Republicans gain temporary control of Minnesota House after Democrat
decides not to appeal ruling
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[December 30, 2024]
ROSEVILLE, Minn. (AP) — Republicans will start the year
with at least a temporary majority in the Minnesota House after a
Democrat decided not to appeal a judge's decision that he failed to
establish residency in the suburban district he was elected to
represent.
That means Republicans will have a slim 67-66 majority in the House when
the Legislature begins Jan. 14. That may not last long because Gov. Tim
Walz has already scheduled a Jan. 28 special election in the
Democratic-leaning district that Curtis Johnson won by 30 points in
November.
“While I disagree with the conclusions reached by the District Court, I
recognize that whatever the decision on appeal the ultimate decision
belongs to the Legislature, where it appears there is no viable pathway
for me being allowed to retain my seat,” Johnson said in his resignation
letter Friday. “Rather than dragging this out further, I have decided to
resign now, so that a special election can be held as soon as possible.”
Ramsey County Judge Leonardo Castro ruled last week that Johnson didn’t
live in the Roseville-area district for the required six months ahead of
the election and is therefore ineligible to serve.
Johnson's Republican challenger, Paul Wikstrom, presented surveillance
video and photos in court to show Johnson did not reside in the
apartment he claimed as his residence. The St. Paul Pioneer Press
reported that the lack of utility hookups and regular activity at the
apartment reinforced that conclusion.
Republican Rep. Lisa Demuth, who is in line to become House speaker with
the GOP in control, said she is pleased the judge's decision will stand.
Previously, leaders of both parties had been working out a power-sharing
agreement given that the chamber was expected to be divided equally
67-67.
“This confirms that Republicans will have an organizational majority on
day one, and we look forward to ensuring that a valid candidate
represents District 40B in the upcoming legislative session,” Demuth
said in a statement.
Although Democrats argue that Republicans would need to have at least 68
seats to control the House. or pass laws.
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The Democrats should be able to stop Republicans from being able to
pass laws, but the GOP could still push its agenda. Republicans will
have working control of committees to advance bills to the floor,
which could force Democrats from swing districts to face tough
decisions on bills. And Republicans could try to launch
investigations they have been seeking for a long time into the Walz
administration and problems it has had limiting fraud.
Democrats had been expecting to have a one-vote edge in the Senate,
but that chamber is now evenly split at 33-33 after former Majority
Leader Sen. Kari Dziedzic died Friday from cancer. A special
election will also be held for her Democratic-leaning Minneapolis
district, but that hasn't been scheduled yet.
Demuth also questioned whether Walz has the power to set the special
election so quickly even before the Legislature certifies the
vacancy. If that argument prevails that would extend Republican
control of the House longer, but the secretary of state's office
told Minnesota Public Radio that Walz's order setting the special
election is proper.
Whenever the election happens, Democrats are confident they will win
the seat, current House speaker Rep. Melissa Hortman said.
“A prompt special election will allow the voters of District 40B to
ensure that they will be represented in the Minnesota House for the
bulk of the session,” Hortman said in a written statement. “We
expect the district will again vote to elect a Democrat by
overwhelming margins.”
A pending court challenge in a different suburban district could
also affect the balance of power in the House, but it appears
Democrats will likely prevail in that dispute. Incumbent Democratic
Rep. Brad Tabke, of Shakopee, was declared the winner by 14 votes
over Republican Aaron Paul despite 20 missing ballots that were
accepted but never counted and then apparently thrown away. At a
hearing, his attorneys presented six of those affected voters who
testified that they supported Tabke, which would be enough to
preserve his win. A judge is expected to decide within the next few
weeks how to proceed.
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