Senate Republicans failed Monday to rush a $500 million tax relief package from the DFL-led House to a final floor vote in the DFL-led Senate.
"Minnesotans are working on their tax returns right now, and they deserve a clear answer from the Legislature on tax reform," said Senate Minority Leader David Hann, R-Eden Prairie. "The House was able to move quickly on this issue. Senate Republicans think it's vitally important to citizens of the state that we do the same. There's no reason to delay."
DFL Senate leaders said they want to hold public hearings on a plan the House overwhelmingly approved last week.
"This is a very large proposal," said Assistant Senate Majority Leader Katie Sieben, DFL-Newport. The Senate, she said, wants to "hear from the public on the components that will go into it."
Hann said he suspects the Senate DFLers are intentionally holding up the tax proposal to keep it as a possible bargaining chip for other measures, like a proposed $90 million Senate office building and parking ramp that is stalled in the House.
The building issue must be resolved "before we have movement on these other major things," Hann said.
Sieben said the Senate Taxes Committee "isn't trying to hold anything up. They are moving ahead as quickly as possible, keeping in mind that there is a process in the Senate."
The proposal includes tax breaks for middle-income Minnesotans and it would repeal new business sales taxes on warehousing services and telecommunications equipment and repair, changes strongly supported by DFL Gov. Mark Dayton.