Minnesotans trying to lift the state's ban on Sunday liquor retailing were upbeat Tuesday after a House committee easily voted to repeal it, the first sign that a bevy of new legislators are sympathetic to allowing Sunday sales.
"You're starting to get more people wondering aloud to their legislators, 'Why not?' " said Rep. Jenifer Loon, R-Eden Prairie, chief author of the bill.
Despite Tuesday's success, advocates face obstacles from entrenched interest groups that have been effective at keeping it in place up until now. Many liquor retailers and bars favor the current regulation because they say it ensures a fair marketplace and sound public health.
Tony Chesak, executive director of the Minnesota Licensed Beverage Association, was resigned to the legislation passing its first hurdle but not willing to give up. "Our organization will continue to fight for the little guy, for the small family-owned business that owns and operates bars and liquor stores throughout Minnesota," he said in a statement.
The group argues its members would have to open their businesses on Sundays to compete with larger competitors but are unlikely to see a proportional increase in sales. In other words, more overhead with little to show for it.
Opponents have history on their side — the ban has been in place since statehood in 1858.
Advocates for Sunday sales — including an array of other powerful interest groups — get a little closer every year, buoyed by public opinion polls that have repeatedly shown the public overwhelmingly favors repeal.
Minnesotans can buy alcohol at taverns and restaurants, or fill a growler at a brewery on Sundays. But if they want to buy from a liquor store, they have to travel to surrounding states, each of which allows the sale of booze on the traditional Christian sabbath.