• After Loss, Tim Walz Faces Party's Sinking Fortunes in Minnesota

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Tue Feb 11 09:15:39 2025
    XPost: alt.politics.democrats.governors, mn.politics, alt.politics.elections XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics

    Governor Walz’s party has lost control of the Minnesota Legislature and
    faces mounting criticism as a budget deficit looms.

    Since returning to Minnesota after a failed bid for vice president, Gov.
    Tim Walz has kept a relatively low profile. He consoled deflated
    supporters with a speech at a high school, posed for photos with a turkey
    at the Minnesota State Capitol to mark Thanksgiving and flew to the
    Bahamas for a brief respite from the cold.

    This week, Mr. Walz, a Democrat, must start grappling in earnest with his party’s sinking political fortunes in his home state as lawmakers begin
    meeting in St. Paul for what is expected to be an unusually acrimonious
    state legislative session.

    Minnesota Democrats controlled the governor’s mansion and the State
    Legislature the past two years, allowing them to pass a trove of liberal
    laws on abortion rights, marijuana and medical leave. But they are bracing
    for a new era of gridlock, having lost their slim majority in the House.
    Their control of the Senate is tenuous.

    State budget officials last month issued a grim assessment of Minnesota’s fiscal health, warning that spending is projected to exceed revenue in
    coming years. The officials said a $5.1 billion deficit is possible by
    2028. Under the Democrats’ leadership, the state had a $17.5 billion
    surplus at one point, leading critics to question how tax dollars have
    been spent.

    “It’s going to be an arduous, hard, really tough session,” said Blois
    Olson, a political analyst and communications strategist in St. Paul. A
    looming question in St. Paul is whether Mr. Walz will seek a third term in
    2026 after what many say they anticipate could be a bruising return to his state duties during the legislative session. “If he feels beat up after
    that,” Mr. Olson said, “I think his prospects of running again are going
    to be low.”

    Shortly after Mr. Walz returned from the national campaign trail in
    November, signs arose of new tensions at home. Mr. Walz was not seen at
    public events with his lieutenant governor and running mate, Peggy
    Flanagan. Reports of a falling out over preparations for a potential
    succession plan for the governor’s job — in the case of a Democratic win
    of the White House — spilled into the open.

    Mr. Walz and Ms. Flanagan, an outspoken supporter of the governor since
    they were first elected together in 2018, declined requests for interviews
    for this story.

    Speaking to supporters in Minnesota shortly after the election, Mr. Walz
    said that he had been struggling to understand why voters gave President-
    elect Donald J. Trump a second term in office. Still, he pledged to find
    areas of agreement with conservatives.

    “I think we, and I’m speaking about myself, need to swallow a little bit
    of pride and try harder to find common ground with our neighbors who
    didn’t vote like we did,” Mr. Walz told a crowd of campaign volunteers and government employees who gathered in November at Eagan High School in
    Eagan, Minn.

    Yet Mr. Walz also said that he was “ready to stand up and fight” to
    safeguard the steps that Minnesota Democrats had taken in recent years to expand abortion rights, tighten gun controls, fight climate change and
    remain a welcoming state for immigrants.

    As the new legislative session opens on Tuesday, Democrats find themselves
    on the defensive amid an ongoing fight over control of the Statehouse. November’s election left an even split in the chamber, but a judge found
    that a newly elected Democrat failed to meet the residency requirements
    for his seat. That means Republicans will start the session with a one-
    seat majority, at least until a special election is held.

    Representative Lisa Demuth, the top Republican in the Minnesota House,
    said her party’s gains in the election should be interpreted as a rebuke
    of the ways Mr. Walz and fellow Democrats had steered the state sharply to
    the left since they assumed full control in the capital in 2023. When
    Democrats held a trifecta, they passed policies that included legalizing recreational cannabis, funding free meals for virtually all students in
    the state and requiring that businesses pay for family and medical leave.

    “We tried to sound the alarms over the last two years, saying, Hey, let’s exercise a little bit of restraint,” Ms. Demuth said. “That was completely ignored.”

    Representative Melissa Hortman, the top Democrat in the Minnesota House, defended the party’s record.

    “I wouldn’t change what we did because we invested in Minnesotans,” she
    said. “We made child care cheaper. We made getting housing built a high priority. We made some pretty considerable investments in state
    infrastructure projects.”

    In recent decades, divided government has been more common than full party control in Minnesota, she said, adding that she was confident lawmakers
    would find common ground in the coming months as they work to pass a
    budget for the next two years.

    For now, lawmakers are bracing for an unusually turbulent session. House Democrats have vowed to boycott the first weeks of the session until a
    special election for the disputed seat can be held in late January.

    Democrats had been poised to hold a one-seat majority in the Senate. But
    the death of a Democratic senator last month means they will start the
    session with a tie. Complicating matters, another Democratic seat is in question; Senator Nicole Mitchell is scheduled to be tried later this
    month on a felony burglary charge. She has pleaded not guilty.

    Larry Jacobs, director of the Center for the Study of Politics and
    Governance at the University of Minnesota, said he expected that
    Republicans would use their growing clout to undermine Mr. Walz at every
    turn.

    “This is full-out political warfare,” he said.

    As a candidate for vice president, Mr. Walz presented himself as a
    moderate politician with working-class roots and an impressive governing record. But in the national spotlight, Mr. Walz faced questions over
    whether he had steered Minnesota too far to the left.

    In the end, Mr. Walz’s ticket, led by Vice President Kamala Harris, lost
    key Midwest battleground states where Mr. Walz had been expected to
    attract votes and won Minnesota by only four percentage points.

    Mr. Walz has announced only one major legislative initiative in the lead-
    up to the new session: After years of criticism that state agencies lacked safeguards to identify and prevent brazen theft schemes, Mr. Walz recently announced a package of efforts to stop fraud in government. Mr. Walz’s
    critics portrayed the move as an exercise in damage control.

    Mr. Walz also faces growing questions, including from liberals, over the
    slow and bumpy rollout of legalized recreational cannabis in Minnesota —
    one of the signature laws approved by Democrats in 2023. Mr. Walz’s administration has yet to hire a permanent director for the Office of
    Cannabis Management. It’s uncertain when the first urban dispensaries will
    open because the process to issue licenses has been snarled by legal challenges.

    In recent months, Mr. Walz has said in interviews with local news media
    outlets that he had yet to decide whether to seek a third term in 2026. If
    he does, there are signs he might partner with someone other than Ms.
    Flanagan, a one-time political mentor who has been farther to the left, political analysts said.

    An invitation for a fund-raising lunch sent recently by Mr. Walz’s
    campaign operation listed Mr. Walz’s name along with that of his wife,
    Gwen, but not Ms. Flanagan.

    Republican leaders in Minnesota said they were optimistic about their
    prospects in 2026, when they intend to blame Democrats for spending the
    state’s sizable surplus.

    “Not only did they spend it all on these pet programs, which in our view
    is ridiculous, but they put us back into a deficit and raised our taxes,”
    said Alex Plechash, the new chairman of the Minnesota Republican Party.
    “That is just unforgivable.”

    Ken Martin, chairman of the state’s Democratic Party, who is seeking to
    lead the Democratic National Committee, declined an interview request.

    Mr. Olson, the political analyst, cautioned that Mr. Walz may yet find his political footing. Much can shift, he said, in the early years of a new
    Trump administration.

    “Eighteen months is a lifetime in this business,” he said.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/14/us/after-loss-tim-walz-faces-partys- sinking-fortunes-in-minnesota.html

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