The 94th Minnesota Legislature convened (partially) on January 14th and it’s been a rollercoaster! The House is where the majority of the tumult occurred and after much debate from both sides of the aisle, a power-sharing agreement is now in place and they are conducting business (albeit delayed and also while approaching a special election that may shake things up again).
Meanwhile in the Senate, the untimely passing of former Majority Leader Sen. Kari Dziedzic in December meant the chamber had party balance when it convened. Since then, Doron Clark won the vacated seat in a special election, leaving the chamber with a one-seat DFL majority.
Despite this surprising spectacle, this session promises to be a relatively uneventful year. However, if we’ve learned anything in recent years, it’s that things can change quickly in St. Paul.
As we work with clients through the first session of this biennium, there are two key considerations that make this year especially unique:
- Power-sharing – The House currently has 67 Republicans and 66 Democrats with one seat vacant after Rep. Curtis Johnson’s resignation. To fill that seat, there will be a special election on March 11 (the seat is expected to go to a DFLer). Under the latest power-sharing agreement, the GOP will hold the gavels until the election in March, including in all committees. Also under this agreement, Rep. Lisa Demuth (R 13A) will be speaker for the next two years. This is a unique situation and will require both parties to work closely together to efficiently pass a much-needed bonding bill before the May 19 deadline. If they can’t get it done, it might require adding a special session.
- Budget deficit – This first year of the biennium is a budget year, which means this legislative session will determine Minnesota’s state budget for the next two years, the state’s fiscal health wasn’t very promising. The forecast predicted a $616 million balance at the end of the FY26-27 biennium, which is $1.1 billion less than prior estimates. As a result, this session will feature many competitive requests for fewer dollars, and legislators will have to make some difficult decisions.
Collaboration and cash aside, we expect the following to be top issues this legislative session:
- Bonding
- Cannabis regulation
- Fraud oversight
- Transportation funding
- Environmental permitting
- Housing policy and funding
- Income and other taxes
As always, we at Bellmont are ready to help our clients prepare for, interpret and leverage any type of session climate, using communications and thought leadership strategies to meet the moment and their business goals.
We’ve enthusiastically hit the ground running with several of our public affairs clients to get multi-faceted communications strategies together and determine the best messaging for their policy priorities and most influential stakeholders in this unique legislative environment. We’ve also assembled strong support networks for our clients ahead of session, identifying like-minded partners and advocates to ensure we’re all singing from the same songbook, with the strongest singer taking the lead at the most opportune moment.
During session, our team keeps our ear to the ground on all things happening in both St. Paul and Washington D.C., monitoring bill progress, political winds, media narrative and public perception so our clients are ready to enter the conversation when the time is right. In addition, we craft persuasive communications materials to drive our clients’ conversations in meetings with legislators and lobby days, and even organize press conferences at the Capitol. Finally, for those clients involved in policy work, we equip them with action alerts, media materials, reports, letters and more to ensure they and their networks can communicate effectively and clearly to legislators.
It’s the busiest and best time of year for our public affairs practice group at Bellmont Partners and we look forward to helping our clients champion change at the Capitol. If you would like public affairs communications support this year, please don’t hesitate to reach out.