The thermometer barely rose above zero last Jan. 5, as Gov. Mark Dayton was sworn in for his second term. It was a chilly start to a political year that never quite heated up for the governor.
Dayton ends 2015 with few of the banner legislative achievements that characterized his three previous years in office: a Vikings stadium deal, an income tax increase on the wealthy, funding for all-day kindergarten, a state minimum wage hike.
Following that string of successes, voters in 2014 rewarded the DFL governor with a second term — but also returned Republicans to the House majority. That left Dayton's second term starting off like his first, with a legislative session that ended in a stalemate over the state budget.
At a news conference last week, Dayton said his second term was positive by his own favored yardstick.
"This has been a good year for Minnesota. That's my measure," Dayton said. He cited a strong state economy despite several pockets of concern, the 3.5 percent statewide unemployment rate, and a series of notices by national publications and groups that have trumpeted Minnesota's quality of life and sound fiscal management.
And, unlike four years earlier, Dayton headed off a state government shutdown this year by striking a last-minute budget deal with Republicans. But it required him to retreat on what had been Nos. 1 and 2 on his wish list: full funding of all-day prekindergarten classes at public schools and a major infusion of new dollars into transportation infrastructure statewide via a gas tax increase.
Dayton also was unable to rally legislators for a special session last summer to help the struggling Lake Mille Lacs-area economy. Now he's again trying to convince legislators of the need for a short special session in January to attend to several matters.
Starting his second (and he says final) term, Dayton proclaimed himself "Dayton Unbound" — cheekily hinting that lack of another election in his future meant a more unfettered style. But he learned the downside potential early on when he bluntly denounced a fellow DFL leader.