Sturdevant: Minnesota has a budget deal because DFLers were willing to lead
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Amid the distraction Monday of a potentially violent showdown on the streets of
So join me, please, in looking either anew or again at what the
This state has just witnessed a moving example of what leadership requires in a representative democracy, one that is as narrowly divided between two parties as it can get.
In the equally split
In the 34
There were 14 budget-related bills on Monday’s special session docket. But the session — and the fate of state government in the biennium that’s due to start on July — had come down to one big bone of partisan contention: Would MinnesotaCare still be available to all low-income
Republican legislators were unanimous in saying no. Not just saying, but insisting. Kicking such people off of MinnesotaCare had become that party’s top priority.
That’s to the GOP’s discredit. Denying people health insurance is not good for anyone — including insured people whose premiums will rise to cover the cost of uncompensated care.
DFLers were as adamant that all Minnesotans, no matter how they got here, should have access to health insurance. But Hortman and Murphy — both seasoned veterans of such standoffs — understood that divided government means both parties get some of what they want.
Hortman and Murphy negotiated to keep MinnesotaCare available to undocumented children. It was the best they could do, they believed.
The alternative, they judged, was likely to be no new budget before
It could be worse in 2025. Minnesotans watching events in
Murphy and Hortman struck a hard bargain, then gave their word to support it when votes were cast in their respective chambers. Despite sharp criticism from their own members and sorrow great enough to provoke tears, they kept their word.
In other words, they were leaders — not of their faction or their party, but of this state. They will surely pay a price with those who hate this deal. But for averting a shutdown, they also deserve respect — and thanks.
I’ve lately been pondering the characteristics of good public-sector leadership as a personal milestone approaches. My first workday as a “summer replacement reporter” at the
This anniversary has inspired me to mentally revisit some of the people I’ve known and covered who occupied positions of public responsibility. I’ve been freshly admiring the selflessness of Gov.
My list could go on. If it did, you might see what I do: These admirable ones were all driven by a strong sense of stewardship for Minnesota’s shared enterprise.
For them, leadership wasn’t about amassing and exercising power — at least, not as their ultimate goal. Rather, it was about being good stewards of the commons. Their work was about preserving, amending, enlarging and perfecting the shared structures and systems that give Minnesotans the opportunity for satisfying lives. They understood themselves as caretakers of something precious — and fragile.
This week, I can put two more names on my list of Minnesota’s good stewards:
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