The Minnesota Senate has settled a lawsuit with Michael Brodkorb for $30,000, far less than the former GOP spokesman sought in his wrongful-termination lawsuit.
"I am glad to have this over with," Brodkorb said Thursday. "This is about putting this matter behind me and allowing me to get my life back and wake up tomorrow with this not on my shoulders."
The settlement ends the most riveting legal showdown at the Capitol in recent history, with the notoriously combative former communications chief threatening to churn up romantic affairs of current and former lawmakers in what promised to be a high-stakes courtroom political drama.
In the end, Brodkorb settled for what the Senate claims is the same severance package he was offered two years ago and agreed to pay his own legal fees. Brodkorb also acknowledged that the facts of the case did not support his gender discrimination claim. Taxpayers have already spent more than $300,000 in legal fees defending the Senate. The body's Rules Committee will need to approve the payment.
"We are pleased to have successfully resolved this matter in the best interests of taxpayers and the institution of the Minnesota Senate," said Senate Majority Leader Tom Bakk, DFL-Cook. "This agreement permanently dismisses Mr. Brodkorb's claims in their entirety while providing the limited severance pay that was offered to him before he commenced litigation."
Brodkorb, however, disputes the Senate account. "They did not offer me a severance package," he said.
Brodkorb was fired late in 2011 after then-Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch admitted the two were having a romantic affair. Both were married to other people at the time. Koch resigned her leadership position, and the interim head of the GOP caucus then ordered Brodkorb be fired.
A longtime GOP political operative, Brodkorb filed a wrongful termination lawsuit seeking $500,000. He argued that he had been treated differently than female staffers caught in similar romantic relationships with elected officials. Brodkorb threatened to bring those other relationships to light to prove his case, which had the potential to create political and personal problems for current and former legislators.