. I can't wait

CHRISTY: for our listeners to get to know you a little bit better.

MARK: Let me just say that event

MARK: was so much fun. What a blast. You guys put on

MARK: a great party

Monica: We had fun too. It was so out of our wheelhouse to organize something like that, but we were happy with how it turned out. We were glad you were there

MARK: It was awesome

CHRISTY: And we were saying

CHRISTY: that your speech was one of the barnstormers of the event, so Yeah,

MARK: tr- I try. With hair like mine, you, gotta know how to

MARK: speak

CHRISTY: Yeah.

Monica: Well done

CHRISTY: Well, well, why don't we give our listeners an opportunity to get to know you a little bit better? So tell us about what it was like growing up on a

CHRISTY: Minnesota

CHRISTY: farm, and what did that experience do to shape you into who you are today?

MARK: Oh, yeah, absolutely. So, uh, we moved out to the farm in 1976. Great time for Dad to just say, "We're gonna buy a farm." Uh, he was a educator, drove up to Richfield every day, taught elementary school kids, then came home, and we worked on the farm. And Dad grew up on a farm, and, uh, I also was a farmer, uh, as I was growing up.

MARK: Kind of pass it along generation to generation. So,

MARK: uh, when Dad's dad would come out,

MARK: Ole, uh, we knew how to work hard. Of course, you know, there's an Ole Legvold out there.

CHRISTY: without telling us you're Minnesotan

MARK: I, I know. The, the other grandpa's name is Gus,

MARK: so

MARK: we, we got it covered on both ends. But, um, loved being outside, loved being out working on the farm.

MARK: We had, uh, cattle that we were raising, plus corn, soybeans, hay. So my summers really consisted of riding around

MARK: on the back of a hay rack with,

MARK: uh, family primarily, uh, baling hay. We had a neighbor that also raised cattle, so we all

MARK: pitched in as a community, helped one another, put a bunch of hay in

MARK: both of the barns so we could make it through the winter.

MARK: learned how to feed the cattle, run the tractors. I think at age,

MARK: uh, 12 I was out

MARK: plowing. Uh, yeah, 'cause you're just going

MARK: back and forth and it's not that hard, so they set you out and away you go.

MARK: just had a really, really great

MARK: time, but learned some invaluable lessons

MARK: that just kinda continued to serve me. Loved to work hard every single day.

MARK: Uh, there was always that great feeling of you put in a good hard day of work and, um, at the end of the day, uh, you feel good that you got something accomplished, and that's one thing I love about farming today. You can look back on a day's worth of work and actually see you

MARK: accomplished something,

Monica: There's a lot of Minnesota that is devoted to farmland, and my husband and I come from

Monica: farming families and, and I can't imagine farming. It is, it is a, a tough way of life. And what do you wanna tell people who don't understand what it was like? You know, what, what is-- what was growing up in rural Minnesota that might be misunderstood?

MARK: Yeah. Yeah, it's, it's,

MARK: um, there are joys with it and there's also

MARK: hardships, right? You don't have the neighborhood full of kids with all the friends. If you wanna visit with your friends, you're going into town hanging out. Usually that meant, uh, biking down a gravel road on my 10-speed. Uh, you learn how to be pretty quick with steering, uh, when that's the case.

MARK: But you don't have friends next door, uh, but you have a whole lot of nature around you. So, uh, some joys, some challenges there.

MARK: the other part about growing up on a farm is you learn what, uh, running on a pretty tight budget looks like. Uh, Dad was an educator, which means, you know, they don't make a whole lot.

MARK: He's driving up to Richfield every day, driving home, and,

MARK: uh, you know, we learned how to keep good track of a dollar bill

MARK: and, and work really really hard to earn

MARK: them. And at the end of the day, we had, uh, a good corn operation, a good soybean operation, and a good cattle operation. So I learned about, uh, risk, reward, and diversification of your efforts so that you're not relying on one thing or another.

MARK: Uh, if the cattle were doing really, really great, uh, usually corn and soybeans

MARK: weren't, uh, but that balanced out the risk and the reward. So running a farm, whether it's a small family

MARK: farm or it's the big corporations, they're thin margins. There's a lot of risk to it

CHRISTY: And just to be clear, you're still farming today. Like, you just posted

CHRISTY: about the cost of diesel last week on your Facebook, so

MARK: planting season, those, those beasts get, uh, pretty thirsty for

MARK: diesel. just finished up planting. The corn's up. Uh, we'll have knee-high corn by the 4th of July out on the farm, which is, is a wonderful thing to, to have happen because you know that some of the risk is, is gonna

MARK: pay off most of the time if, uh, pending hail, knock on wood.

MARK: Uh, but it's a struggle. Last year I, I sold soybeans out of

MARK: the, uh, out of the field right at the end of the season for the same price that soybeans were in 1978,

CHRISTY: Oh my gosh

MARK: a thin margin, and the cost of diesel keeps going up, and the cost of fertilizer keeps going

MARK: up,

MARK: and, and yet our commodity prices aren't rebounding. There's a lot that

MARK: we can do to help farmers, uh, but starting out with, um, reestablishing our markets, uh, internationally, that would help farmers the most.

CHRISTY: So did the tariffs impact the pricing on the soybeans? Is that why they were so low?

MARK: Yeah. When, when your biggest customer is China and suddenly you say

MARK: we're gonna tariff you like crazy, they stop buying soybeans from us and they start buying soybeans from Brazil, and that means we lose a major market. That's probably what impacted, uh, farming and soybean farming especially.

Monica: what

Monica: what lessons in farm life would

Monica: you like to see in elected leaders? and you already mentioned a bunch of those things that our, our leaders really could take to heart

MARK: Yeah, it's, it's getting up in the morning and, and doing the

MARK: hard work that

MARK: You need to. Sometimes, uh, uh, your boots get stuck in something that's sticky and doesn't smell really good and, and you gotta

MARK: keep on working and getting, get the

MARK: job done. Uh, but you also learn how to

MARK: cooperate. I talked about what it's like in the summertime to hay as a community, which means, you know, the neighbor owns the hay baler, we own the hay

MARK: racks, and all the labor is, uh, provided. We share that

MARK: effort. Uh, you learn how to cooperate with people, and you might disagree about how to get stuff done, but at the end of the day, you gotta bale the hay and you gotta put it in the barn or nobody lives through the winter. So it really taught me about w- how to be cooperative in a, in a community and focus on the task that needs to

MARK: get done and do the work, regardless of whether you agree with the person or not

CHRISTY: Okay. I just learned something new because I didn't realize that you did not own all your own equipment and that it was a community effort for you to bale hay. I mean, You live in a somewhat red part of the state, Your neighbors may not think politically the same way you do, and yet you guys have to kind of overcome that in, in order to work together because it's a survival thing, correct?

MARK: Yes, absolutely. And Christy and Monica, this is one of the joys of running for office right now is I, I've learned how to get along with people that disagree with me politically or philosophically. Uh, you have to do that just to get any mission accomplished or any job done. My neighbor has a bunch of Trump stuff up in his shed,

MARK: um, but I still go down there and talk

MARK: with him like human beings, neighbor to neighbor.

MARK: Uh, at the end of the day, if he's got a flat tire on the side of the road, I'll stop

MARK: to help him, but I also know he'll stop to.

MARK: help me. Politics is one thing, but being neighbors, I think that's what we need to get back to in our

MARK: political discussions. How can we learn to get

MARK: along? And

MARK: I've found that knocking on people's doors out in the middle

MARK: of, uh, what you would consider a red community, and I have great conversations with folks that

MARK: still have their Trump stuff up.

MARK: But at the end of the day,

MARK: in, in

MARK: this country, we gotta learn how

MARK: to love one another regardless. That's how we get to move forward. As much anger as we have about the policies and the politics and the cruelty and the chaos, at the end of the day, we gotta hold the elected people responsible for

MARK: making those decisions.

MARK: But the voters, we still need to care about them as neighbors

Monica: I think Minnesota has really exemplified exactly that, and that's where the

Monica: whole term neighboring came from during Operation MetroSearch, where we take care of each other. It doesn't matter what they look like, what they believe, what church they go to We are gonna take care of our neighbors

MARK: Absolutely. You know, I'm, I'm running on five core values, and the last one's probably the one that served me the best, and that's, uh, everybody deserves to be treated with care and respect. And I know we'll talk more about that as we go

MARK: along, but I learned that growing up on a country road and sharing equipment with my neighbors and getting the hay done.

Monica: Yeah. Well, tell us

Monica: about those since you mentioned it. What are your five core values you're running on

CHRISTY: Yeah, absolutely. Um, uh, they were all shaped by the different jobs that I've done, especially my time on the farm, the military, and working in public schools. We get up in the morning, we work hard.

MARK: I think Minnesotans like to work hard and see what they've accomplished, but they also believe that they want their government to work hard with them. Uh, we want our public people to act with integrity, but we also expect our neighbors to act with integrity. So that's my second core value, always act with integrity.

MARK: We believe in serving others. Uh, this has been a winter, um, like we have never seen in Minnesota, but we've

MARK: seen how Minnesotans step up. They serve others in their community,

MARK: uh, and that's what we want from our "

MARK: public servants, uh, as well. Valuing learning. As a recovering educator, uh, and as someone that taught, taught kids, taught airmen in, in the military,

MARK: uh, and tried to

MARK: work in the community to teach people to be better leaders, uh, we value learning in Minnesota.

MARK: We put our money

MARK: where our people are, especially our public schools. But it also means we value learning enough to listen

MARK: to experts, listen to economists,

MARK: listen to doctors, listen to scientists, so

MARK: that

MARK: we make the best decisions possible, and we're not relying on conspiracy theorists to make

Monica: Amen.

MARK: Yeah, and then-- Yes, absolutely. And then the last one's

MARK: probably the most important. Treat everyone with care and respect. It doesn't matter where you live, what you do

MARK: for a living, who you love, treat everyone with

MARK: care and respect

Monica: You know, I taught public school for 30 years, and the last decade or so, I always told the kids, "We have one rule because it encompasses everything else. Be kind." If you are being kind, that truly means no other rule is needed.

CHRISTY: Yes

Monica: thank you for your service as a public school teacher.

MARK: Gosh, yeah, absolutely. You too.

MARK: it's

MARK: it's hard work. Y- uh, but again, it's kinda like, uh, baling hay all day. You go home tired,

MARK: but you feel like you accomplished something 'cause you impacted a kid's life

Monica: I loved it

CHRISTY: and thank you for your service in the military because that's where we're going next. you spent three decades serving in the US military. So why don't you tell us what inspired you to serve and how that's impacted the person that you've become?

MARK: Christy, the in inspiration to serve came on a turkey barn just outside of Northfield in February. It's cold up there. I'd, I'd left my first college. I was not a good student right out of, uh, out of high school. I thoughtIf you just work hard, things are gonna go okay.

MARK: And so I liked working hard. So I, I left my first college, started working in construction, roofing a turkey shed in February up on a hill.

Monica: Hmm.

MARK: this is cold. I needed a, a different way of going about life, and so found an Air Force recruiter and, uh, said this would be a great way to, uh, shape my life, learn a new skill, uh, see part of the world, uh, have some adventure, um, and then come back to, to Northfield and get back to work on the farm.

MARK: So joined the military in 1990. Uh, went down to Lackland Air Force Base through basic training, and

MARK: They picked my job for me. Now imagine signing up to do something for four years,

MARK: but you don't know what it

MARK: is. You're just gonna go on this adventure. And I'll let the government tell me what I'm gonna do for four years.

Monica: That's quite the leap of faith

MARK: It was a leap of faith, absolutely. I just knew I wanted to serve my country, and I, I knew I wanted a different way of life than where I was

MARK: heading, and they assigned

MARK: me to be a firefighter, which was such a great job. So I learned how to be a firefighter, got stationed in Altus, Oklahoma, uh, got married there, had my first child, moved up to Alaska, had another child up there, all serving as a firefighter.

MARK: And, uh, really learned a- another part of what hard work looked

MARK: like, hard work learning how to be a good airman and a good firefighter. It, it really, really helped shape

MARK: me.

Monica: Well, that perfectly segues into my next question because you had a number of leadership roles. So how does that experience teach you about responsibility, leadership?

MARK: Yeah. You know, when you're, when you're just barely

MARK: 20 and you're, you're entering the military, y- you know a whole lot, right? You're super, super smart, especially smarter than your parents. Uh, but they teach you, they teach you pretty quick that you don't know

MARK: much. Uh, but I showed up at my first fire department and had wonderful mentors.

MARK: Uh, I had

MARK: wonderful, wonderful trainers and people that had been in the career field for a whole lifetime,

MARK: teaching me how to be a good

MARK: firefighter, but also teaching me how important it is to work together as a crew of people because your life is gonna

MARK: depend on

MARK: the people to your left and to your right, so you better treat

MARK: them well.

MARK: We're a family at the end of the

MARK: day. Uh, you gotta treat the people to your left and your right like your brothers and like your sisters because you're gonna rely on them to save your life someday, And there really was a sense of urgency. That, that taught me about leading myself, becoming a smart firefighter, but leading others just on

MARK: that

MARK: small team. And eventually, as you stick with the job,

MARK: pretty soon you're leading a pretty big, big organization.

MARK: It was a good segue, but it's, it's a step-by-step-by-step process.

CHRISTY: You know, it, it should be noted the military actually does that very well at least they did, I don't know if it's been broken, the whole system's been broken, but they do such a good job of testing and analyzing recruits to see what their strengths are and putting them in positions where they're going to succeed. And I think that that's probably why you had that experience. They, they could see in you that you fit this mold and that you would thrive there. So I think that's really cool.

MARK: I I would like to think that they saw something, but they were also very purposeful

MARK: in the, in the development of me as a, as an airman,

MARK: as an individual. And as long as you bring that subject up, I have such good faith in the young men and women and the people that I left behind in my unit when I

MARK: retired three years ago.

MARK: They're good human beings with a huge heart, and I know that they're put in difficult situations. They've been put in difficult

MARK: situations for years, and I know that it is hard right now, but their heart remains. They're still good people. When you saw the pictures of the National

MARK: Guard showing up during

MARK: Metro surge this past winter, you know, they didn't show up to oppress their neighbor.

MARK: They showed up with hot

MARK: chocolate. They did

CHRISTY: I know, and handing out hot chocolate and donuts

MARK: Yeah. They did the same thing after George

MARK: Floyd was

MARK: murdered. They protected the neighborhoods. They protected their neighbors during the evenings, and then they showed up on the Capitol lawn during the heat of those days handing out water to the protesters.

MARK: I was so proud to be a part of that organization because I know its heart. I know they're developing good leaders,

MARK: but they're also developing good human beings, and those human beings remain today

Monica: Well, and you have such a personal relationship from your own service, but you shared with us before we started recording that, um, you have another family member. Uh, you wanna talk about that?

MARK: Yeah, my, my, uh, stepson Tyler, youngest

MARK: stepson, Uh,

MARK: he's gonna enlist in the same organization that I spent most of my military career in, uh, here in the Minnesota Air National Guard. So it's out of the six kids in our blended family, we got five grandkids. Um, some of them explored, uh, getting into military service, and Tyler's kind of pulling the trigger today, uh, and he's gonna enlist.

MARK: And the great thing is he's gonna be, uh, part of the flying organization, and he's working with one of the

MARK: firefighters that I worked with for a good long time. So it's kind of this, uh, my fire department family And my

MARK: family family are, are merging a little bit in this organization that I cared so much about.

Monica: Full circle

CHRISTY: like your life is coming full circle,

MARK:

MARK: Christy, I am seeing that more

MARK: And more today. It's,

MARK: it's like I'm gonna run for Minnesota State Senate. What do you need?

MARK: What are the characteristics that we really want in our senators and

MARK: the people in public service? You want a lifetime of experience. You want them to be able to see a bunch

MARK: of different perspectives.

MARK: Uh, you want a diverse, uh, experiences that have shaped their core values. I

MARK: mean, I've, I've, done a little bit of

MARK: everything. Um, and

MARK: so it all seems

MARK: like it's all coming together. First and foremost, taking care of

MARK: people, uh, and I still have that

MARK: ethos today. So it feels

MARK: like, yeah, everything is coming full circle in this run, too.

CHRISTY: so you also served as a law enforcement officer, so why don't you give us a little bit of how that

CHRISTY: also impacted who you've become?

MARK: Absolutely. and this, this-- in order to go from being a firefighter to doing cop work, uh, in the military, it kind of-- I gotta fill in the blanks between, uh, 20 years as a firefighter and then how did I end up going into, uh, security forces i-in the military. my career, my military career, and my education career, um, the cool thing about being in the Air National Guard is you get to do two different jobs.

MARK: In my case, three, 'cause I was farming on the side. But, uh, for 10 years of my military career, I was what they would call a traditional Guard member, and that means one weekend a month, two weeks a year, uh, I would do a civilian job. That's when I was working in St. Paul schools. On the weekends and during deployments, I was a firefighter.

MARK: It was great. Um, loved the work, loved the, my brothers and sisters, but then on Monday morning, there you are with the kids, uh, y-you know, helping the runny noses and helping them learn at the same time. Uh, it was all good public service. Uh, but in 2007, after I'd finished my master's degree, I was working in a, a public school in a assistant principal position.

MARK: The Guard came back and said, "Hey, how would you like to be the full-time fire chief?" And so 2007, I traded in the tie for camouflage and went back active duty, assigned to the same unit I was traditional Guard in, so right here at the airport. And I did that till 2013 when my fire department closed. Um, found all my firefighters new jobs, new occupations, and stuck around.

MARK: Um, and they said, "You don't have any people anymore. Would you like to work with people?" I said, "That is my jam. I love working with people." They said, "How'd you like to be a cop?" I went , "Oh, that's gonna be a stretch for me." Uh, but they needed some good leadership, and I needed the opportunity to

MARK: work with human beings again. So at age

MARK: 45, um, got a phone call, uh, middle of the day. They said, "Hey, we got a, um, school you can go to." "Great, great. When does it start?" They said, "In two days you have to be down in San Antonio, Texas." So Lisa and I weren't married yet. She packed up her house and two of her boys, moved down to my place. I mean, military

MARK: spouse, you talk about public service, right?

MARK: Uh, but she pa-packed up her boys, her dog, moved down to my place and took care of the one kiddo I still had at home. And, um, I took off for Texas and stayed there for three months, learned how to be a, a member of security forces. So that's our law enforcement and security division here on base. And came back and, um, strapped on the gear every single day.

MARK: We armed up every single day to guard the base and make sure people were safe and following the rules and the laws that we have here.

MARK: And, uh,

Monica: big leap of faith to jump into that and mid-career, midlife to just make that leap. That's, that's impressive

MARK: It was, uh, it was really, really tough. It was like kind of starting over, but in the military, you keep your rank, um, when you go someplace. So I, I outranked my instructors and was older than all of them, but, uh, yeah, it was a huge leap of faith, and I knew that it would be a challenge for me physically, but it would also be a challenge for me mentally and emotionally.

MARK: I learned how to appreciate the work that our law enforcement, uh, officers do out on the streets in our cities, in our counties, our sheriff's

MARK: department, and in the military. I

MARK: learned how to really appreciate the hard

MARK: work and all of the learning that they

MARK: have to do just to do that well. But I also learned how important it

MARK: is if you are gonna be charged with the, use of deadly force, you need to know when

MARK: to use it, how to use it,

MARK: where to use it, when it's appropriate, and all the things that you do

MARK: before you even pull that gun out of its holster. And I checked in with my folks, um, that was one of the, the key

MARK: responsibilities as a leader throughout the shift and at the beginning of the shift before they're handed a

MARK: weapon. Needed to know if they had a good meal, if things were okay at home, if

MARK: they were getting enough sleep, if they were mentally, spiritually, emotionally, and physically able to carry that weapon,

MARK: ' cause we're, we're all doing this

MARK: hard work together. We don't have that checkout in the, in our public streets, do we?

CHRISTY: I was just about to bring that up,

CHRISTY: the fact that

CHRISTY: you're talking about all of the care and, fail-safes that?

CHRISTY: are there, including the leadership checking in with people before handing them a weapon. And to see what happened in our streets in Minnesota, twice, not once, but twice,

Monica: Three times. One, one non-lethal

CHRISTY: Right. it's very troubling, to even think about that?

CHRISTY: so

MARK: And I, I, I, am in favor of the Second Amendment. I, I think it's important, but I also think there are some guardrails that we have to have in place as, as a community, um, to make sure that

MARK: the,

MARK: weapons that have no business being on the city streets aren't

MARK: being carried by people that are inherently dangerous to

MARK: carry lethal force

Monica: Well, since you bring that up, I'm gonna veer off script a little bit because recently there was, uh, gun legislation brought to the floor, that-- Well, it passed the Senate and then it, didn't go anywhere in the House. So where would you have stood on that?

MARK: Yeah. that bill that, uh, that got passed through the Senate and then, uh, got stuck in a drawer in the House, um, I, I would've voted for that. it put some good guardrails on, uh, protecting our city streets and protecting our school children. Um, and that's something that We can agree on, and not everybody had an easy vote on that.

MARK: It would've been, uh, a tough one, um, because we're limiting something that people are very, very passionate about. but at the end of the day, as legislators, if you're not focusing on how to keep people safe in the city streets, you're really not doing a primary job and a primary

MARK: responsibility of that position

CHRISTY: And one of the reasons that that bill came about was, Senator Zeynab Mohamed introduced it after the school shooting in her district. And so our next question kind of segues into your work in

CHRISTY: education.

CHRISTY: How do you feel about the fact that they buried that bill,

CHRISTY: which was, written by

CHRISTY: someone in response to a school shooting? How did that fail our school children?

MARK: Uh, it, it didn't just fail our schoolchildren, it failed our, our entire political structure. Um, another key core value, right? Act with integrity. Uh, and when you just put something in the drawer, if you use procedure to limit voices from being heard,

MARK: I know it would've been a

MARK: tough vote for a lot of folks, but at the end of the day,

MARK: your integrity should guide the fact that that should've seen the floor, uh, in the House, and they should've had an up-down vote on it.

MARK: It's, it's, it's not serving our school kids well. People didn't wanna go on the record with it. Um, I, I,

MARK: know the guy that's serving me in the House right

MARK: now, it-- I know how he would've voted on that 'cause he's a

MARK: Second Amendment purist. Uh, to me, pure adherence to the Second Amendment, I had a guy tell me that he should be able to own an F-15 fighter jet if he could afford

MARK: it 'cause the Second Amendment

MARK: allows him

MARK: to, and, uh, yeah, I-- that's not my

MARK: barometer of freedom.

MARK: I think we can, uh, turn the dials, uh, one way or another on things, and,

MARK: getting an up-down vote on that one would've been a way of, uh,

MARK: finding out where the dials would've been turned.

CHRISTY: I'm a firm believer that your freedom

CHRISTY: should not impede upon someone else's

CHRISTY: freedom

Monica: That

MARK: Yeah,

MARK: Yeah, absolutely. Uh, and yet we're s- we're seeing our individual freedoms,

MARK: um, exercised every day, and it's hard, hard work here in Minnesota, isn't it?

CHRISTY: Yes. and then after the military service, you went into education because you just-- I don't know if you

CHRISTY: were a glutton for punishment or what.

MARK: Yeah. S- so

CHRISTY: Talking to two teachers here, but

MARK: Um, so I was, I was serving traditionally in the Air National Guard and, um, worked in, in the elementary school on the east side of St. Paul, uh, kindergarten through six, science and, and, and, uh, gifted ed.

MARK: and then had a wonderful, wonderful mentor, Shirley Pickett was her name. Uh, this is one of those things, when you listen to smart women and they give you good advice and you follow it, things usually turn out pretty darn well. Shirley said, "Hey, you got some leadership potential. You should become a school administrator."

MARK: Maybe she didn't like me, um, but, but maybe she saw something, right? Uh,

Monica: all my years of teaching, I would never be an administrator, so bless you

Monica: for that

MARK: it's-- It was good. It

MARK: was really good hard work. Uh, but I I went back to school, uh, and got my master's degree in, in, school leadership and administration,

MARK: finished my principal's license at the University of

MARK: Minnesota, and, uh, tried working my way in.

MARK: And, and

MARK: I was, uh, just in that AP position. Um, still

MARK: loved working with kids. It was a struggle every single day. You saw what kids were struggling

MARK: with, especially in St. Paul. going on a home

MARK: visit, to visit a dad and a son who's, living in a hotel 'cause they

MARK: lost their home, and yet the dad still was

MARK: just as passionate about making sure his son got to school and learned every

MARK: single day.

MARK: our, our kids that are living in poverty

MARK: are facing insurmountable, circumstances in their life, and yet they still show up to get an education, and they have to work so hard at it. It's another reason I am so in favor

MARK: of feeding our kids at school, 'cause I saw how

MARK: hungry some of my kids were when they showed up on Monday

Monica: I don't know how anybody can be opposed to, you know, feeding a kid. I just... Yeah, any opposition to that just baffles me.

CHRISTY: We're one of the only westernized countries that does not have universal school breakfast and school lunch too. I'd like to bring that into the conversation because most European... Yep. Yep, we are.

MARK: Yep. I, I think, I think that was really a good way of making sure that not only are we feeding our kids, right, so that they can show up and have food in their tummy and so their brains are working more effectively, but it also shows those kids when they show up to school, this is a place that cares about you and respects you

Monica: Absolutely.

MARK: Yeah. I- it broke my heart when

MARK: kids just got a cheese sandwich going through the line.

CHRISTY: Yeah

MARK: Yeah. Sad

Monica: So quite the varied,

Monica: career you have had and many different roles, many different hats. So what prompted you to decide to run for office?

MARK: Thanks. Yeah. Um, so retired from the military

MARK: about,

MARK: two and a half, three years ago, and I still have this heart for public service. I've, I've done some jobs where you show up, you, you look at what's, uh, dangerous or wrong, and you do something about it. Firefighters do something about something that's dangerous.

MARK: Law enforcement officers do something about things that are going on in their communities that's wrong. and I served during the first Trump administration, uh, as the command chief. I was a senior enlisted leader in my organization. Had 1,200 people. shepherded them through COVID, where one person in the shop believed COVID was a hoax and wasn't gonna wear a mask, and another person had,

MARK: a child at home, uh, with health issues, and I had to help them balance their emotions while making sure they were following

MARK: the rules, right?

MARK: Uh, it was hard work, and we got through it. We got through it as a family, and,

MARK: and,

MARK: it was still tough. So getting out of the military, I still had a heart for service, still

MARK: wanted to teach people how to be good

MARK: leaders. Uh, but when I saw what was going on in our federal politics

MARK: again, uh, when Trump got reelected,

MARK: started looking at what's going on

MARK: in the state government as well.

MARK: I've always been a believer

MARK: that you have to do what you can, where you

MARK: can, how you can, and to stand by and watch something dangerous and wrong happen, whether it's at the state level or at the federal level, and not do everything

MARK: I can, that doesn't fit the core values

MARK: that I, I grew up developing, and it didn't fit where I was in my life at that time

Monica: I think we're seeing more And more of that, people that are responding to what they're seeing i- by running for office, people that never would have before. And Christy and I have said for a long time that people like you that have experience in the real world, not just the political world, are so valuable as leaders, and I think we, we need more of that

MARK: Yeah. I agree. It, it takes a very, very diverse, life to make a good public servant because you can really, really empathize where people are in their lives. I mean, I've, I've lost sleep at night 'cause I was worried about making the next house payment. It's awful. how can you empathize if you've never been in that situation?

CHRISTY: Yes. And you live-- You're from southern Minnesota, so it's fairly agricultural area of the state, fairly rural area of the state. And so your district has some pretty unique needs compared to someone, say, from the Twin Cities or even someone from up north in the Iron Range. So what do you believe District 58 needs most from its next senator?

MARK: Great question. Uh, I think district 58 needs from their next senator the same thing every place is needing, and that's somebody that shows up to work with the core values that most Minnesotans

MARK: share. That's why I'm running on core values. District 58's pretty darn unique. we, uh, just have that transition zone between the suburbs and the rural communities of Minnesota.

MARK: Uh, it's northern New Prague, Lonsdale, Northfield, Farmington, southern precinct of Rosemont, all the way out to the

MARK: Mississippi River on both the north and the south side of Hastings. So I got a lot of rural country, but I also have suburban, and small towns. And so all of those different, uh, communities have similar needs in that they want somebody that reflects their core values, but they also have very unique needs, so you have to show up,

MARK: ready to do the work and ready to understand what those communities really need,

MARK: and it starts with listening and understanding and just being a good neighbor

Monica: So if voters only remember one thing about your campaign, what do you want that to be?

MARK: Great question. Um, if voters could remember one thing about my campaign, it's gonna be he won in November, because he showed up to the campaign with a lot of--

MARK: Yep, yeah. So they'll remember that of this campaign, but they won't

MARK: remember it just because I was a Democrat running in a year where we're expecting a lot of Democrats to do well.

MARK: They'll remember it because we kicked this campaign off over a year ago.

MARK: just started, uh, getting organized. We've been running since August. So they're gonna remember about me that I ran on the big core value of we

MARK: work hard. In District 58, in the rural communities, in our suburbs, people are working hard every single day, and I bring that work

MARK: ethic to the campaign.

MARK: Uh, all winter long, knocking doors when

MARK: it was 24 degrees or better, cause your hand freezes if it's, uh, colder than that. and showing up in the farmyards and having hard conversations with people that maybe still have that Trump sign up in their garage, or maybe they just took it down last week.

MARK: Having s- having

MARK: the courage to show up and have the conversations with neighbors. That's what they'll remember

CHRISTY: Out of curiosity, are you noticing-- Because I, we, I live close to Buffalo, so we will drive out, you know, past Corcoran, and a lot of the homes out there that once had Trump signs and tattered Trump flags waving for years, they're now gone. Are you seeing more of that down your way also?

MARK: Yeah, I, I am seeing that, and maybe

MARK: it's

MARK: just the fact the flag finally, uh, got too tattered to recognize or maybe they've had a change of heart. Um, I do know, uh, one house that's in my district.

MARK: Uh, they've had a Trump sign

MARK: on their, front yard. It's gotten a little bit smaller, then it got a little bit smaller, and now that big, uh, piece of plywood that used to have a smaller sign on it, it's just painted flat white.

MARK: I've got a nice blue sign I'd love to put on that for them. Um, but

MARK: it does, Christy, show the evolution of people's thoughts, and we, uh, as good-hearted Minnesotans need to understand these are still our neighbors. We might not have agreed with either of the votes that they made, all three of the votes that they made in some of these elections, but we gotta love our neighbor and, uh, and give people, uh, the ability to change their mind and come back and, and say, "You know, maybe that was a mistake.

MARK: Maybe I'm glad I made that vote, but now I'm just hurting like heck and, uh, I'm looking for

MARK: something better in our politics." So we've gotta treat people with care and respect at the end of the day.

Monica: What would, what would be your top priority upon being elected?

MARK: My top priority

MARK: kind of fits my, uh, em- my, employment resume, and that is all of it all the time. Uh, I've done a little bit of everything, and so there's so much to do. But top priority is show up to the Senate, build relationships. Um, obviously, I want our agriculture, um, and our ag community to have a strengthened, diversified economy,

MARK: uh, one where we grow such great crops in Minnesota.

MARK: We feed our people, uh, but we

MARK: also use our commodity crops to, uh, produce some energy right here in Minnesota instead of shipping it off. I wanna make sure our public schools are strong. As a recovering educator, uh, that's one of my key priorities. I've, I've got, uh, grandkids that are gonna be going to school in District 58.

MARK: so this is a, a personal thing for me. but it all comes down to making sure that Minnesota is an affordable place to live. I talk to folks in rural communities. They want their kids to be able to move home, uh, and their kids wanna move home. Uh, and I mean home not to mom and dad's basement, but to the house down the road that the kids wanna purchase.

MARK: And right now, it's unaffordable for them to commute, it's unaffordable for them to buy that house, and it's unaffordable for them to

MARK: even put food on the table. So we've gotta address

MARK: those basic needs.

CHRISTY: Yeah, and I, I wanna circle back because there's a, a through line through every conversation that we've had with you, every interaction that we've had with you is about treating people with respect. We

CHRISTY: just talked about that. Um, you recently spoke out, about the cancellation of an event honoring women who died serving our

CHRISTY: country.

CHRISTY: And Monica and I fondly call you an

CHRISTY: honorary chick because you're just--

CHRISTY: you've spoken so strongly

CHRISTY: and

CHRISTY: s- and so passionately about respecting women and the contribution that they make to society.

CHRISTY: And, um, we're gonna credit Lisa with part of that because,

CHRISTY: you know, she's, she's definitely a good influence, but we, we suspect that a lot of it is intrinsic with you.

CHRISTY: So why don't you share a little bit about that? Because I

CHRISTY: could tell you felt

CHRISTY: pain from that, that that

CHRISTY: event was canceled.

MARK: Yes. We'll circle back to, uh, giving my wife some credit. Um, abso- I wouldn't be where I am in this campaign without her. She, she, uh, runs, manages this campaign.

MARK: She's passionate. She keeps telling people, "I, I want him to be my senator." and it's not because I'm her husband. I think it's just because she thinks I'd be a good one and I'd serve people, bring the heart to it.

MARK: So,

MARK: uh,

MARK: back to the downright anger that I have, uh, about how military service members that gave their life for their country, How this new movement is saying we can't give them honor and respect if they're women or because they're women, because that somehow takes away from the honor res- and respect for all.

MARK: military service is a great way of serving a great country. I still believe our country is a great place because of the people that are in it. So taking away the honor and the respect due to the women that gave their,

MARK: lives and gave service to the country, yeah, that, that's hard. That's a personal thing for me.

MARK: Uh, I lost a really, really dear

MARK: friend, uh, to cancer caused by the burn pits. She was a fantastic mentor. She was a wonderful, wonderful human being.

MARK: And so by saying s- we're gonna t-take away that ability to lay a wreath at

MARK: somebody like her grave, yeah, it hurt. It was, it was a personal point of pain for me, and it showed how low that we have to step where

MARK: We can't honor one person or one group without feeling like we're dishonoring another person. Uh, honor, decency, and kindness is not a zero-sum

MARK: game. the more you show, the more you get

CHRISTY: We're interviewing Kristy Janigo on Thursday, who's another candidate for Senate who herself is a veteran, so I'm interested to hear her take on that as well.

MARK: I'm gonna give

MARK: props Kristy. She's, she is a strong, military veteran running for a, a really, really

MARK: tight Senate race, uh, up there, and I cannot think of a more bright, capable, wonderful human being to represent

MARK: that area. It just shows the caliber of candidates that we're getting out

MARK: there. Um, it, it,

CHRISTY: Yep, and she'll be my senator

MARK: Oh, aren't you so lucky?

CHRISTY: Mm-hmm

MARK: Yeah.

MARK: The, the DFL Party has done a great job diversifying the, the people

MARK: that are running. We've got veterans, we've got farmers, we've got, uh, teachers, folks that, uh, step away from a career that's usually pretty darn hard and wanna do this public service

MARK: work, and I, I think Kristy's a fantastic candidate.

MARK: I'm looking forward to serving with her

CHRISTY: She thinks very highly of you too. You two have been-- I know that you've been communicating and kind of partnering on things, so we're excited to interview her

CHRISTY: on Thursday.

MARK: I think that'll be great

CHRISTY: Yeah. And you've been such a strong supporter of women in general. At our event, you told a story about a woman who was your superior, I believe.

MARK: No, she was, She was my-- she was in a subordinate position to me, but she was still a mentor of mine. Yeah. Uh, I, I learned so much from her. Uh, she had so much different life experience all poured into one human being. she had been serving for a really, really long time. Still continues to serve today.

MARK: uh, came out, as a open lesbian woman serving in the military, uh, right at the tail end of Don't Ask, Don't Tell, so right before it was repealed. That takes some risk. Uh, but man, I tell you, she's got, she's got courage in spades. Uh, works in a l- in the security and law enforcement, uh, agency on base and

MARK: and that takes some, that takes some risk to work in a male-dominated field as a

MARK: woman and as a Native American serving

MARK: in the United States military.

MARK: Sometimes that's difficult. But no community honors military veterans more than the Native American community. So to her, it was a big point

MARK: of pride, not just for her, but for the community. And we had a lot of long conversations 'cause I'd go out and I'd check on her when she was

MARK: working post, and, uh, a

MARK: lot of long conversations about her life

MARK: journey.

MARK: And if I needed perspective on things that I, as a man, as a white straight male, uh,

MARK: could not understand or wanted to

MARK: uns- understand more

MARK: about, she always knew I approached her with

MARK: an open heart and a mind that wanted to learn, learn her perspective so that I could serve her well. Uh, and I just, I

MARK: learned so much, respect her so much

Monica: There's a lot in what you just said there about learning from each other and learning from other people's perspectives. So thank you for bringing that to, to your campaign and just to humanity in general.

MARK: I try, I try hard at it every single day. Some days I don't get it right, but, uh, I, I need to learn how to listen, listen a whole lot

MARK: more than I speak

CHRISTY: I love hearing that because I think a lot of times we forget that it is straight white men who often have the least number of barriers to cross to actually be successful

CHRISTY: in

Monica: a billionaire, so

CHRISTY: right, Right. That

MARK: I certainly don't want to be one either

CHRISTY: I

CHRISTY: don't think I would either. And I say that honestly because

CHRISTY: it is just, it's, it, it's too much of everything. Like when you have too much of everything, you you don't have the opportunity to

CHRISTY: find joy in something that's few and far between. I think that that is underrated

MARK: And, and to me, you, you lose the,

MARK: uh, you lose the

MARK: value that you put on relationships and relationship building when you feel like Everything's transactional,

MARK: right? And, and to me, I've been building relationships professionally. It's

MARK: just been such a gift to be able to do what I have done in my

MARK: life 'cause everything has been

MARK: about building relationships with people and trying to understand where they're at so I could lead them well.

MARK: And right now, this is a

MARK: fantastic opportunity to continue to build relationships, continue to build community,

MARK: and try and serve people as best I possibly can as their next senator

CHRISTY: Absolutely.

CHRISTY: So Mark, the, the world is

Monica: is kind of wonky right now, a little topsy-turvy. What's giving you hope?

MARK: Man, I te- I I tell you what, Monica, uh, what gives me hope every day is when I'm out knocking on people's doors and having good conversation. H-hope comes from the people in our country. It doesn't come from the policies and the politics. And the more people, the more human beings you meet, you listen to their life circumstances, sometimes you have

MARK: disagreements, and they tell me

MARK: I, I'm kinda middle of the road.

MARK: I'm, I'm unlike everybody, and I

MARK: am-- get the opportunity to reassure them

MARK: most people are pretty middle of the road. Most people want government that works, government that's a little bit boring, and doesn't have the high drama and the chaos and the cruelty that we're seeing

MARK: right now. so what gives me

MARK: hope is that there, there are more people out there that believe that we can get back to kindness, decency, uh, and some sense of calmness in our, in our government and our politics so that people can just focus on getting up in the morning, going to work, doing something that they love, and coming home to the people they care about and love in their community.

MARK: So it's-- That gives me hope every single day. This is a joyful run. I am loving this every single day 'cause there's always hope

MARK: every single morning.

CHRISTY: I love that. I absolutely love that. And why don't we talk about where people can learn more about your campaign, get connected with you, find out how they can help out and volunteer?

MARK: Yeah.

CHRISTY: if people, wanna learn more about me, uh, they can go to my campaign's website. It's legvold, the number four, mnsenate58.com. That's L-E-G-V-O-L-D, the number four, mnsenate, the number 58.com.

MARK: I've got all my core values there. You can learn how I was shaped and influenced, but I've also got some key policy points that I'm passionate about.

MARK: Uh, and otherwise, shoot, hit me up on Google. I hear that thing works pretty darn Well,

Monica: and we'll make sure to put links in our show notes

Monica: too, so people can find you through the podcast too

MARK: Love that

CHRISTY: Mark, thank you so much for joining us today and for sharing your story with our audience. We really

CHRISTY: appreciate the time. We know

CHRISTY: that you're busy between running for Senate and running the farm and all your other responsibilities, and it really was a

CHRISTY: privilege to talk to You today,

CHRISTY: and we just feel so honored to have you here

MARK: Thanks to you both. This has just been fantastic

Monica: Good to have you on

MARK: And keep up the good

MARK: work that you're doing

CHRISTY: We're

Monica: trying. To our listeners, if you are finding meaning in the stories we're sharing, if something moves

Monica: you, challenges you, makes you see the world a little differently, please like, comment,

Monica: or share. It helps more than you

Monica: know

CHRISTY: and follow

CHRISTY: us everywhere at the Politics Chicks on Substack, Threads, Blue Sky, Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook

Monica: Thanks for being a part of our community. Keep shining your light so we can find each other in the dark

CHRISTY: And remember, we're stronger together. Thank you so much, Mark, for being here today

Monica: Thanks,

MARK: Thank you