In the Minnesota Legislature this year, great relationships are not so great.
"We have a great relationship with the Senate. Don't be fooled," House Tax Chairwoman Ann Lenczewski, DFL-Bloomington, told reporters last week.
Shortly thereafter, she asked her House colleagues to talk to senators to get them to pass the tax bill the House had just overwhelmingly approved. The Senate still hasn't followed suit.
Although there is yet time for the two chambers to join forces, the Democrats controlling both houses have had a rocky relationship in 2014. And their troubles could drive key Democratic issues off a cliff shortly before the House and DFL Gov. Mark Dayton face voters in this year's election.
The friction appeared as soon as lawmakers retuned to the Capitol in late February.
On day one, at Dayton's urging, the House approved $20 million in spending to help low-income Minnesotans with their heating bills. Senate Majority Leader Tom Bakk, DFL-Cook, said the Senate might need to mull over the measure. The Senate eventually passed the measure and got the aid out the door.
That same week, the House smacked around the idea of a new legislative office building that would house senators, something Bakk wants.
"I think we have a question before us that needs some thought," House Majority Leader Erin Murphy, DFL-St. Paul, said of the building. That thought has, so far, stopped the building from moving forward. The House Rules Committee would need to sign off on the plans and has not even scheduled a meeting to do so.