As legislators head into the last days of a bitterly divided session, a solution for the state's $5 billion budget dilemma could rest in the hands of a group not known for its clout -- freshmen legislators.
Their sheer numbers propelled Republicans to dominance in the House and Senate for the first time in decades, and many came to the Capitol determined to make some noise. Dissatisfied with their party's old no-new-taxes pledge, they raised the stakes: No new revenue.
Rep. Rich Murray, a small-business owner whose Albert Lea swing district went for DFL Gov. Mark Dayton, said his purpose is clear. "Elections never bothered me," he said. "I came here for two years." After five months of legislating, he said, "I've actually moved a little further right when I see there's a lot going on in government that we could do a lot better."
But the realities of negotiations -- and potentially nasty reaction from voters facing deep cuts back home -- may test their nerve in the next few days. Some of the freshmen face unique challenges: Rep. King Banaian, who barely eked out a victory in his St. Cloud swing district, could see substantial cuts to state aid on which St. Cloud depends. Sen. Benjamin Kruse, the first Republican to represent Brooklyn Park in decades, will have to explain to constituents -- a number of whom are renters -- why Republicans cut the renters' credit and would push the low-income Minnesotans off state-backed health care programs.
So far, the GOP's freshman class shows few signs of backing down, even though the state may be on track for a special session or even a rare government shutdown.
Capitol veterans such as Roger Moe, who as a DFL Senate majority leader went toe-to-toe with 20 years of governors, said a position like that "doesn't leave a lot of room for compromise, and this place is all about compromise. No one side is going to get everything they want. And eventually everybody has to realize that."
Dayton has been firm in his insistence that the state's rich are not paying their "fair share." Republicans -- particularly the freshmen -- say voters sent them to the Capitol to stand against bigger government and higher spending and that they won't cave on their most basic principle.
"A lot of freshmen believe they were brought here for a specific reason, and that was to draw some lines," said Assistant Senate Majority Leader Dave Thompson, a freshman from Lakeville who has become one of the highest-profile new members. "And we've got a lot of freshman members who are willing to assert themselves."