Opponents of Gov. Tim Walz's executive orders closing bars and restaurants are bombarding some Minnesota legislators with calls and e-mails, hoping they will vote to end the governor's emergency powers when the Legislature reconvenes next week.
The concerted campaign is targeted at a half-dozen Democrats in the Minnesota House, who have either voted to end Walz's powers in the past or have been willing to consider alternatives to COVID-19 decisionmaking.
"If we fail, our beloved businesses who are under assault from Tyrant Walz and our awful Attorney General will likely fail and go bankrupt," Jake Duesenberg, president of the group Action 4 Liberty, wrote to supporters as he urged them to contact Democratic and Republican legislators.
Even if the crush of calls and e-mails sways the small group of legislators in their favor, Walz's critics would face another likely insurmountable hurdle in the DFL-led House.
Throughout the pandemic, legislators have held monthly special sessions that give them an opportunity to reject Walz's continuation of a state of emergency. That emergency status allows the governor to make decisions with little legislative input. While the Republican-controlled Senate has routinely voted to end his powers, the House Democratic majority has not. Both chambers would need to support an end to the emergency.
When lawmakers return to St. Paul on Tuesday for the start of the regular session, the composition of the House will look different. A number of Democratic representatives lost in November, and the House DFL's 16-seat advantage shrank to six seats.
Duesenberg said he hopes that will change the odds in their favor. But House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, said a procedural hurdle ensures it will not.
To vote on an end to the emergency powers, House members would first have to vote to suspend their rules to take up the proposal. A suspension of the rules requires 90 votes, Hortman said.