Republican legislators are demanding more information about whether DFL Sen. Jeff Hayden abused his power and aided the misspending of taxpayer money.
During an ethics hearing Wednesday, lawmakers asked Minneapolis school board officials to submit affidavits detailing whether Hayden and Sen. Bobby Joe Champion, DFL-Minneapolis, threatened to withhold state funding if the district did not award a $375,000 contract to Community Standards Initiative (CSI), a group whose mission was to close the achievement gap.
Lawmakers also are asking the state Commerce and Human Services departments to provide any documents that detail what role Hayden played in Community Action of Minneapolis' alleged misspending.
DFLers and Republicans provided vastly different accounts of the outcome of Wednesday's hearing.
"We are pleased the Ethics Subcommittee granted a de facto probable cause ruling regarding our complaint against [Hayden]," Senate Minority Leader David Hann, R-Eden Prairie, said after the hearing. "The subcommittee wants more information and facts before they make their final decision in this important matter."
The hearing was the first time Hayden has spoken publicly about the allegations. In a statement, he said that the evidence presented at hearing was "nothing more than speculation and misinformation."
"A thorough consideration of the facts by a bipartisan subcommittee failed to demonstrate that my conduct was in any way unethical or in violation of the rules of the Senate," he said.
The ethics subcommittee will continue its proceedings on Nov. 5, the same day it will hear a similar complaint against Champion, also filed by Senate Republicans.
The ethics inquiry stems from the Star Tribune's reporting on Hayden's connections with CSI and Community Action. Hayden appointed his wife to serve on his behalf on the board of Community Action, which was at the center of a state audit that alleges misspending of more than $800,000, including trips for board members.