Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is pushing to make lawmakers subject to the same open-records laws that cover the rest of state government, an idea the top Republican in the Legislature opposes.
Walz raised the possibility of new legislation in a letter Monday to Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, R-Nisswa, while also highlighting concerns about a new Senate Republican Caucus web page soliciting "whistleblower" complaints from state employees.
Walz said he welcomes legislative oversight of state government, but argued that creating a party mechanism for reporting government waste, fraud or abuse would be a "departure from neutral investigatory principles" and would lack the protections of the Minnesota Data Practices Act, which governs access to government records.
Walz's letter also indicated that he and Gazelka had spoken previously about covering the Legislature under the requirements of the open-records law, and suggested that future talks are in the offing.
"I am grateful for your willingness to have an additional discussion about passing legislation next session subjecting the State Legislature to the Minnesota Government Data Practices Act (MGDPA)," Walz wrote.
But Gazelka said Tuesday that he does not recall talking with Walz about opening the Legislature to those requirements. He added that while he is willing to talk about any issue with the governor, he does not favor extending the open-records law to the Legislature.
"I personally would be opposed to that. I think constituents need to feel like they can voice their concerns and not have that be public," he said.
The Legislature has long exempted itself from open-government requirements, keeping the bulk of communications, records and other data hidden from the public. The lack of transparency came into sharp focus in May amid the closed-door budget negotiations between the governor and legislative leaders, a process that is widely referred to as the "cone of silence."