The Minnesota Supreme Court on Wednesday overturned a murder conviction after finding that a search for phone location data was too broad. But the justices did not ban “geofence” warrants outright.
It was a tense day in the House Rules Committee yesterday as members mulled impeachment proceedings for Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison. The right flank of the House Republican caucus carried proposals to impeach the DFL officials
, alleging they let fraud fester in state government programs. That issue got some discussion, even though the actual resolution before the tied committee had to deal with the process to launch impeachment proceedings through the House’s anti-fraud committee. Rep. Ben Davis, R-Merrifield, and his colleagues said the House should take a step not exercised since the 1800s and remove the Democrats. "We have a historic amount of fraud taking place in our state. Historic actions are warranted,” he said. “Minnesota deserves accountability and transparency with its constitutional officers.” All eight Republicans on the panel voted in favor, while all eight Democrats voted against. They said it
was a waste of time and a political stunt. Several also said Republicans should seek consequences for their party’s leader: President Donald Trump. “The public is asking us to actually do things that help them. They are facing real economic challenges with cost of living. They are dealing with the aftermath of Operation Metro Surge, they are asking us to take action on gun violence prevention, they are asking us to take action on actual bills that would address fraud, and yet we are here debating this nonsense,” said House DFL Floor Leader Jamie Long. Gov. Tim Walz encouraged lawmakers to focus on the remaining work of the session. “I would just encourage those legislators to maybe get
out of the basement of the Capitol, where you're putting on a little play,” he told our colleague Catharine Richert. “They don't like me, but they were not elected to like me. They were elected to serve their constituents.”
In the governor’s race, the Republican candidates face the stark reality of being swamped in fundraising by Democrat Amy Klobuchar. Klobuchar, who entered in January, has more than triple the COMBINED cash on hand as all of the Republican candidates still actively campaigning. The state GOP tried to spin being dwarfed in fundraising, with party chair Alex Plechash saying Klobuchar “wants donors to open their wallets again so she can protect her toxic record of failure. That takes nerve.” Here are the figures from the first quarter reports.
Candidate
District
Party
BeginCash
IndContrib
TotReceipts
EndCash
Klobuchar
GOV
DFL
$0
$4,728,002
$4,856,578
$3,440,056
Walz**
GOV
DFL
$3,891,726
$93,494
$169,091
$3,138,504
Demuth
GOV
GOP
$443,080
$215,392
$225,803
$543,942
Robbins
GOV
GOP
$372,671
$61,217
$61,217
$201,608
Qualls
GOV
GOP
$117,616
$124,425
$124,625
$100,062
Knight
GOV
GOP
$127,003
$44,038
$45,538
$91,126
Madel**
GOV
GOP
$385,212
$2,878
$163,398
$64,088
Bennett
GOV
GOP
$0
$49,270
$60,770
$41,651
Lindell
GOV
GOP
$79,935
$495,988
$495,988
$40,136
Jensen**
GOV
GOP
$224,519
$16,521
$16,788
$26,371
Krhin
GOV
GOP
$500
$38,800
$38,801
$5,834
Johnson**
GOV
GOP
$7,876
$48
$48
$4,381
Kohler
GOV
GOP
$2,502
$5,761
$5,771
$4,291
Nova
GOV
GOP
$0
$3,000
$6,000
$3,552
Parrish
GOV
GOP
$1,516
$6,652
$6,652
$3,118
Ference
GOV
DFL
$0
$6,531
$6,531
$2,987
Estrada Sr.
GOV
GOP
$109
$4,065
$4,065
$1,768
Layne
GOV
DFL
$0
$1,625
$1,625
$1,371
** NO LONGER RUNNING
The attorney general's race is much more financially competitive:
Candidate
District
Party
BeginCash
IndContrib
TotReceipts
EndCash
Ellison
AG
DFL
$274,602
$335,332
$368,665
$501,786
Schutz
AG
GOP
$230,365
$149,936
$149,936
$269,993
Not so much in the secretary of state race:
Candidate
District
Party
BeginCash
IndContrib
TotReceipts
EndCash
Simon
SOS
DFL
$346,542
$123,261
$133,727
$396,484
Jude
SOS
GOP
$3,751
$12,015
$16,789
$7,393
Phillips
SOS
GOP
$9,927
$4,635
$4,921
$2,308
Personal loans are setting the pace in the open state auditor's fundraising picture:
Candidate
District
Party
BeginCash
IndContrib
TotReceipts
EndCash
Jennings
AUD
DFL
$22,946
$2,905
$133,410
$119,622
Jensen
AUD
GOP
$0
$55,156
$85,156
$77,062
Wolgamott
AUD
DFL
$66,304
$2,275
$6,250
$18,368
Filipovich
AUD
DFL
$4,599
$16,965
$17,215
$15,124
George
AUD
GOP
$2,510
$4,825
$4,825
$5,708
Schierer
AUD
DFL
$16,601
$8,110
$8,260
$5,186
Reeves
AUD
IND
$2,441
$1,650
$3,650
$4,448
One more thing to note in the governor's race: Mike Lindell had told reporters in March that he raised $1 million in his campaign. Not even close. His total fundraising was half that. But as we've become accustomed, the more interesting parts of his report are in the spending side of the ledger. Lindell's Mar-a-Lago fundraiser was quite the pricey proposition. He put down $135,000 to host the gathering there plus extra for a fundraising consultant and security tied to the venue. And Lindell dropped another $60,000 on his own book, which he's giving away as a campaign momento.
The House Education Finance Committee will take another run at school safety today — this time with Democrats in control of the gavel.
On Tuesday, the panel deadlocked on a GOP-backed plan to send school safety funding out to public and private schools. They also encouraged local districts to set up anonymous threat reporting lines and allow for suspensions of young students in some circumstances. Republicans said the expanded funding is important because the state should offer funding help for security for private schools like Annunciation Catholic Church and School in Minneapolis. Democrats said the GOP proposal would pull resources away from support staff that deal with student mental health. A DFL proposal focused on boosting funding for those support staff, mandating the threat reporting mechanisms for
districts if they don’t use a statewide system and requiring safe storage of firearms on school premises will be up for consideration today. Democrats also continue to push for restrictions on assault-style weapons and high-capacity magazines but those proposals have so far not picked up bipartisan backing.
Lawmakers on both sides of the political aisle agree that they need to take action this year in preventing grooming of Minnesota students but they’ve had a tough time putting a point on how best to do that. Our colleague Elizabeth Shockman reported last year about a woman who is sharing her experience as she pushes for additional measures that could prevent potential grooming behavior and catch it sooner. She writes that the anti-grooming
legislation currently working its way through the Capitol has many provisions that experts say are important, like making it a felony offense that could result in the automatic revocation of someone’s teaching license. The bill would also require the state Department of Education to set up training on grooming for people who are mandatory reporters. And it would prohibit school employees from being alone with their students during field trips.
Senate Republicans are balking at some property tax proposals others have pushed forward, saying long-term fixes are needed to give property owners relief.
A bipartisan bill would create a tax task force tasked (say that three times fast) with finding ways to lower homestead taxes. DFL bill sponsor, Sen. Grant Hauschild, says Minnesotans need property task relief and this task force would help deliver that. "This is not navel gazing or noodling about the question of property taxes," Hauschild told his colleagues in the Senate Taxes Committee yesterday. The bill has bipartisan support in both chambers, but not all Republicans are on board. Sen. Michael Kreun said at a press conference that a task force just kicks the can down the road and doesn’t address “unfunded mandates” that he says are the root cause of high taxes. Still, the
bill passed Senate Taxes yesterday with bipartisan support and is on its way to the Senate Finance Committee.
While the Senate Republican says he’d welcome sending property taxpayers some relief, he says a bill in the House that would give one-time rebate does not fix the issue. During a press conference on taxes with Senate Republicans, Sen. Kreun said, “A property tax rebate is better than nothing, but it's woefully insufficient,” he said. “Minnesotans need permanent and ongoing property tax relief. That's where our focus should be.” Two House Republicans, Rep. Greg Davids, R-Preston, and Rep. Isaac Schultz, R-Upsala, have introduced bills that would give one-time tax relief next year. They both say longer term solutions are needed.
Tyler Kistner is bowing out of 2nd Congressional District race, saying he’s been called up for active duty from the Marine Reserves to deploy to the Middle East.
Kistner, a Republican who had twice lost races for the seat in 2020 and 2022, said in a statement that his work at the Pentagon has demanded more and more of his time over the last six months, and then a few weeks ago he was activated for duty. “It has never been in me to let someone else’s son or daughter take my place when I am fully capable of going myself,” he said in a statement. “This is where I am called to be right now. Perhaps someday I will be called to serve in the halls of Congress, but now is not that time.” That leaves state Sen. Eric Pratt, R-Prior Lake, as the lone GOP contender for the party’s nomination. Pratt released a statement praising Kistner’s service to
the country and his commitment to the district, “Military service reflects a willingness to put others before self, and that kind of leadership deserves respect.” Pratt will face off against several DFLers vying for the seat, including his colleague Sen. Matt Klein, DFL-Mendota Heights, Rep. Kaela Berg, DFL-Burnsville, and former Sen. Matt Little, a Democrat who previously represented Lakeville.
All over the Legislature, it seems everyone is openly talking about non-disclosure agreements.
Those agreements have come under scrutiny as more and more data center projects have pushed city and county governments to sign them as they negotiate deals. In the House, earlier this month, a bipartisan bill that more broadly banned municipal governments from signing NDAs (for any development project, not just data centers), stagnated. The bill had earlier passed through committee, but was sent to another committee where it died on a party line vote, with all Republicans voting against it. A Senate bill that would focus the ban just on data centers, moved through committee Wednesday and laid over. Sen. Grant Hauschild, DFL-Hermantown, brought the bill forward: “This bill makes
clear that no community has to choose between attracting investments and being transparent with their residents,” he said. “This doesn't stop projects from moving forward or prevent companies from protecting proprietary information. It simply ensures officials can do their job with accountability to the people that they represent.” The Minnesota Chamber of Commerce has lobbied against NDA bans, saying it will put the state at a disadvantage when competing with communities in other states.
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