As babies cried and flashbulbs sparkled, newly elected Republicans claimed control of the Minnesota Legislature on Tuesday, ushering in the most profound change in the body in four decades.
"Our job now is to govern," Republican House Speaker Kurt Zellers said moments after his election to the state's second-most powerful post.
To taxpayers, Zellers pledged to "treat every one of your dollars that you send to us with the same common sense and frugality" used around the family kitchen table.
The House floor, usually restricted to legislators and staff, was overflowing with family and friends on the first day of the 2011 session.
But behind-the-scenes discord between Republicans and ousted DFL leaders percolated through much of the day, occasionally polluting the usual feel-good ceremonial vibe of such an occasion.
It started when Sen. Scott Dibble, DFL-Minneapolis, abstained during a largely perfunctory vote to elect GOP Sen. Michelle Fischbach of Paynesville as Senate president. Dibble was one of only five members who didn't vote for Fischbach. Republicans have never before controlled the Senate.
Afterward, Dibble said he wanted to sound a note of caution. "I would say that her history in the chamber has been one of partisanship -- more so than others. So I am concerned, yes."
Now the Republican-dominated Legislature must quickly pivot from celebrating to leading a tempestuous caucus that faces Gov. Mark Dayton, the first Democrat to lead the state in a generation.