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Wellstone's Revenge: How Minnesota Democrats Took Their State Back
Minnesota's once-woebegone progressives have quietly crafted a road map for turning state capitols blue.
By Andy Kroll
| September/October 2013 Issue
It was the Friday before Memorial Day, and nearly 50 of Minnesota's most powerful businessmen and Republican operatives met for lunch at the Town and Country Club, overlooking the Mississippi River in western St. Paul. They had gathered at the invitation of Tom Rosen, who runs the nation's fifth-largest beef-processing company, and Stan Hubbard, the billionaire media magnate who pioneered satellite television. Over Caesar salad and tomato-basil soup, Rosen, Hubbard, and their friends bemoaned the direction of their state. As one after another rose to speak, the tone was one of outrage and incredulity: "It's time we coordinate." "It's time we stand up and do something." "We're getting chewed up!"
How far has the GOP fallen from the days when Minnesota was Karl Rove's prime example for the cascade of blue states poised to turn red and create a permanent Republican majority? A decade ago, Tim Pawlenty was governor, Norm Coleman had replaced the late Paul Wellstone in the US Senate, and Rove was touting Minnesotawhich hadn't voted for a Republican president in 37 yearsas a battleground state. Today, Democrats control the state Legislature. They hold both US Senate seats, five of the state's eight congressional seats, and every constitutional officegovernor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, secretary of state, and state auditor. In November, they defeated ballot measures to ban same-sex marriage and enact restrictive voter ID rules. And to top it all off, Rep. Michele Bachmann, the tea party torchbearer under investigation for ethics violations, announced in May that she would not seek reelection. "If you look at the history of our party since 1944, we're at the apex of our political power," gushes Ken Martin, the chairman of what in Minnesota is known as the Democratic-Farmer-Labor (DFL) Party.
They've not been shy about using that power. Last spring, Gov. Mark Dayton signed bills legalizing gay marriage, creating Minnesota's Obamacare health insurance exchange, allowing public colleges to freeze tuition, and investing $174 million into pre-K and all-day kindergarten. Dayton and his Democratic colleagues erased a $627 million budget deficit by hiking taxes on smokers, car rentals, and the wealthiest 2 percent of Minnesotans. At the same time, they cut property taxes for middle-class families. It was the most liberal legislative session anyone could rememberand a nightmare for the guests at Rosen and Hubbard's luncheon. "It was a big wake-up call," Hubbard told me in June at his St. Paul office, where a framed letter from Ronald Reagan hangs next to a replica of the Declaration of Independence.
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http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/10/minnesota-progressives-turn-state-blue
myrna minx
(22,772 posts)a kennedy
(29,673 posts)riverwalker
(8,694 posts)Paul Bunyan and the BLUE donkey If only we can turn Minnesota 6th to BLUE (Bachmann's district)
IronLionZion
(45,457 posts)good for you all. Let's do this in other states like Wisconsin, Michigan, PA, Ohio, FloriDUH, and more
dflprincess
(28,079 posts)In 2010 the Republicans took control of both the state House and Senate, fortunately Mark Dayton managed to squeak out (with a recount) a win in the governor's race (and DFLer's took the other Contsitutional offices, including the Secretatry of State) and for two years Mark was all that stood between us and the barbarians.
And we got lucky. First, the Republicans overreached with their Contsitutional Amenedments and second, they did it in a redistricting year. Normally, the state House is up for reelection every two year and the Senate every four years. But, because the legislative lines were redrawn, the Senate was also up for reelection in 2012, otherwise we would have been in a situation where the DFL had the governor's seat that the House, but the Teabaggers would have controlled the Senate.
Let's all remember how close we came and not get complacent.