Rookie legislators traditionally hang back and observe during their first months at the Legislature. But just weeks into the session, some of the highest-profile bills are being carried and defended by aggressive freshmen who see no reason to wait in the wings.
The new personalities in St. Paul come from all walks of life: professor, police chief, insurance agent, teacher, radio host. Their legislation, most of which has the leadership seal of approval, would radically change the state's budget, fast-track permits, freeze pay for public teachers and block state funding of abortion.
If their impact is outsized, so are their numbers. In the House, 33 of 72 Republican members are new. More than half of the Senate's new Republican majority are freshmen.
"If the freshmen sat on their hands, we'd have a lot of hand sitting," said first-term Sen. Dave Thompson, a gregarious former radio host who in one week introduced high-profile bills to freeze teacher pay and block abortion funding. The Lakeville Republican also landed a coveted leadership spot after convening a meeting of fellow newcomers.
Rep. King Banaian, an economist, is headlining a signature GOP budget bill that would force state agencies to rebuild their budgets from zero.
In what might have been considered effrontery in bygone Legislatures, Banaian went to leadership and told them he should be the chief sponsor of a premiere budget bill. "I [told leadership] I want this bill because this is what I was sent to do," said Banaian, of St. Cloud.
The sea change hasn't gone unnoticed. Dick Day, a lobbyist and 20-year Senate veteran who once led his minority caucus, said: "I have never noticed that in the past would you have freshmen legislators introducing such gigantic bills."
House Speaker Kurt Zellers carried only a handful of minor bills during his freshman year.