SECRETARY OF STATE MARK RITCHIE
As Secretary of State, Ritchie is chairman of the state Canvassing Board. A DFLer, he was elected in 2006, defeating Republican incumbent Mary Kiffmeyer. In his first run for public office, Ritchie ran an aggressive campaign, accusing Kiffmeyer of acting in a partisan way as secretary of state, something she denied.
Ritchie's background is largely as a researcher and activist opposed to U.S. trade policies, globalization and genetic engineering, and in mobilizing and registering voters around similar causes. He formerly was president of a Minneapolis-based nonprofit, the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, and was a trade analyst for the Minnesota Department of Agriculture. In 2004, he led National Voice, a coalition of organizations that claimed credit for helping register more than 5 million voters.
Ritchie drew praise for a smooth statewide recount after a judicial primary in September. He drew some allegations of partisanship from the GOP side in the early stages of the Senate recount but those appear to have subsided
MINNESOTA SUPREME COURT CHIEF JUSTICE ERIC MAGNUSON
Magnuson was appointed as the state's 21st chief justice in June by Gov. Tim Pawlenty. Before that, as head of the governor's judicial selection board for five years, Magnuson had a hand in shaping the court by recommending Pawlenty's previous three appointments.
Campaign finance records show that Magnuson has contributed a total of $2,625 to Pawlenty's first gubernatorial campaign and his second-term inaugural committee.
At the time of his appointment, Magnuson was an attorney and shareholder at Briggs and Morgan in Minneapolis, specializing in appellate law.
He is a graduate of the University of Minnesota and received his law degree from William Mitchell College of Law.
MINNESOTA SUPREME COURT ASSOCIATE JUSTICE G. BARRY ANDERSON
Anderson was named to the high court by Pawlenty in October 2004 after serving on the state Court of Appeals since 1998, a post he was appointed to by former Gov. Arne Carlson.