In selecting Smith, Dayton has chosen a powerful deal-maker who has led the administration through some of it is most complex, high profile and politically dicey development projects of this term. Smith took a guiding role in the effort to build a new Minnesota Viking stadium and a multibillion-dollar, state-backed expansion of Mayo Clinic in Rochester.
Smith is now leading a government streamlining effort that is likely to be a major fixture in the upcoming legislative session.
"She's a natural leader, very charismatic, very smart," Dayton said in an earlier Star Tribune interview. "People naturally look to her for guidance. They like working with her, and they like working for her. And she's very good with relationships, from all walks of life."
Dayton made the announcement Tuesday morning at a political rally at an AFL-CIO office in St. Paul. The governor has been quietly vetting possible running mates since last month when Lt. Gov. Yvonne Prettner Solon announced that she would not be joining Dayton in his quest for a second term.
Republicans were already taking aim at the ticket's urban slant. Smith lives next to Lake Harriet in South Minneapolis and Dayton lived in the Minneapolis area for much of his life.
"Mark Dayton has turned his back on the nearly 5 million Minnesotans who don't live in the City of Lakes," said Ben Golnik, chairman of the Minnesota Jobs Coalition, a group trying to defeat Dayton and elect Republicans to the Legislature. "Dayton doubled down on his incompetence by picking a current staffer and longtime DFL insider."
Smith, who has never run for a major elected office before, will now become Dayton's chief surrogate in what is expected to be a fierce, hard-hitting fight for re-election. At 55, Smith is more than a decade younger than the governor and could give the ticket a jolt of energy and vitality.
Dayton is set to have surgery at Mayo Clinic on Thursday to reattach tendons in his hip, which he injured during a fall at the governor's residence last year. Dayton, 67, will need several days to recuperate and then is expected to require a brace for up to six weeks that could restrict his ability to campaign.