The latest political meltdown of the Minnesota Vikings stadium plan unleashed a torrent of political maneuvering and squabbling at the Capitol Tuesday, with the governor, the Vikings and key DFL legislators struggling to get on the same page about the imperiled project.
As Republican leaders pointedly noted that just one of six DFLers on a House panel voted for the nearly $1 billion stadium Monday, leading to the plan's 9-6 defeat, a frustrated Gov. Mark Dayton and DFL leaders sought a path forward for the stadium as the Legislature continued to close in on adjournment.
"It just happens that mixture of Democrats does not reflect where our [DFL] caucus is at," House Minority Leader Paul Thissen said of the committee vote. He said "People are exploring different options" to revive the stadium plan.
But Dayton and stadium supporters also conceded the odds were growing long that a new stadium could be approved this session and pledged to be back at the task if efforts fell short this spring.
"We've got to get a stadium next year or the Vikings will leave," Dayton said, while at the same time urging stadium supporters to be patient.
"The difficult takes a while -- the impossible just takes a little longer. We'll get it next session. ... It'll probably be a better bill, it might be a better location, and a better result. ... We'll learn from this session and go on."
The DFL dilemma did not go unnoticed by Republicans.
"We can't pass the stadium by ourselves in the Republican caucus," said House Speaker Kurt Zellers, who has himself been vague on how much he will do to politically help the stadium. "This is up to the governor and the [House] Democrat minority leader," he said. "If I was the governor, I'd be livid. If I was big labor, I'd be really, really livid."