Slightly more than two months into the 2019 Minnesota legislative session it is becoming more clear
that “One Minnesota” has morphed into “Won Minnesota” and that the DFL strategy to move its agenda is premised less on consensus than on the belief that they won the 2018 elections and their agenda deserves to be enacted. If that is the case then the DFL will get little of what it wants.
Tim Walz ran successfully on a “One Minnesota” slogan and platform. It was an effort to appeal to unity both during the DFL primary to bring together various parts of the party to support him, and to overcome polarization that grips the US and the Minnesota. It is unclear how much this message elected him and Democrats to take control of the House or whether it was the trickle-down effect from an unpopular President Trump, a weak GOP gubernatorial candidate, and a significant money advantage the DFL had. Yes, Walz won 54% of the statewide vote but only 22 of 87 counties. He won the same places where Tina Smith, Amy Klobuchar, the other state-wide DFL candidates and House candidates won. The state is geographically polarized.
Based on a majority vote, he claimed a mandate, as all victors do. He then appointed a cabinet exclusively DFL and mostly Metro-centric. Since taking office he and the DFL-controlled Minnesota House have pursued a largely urban-liberal agenda, although there are strong elements that appeal to the suburbs. In many and most cases pursuing a “to a victor belongs the spoils” or arguing that one is in the majority means you get to move the agenda is perfectly acceptable in a political system premised upon majority rule. Yet in the case of the Walz administration there are several problems.
First, even if the Walz-DFL agenda has elements that appeal to Republicans and rural Minnesota, it has failed to articulate that. It has failed to make the case to rural Minnesota how and why the gas tax, legalizing recreational marijuana, or regulating guns are to their advantage. Narratives and messaging matter, and the Walz administration and the governor have done a bad job here.
Second, there seems to be a belief by Walz and the DFL that their issues are widely popular (and they maybe), fair, and correct, and therefore Republicans should simply do the right thing and go along with the DFL and vote for them. Maybe in a different era this might happen, but in the polarized “winner take all” or zero sum game politics of today that is not the reality. Simply have the right issues will not cut it.
Third, even in an era which was much less polarized, having the right issues was not enough. One had to do the heavy legislative work of building consensus, horse-trading, or developing coalitions to get the votes needed. Walz and the DFL are either not doing that, or not doing it effectively. Think about the recent defeat of legalized recreational marijuana in Minnesota. Walz seemed indignant that the Senate did not support it. At some point he and the DFL need to ask what is it the GOP needs to support it beyond just saying they should vote for it because polls indicate public support. The same crash of reality will soon hit when it comes to the ERA, guns, the gas tax, and a host of other DFL items.
One needs to ask what incentive the GOP has to support them and then figure out what deals are possible to be able to move closer to that. Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka represents 35 GOP senators who have constituencies back home who do not necessarily support the DFL agenda. To get it though the Senate and secure GOP votes he and the other senators have to be able to tell their constituents what is in it for them. This is the real art of legislating, and so far this work or effort seems to be missing.
There are about two months to go in the 2019 legislative session. A lot can happen and agreement on much legislation is still possible. But already we see how the DFL is losing on many issues, and may well get far less than it thought it would this year. Its strategy of “One Minnesota” may have changed to we “Won Minnesota,” thinking that straight majoritarianism would be enough to move a legislative agenda. However, with divided government and a political system that balances majority rule and minority rights, this approach is a recipe for failure.
The problem in MN is that the Dems refuse to properly primary candidates and provide legitimate options, particularly in races where incumbents/old party hacks are running and the GOP fails to offer strong candidates in opposition. I suspect the reason for the latter is that Dem nominees are DINOs and the GOP is therefore content to maintain status quo. As for the former, to the Dems it is all about winning, not about a progressive platform. Consequently, most legislative action is either populist, destined (intended?) to fail due to lack of GOP/DINO support, or far from progressive and thus destined to succeed. It is a win-lose situation for the people of this state.
ReplyDeleteThis is true of the energy/environmental issues I tend to follow. With almost all the Republicans and half the DFLers aligned with the dark side, not much seems likely to happen.
Deletereality will set in soon with the budget and targets. there isn't enough money to go around and we see a number of things like long-term care taking a hit along with healthcare. without a gas tax increase it will be tough and my money is in May the deals will be done with a lot of folks disappointed.
ReplyDeleteProbably you are describing reality, but am not sure what Walz could do differently, given that the Republicans are so committed to obstruction, to subsidizing special interests, to misleading their constituents....One needs to look at the demographics and the opportunities for defeating enough Republicans to take over the Senate.
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