Minnesota state senate candidate gives convention speech while in labor

  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.

A Minnesota State Senate candidate is receiving support after giving a speech at a political convention on Saturday while in labor.

Erin Maye Quade went into labor early the morning of the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party convention where she was set to appear to secure her party's nomination. She still attended to speak.

Erin Maye Quade gave a convention speech while in labor. (Photo: Facebook)
Erin Maye Quade gave a convention speech while in labor. (Photo: Facebook)

A video of her speech was posted to Twitter by a woman named Ashley Fairbanks who was in attendance as Maye Quade spoke to the crowd before taking a pause while experiencing labor pains. "Excuse me," Maye Quade is heard saying while leaning over before people begin to cheer her on.

While the cheers are in support of Maye Quade, Fairbanks expressed her upset over the candidate having to attend the convention at all while in labor.

"Her opponent didn’t think to ask to postpone the convention as she, you know, had to go to the hospital to deliver her baby," Fairbanks wrote. "What the hell."

Neither Maye Quade nor her campaign manager Mitchell Walstad immediately responded to Yahoo Life's request for comment. However, Walstad told CBS News that Maye Quade had to withdraw from the race because she no longer could stay at the convention.

"After the first round of balloting, Erin was at the point where she could not stay anymore, and she chose to withdraw," Walstad told the publication. "She was not forced out, but she chose to [leave] because with endorsing process, there's often a lot of change that can happen between one ballot and the next, and a lot of persuasion can happen if there's no decided candidate after that first round."

While there were options to have the balloting suspended, Maye Quade's opponent Justin Emmerich ended up winning the nomination after she left.

Maye Quade's wife Alyse ended up announcing the birth of the couple's baby girl on Sunday, nearly 24 hours after the politician first went into labor.

"Mom did awesome, even in the moments that got a little intense, and especially when it came to pushing baby girl out," Alyse wrote about her wife. "Actually seeing the power and determination, push after push - I'll never look at my wife the same again, she is so powerful."

Supporters of Maye Quade continue to share their thoughts on social media about the way that the convention played out.

A fellow DFL candidate for a separate district, Clare Oumou Verbeten, took to Facebook to share that it had been an example of racial inequities in the healthcare system.

"It hurts me to see this very public display of a Black woman pushing through pain, especially when the blatant disregard and dismissal of our pain has led to alarming rates of us dying during childbirth," Verbeten wrote. "Black women are always expected to be so strong. We deserve tenderness, care, and rest. Get some rest, sis. Congrats on becoming a mama."

Want lifestyle and wellness news delivered to your inbox? Sign up here for Yahoo Life’s newsletter.