This year, for maybe the first time in his political career, Mark Dayton won't be underestimated — not by much, anyway.
Republicans aiming to unseat Dayton may base their hopes on the slender recount margin by which he won Minnesota's governorship in 2010. But Dayton is a different candidate now — no longer the moody political fortune seeker and disillusioned former U.S. senator, reaching for an improbable comeback. Now he is a tested incumbent who has been both lucky and shrewd in his first term, and about as successful as one could have imagined.
As a political personality, Dayton inspires more puzzlement than passion, from critics as well as admirers. Many in his trade strive to seem at ease in it — inspired by their own eloquence or at least won over by their own charms. Dayton makes it all look rather like work. His earnest, unceasing focus on his objectives gives even his standard politician evasions and trickeries an odd kind of honesty. It's all just part of the toilsome job. He yearns to triumph but doesn't really expect to be loved.
As governor, Dayton has doggedly labored at getting things done for core progressive constituencies, and they will be there for him this year, make no mistake.
To begin where an incumbent's re-election prospects always begin, Dayton's economic timing has been terrific. Minnesota's recovery from the Great Recession was already outpacing the nation's when Dayton was elected. But the times were hard, and they have steadily improved, especially by comparison with many other states.
It is twaddle, of course, for DFLers to credit this continuing bounce in Minnesota's step to the immediate tax hikes and "long-term investments" in education and whatnot they put in place just last summer. It seems more probable that there was some slight exaggeration in claims that Minnesota's vitality had been laid waste by the preceding decade of relative frugality under Gov. Tim Pawlenty, Dayton's GOP predecessor, and the Republican Legislature of 2011-12.
But never mind. Economic sunshine brightens any incumbent's prospects, the just and the unjust alike, and so it will be with Dayton.
Dayton's less foreseeable stroke of luck was the record-setting ineptness of his opposition, which looked so formidable as his first term began. Having seized full control of the Legislature in 2010 for the first time in decades, Republicans did everything they possibly could to squander it — and then some.