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Is Minnesota still a DFL state?
Minnesota Public Radio ^ | May 21, 2004 | Mark Zdechlik

Posted on 05/23/2004 6:58:54 AM PDT by jdege

Is Minnesota still a DFL state?

by Mark Zdechlik, Minnesota Public Radio
May 21, 2004

Minnesota Democratic activists gather in Duluth this weekend for the party's state convention. The main order of business is choosing delegates to the Democratic National Convention later this summer. A good deal of soul searching will take place as well. The DFL has been on a losing streak, suffering a string of electoral setbacks in recent years. But party activists say Democrats are tired of losing and that disdain for the Bush administration has left them more united than they have been in decades.

St. Paul, Minn. - Five years ago the anti-establishment entertainer Jesse Ventura dealt the political status quo an unexpected blow when Minnesotans elected him governor.

Ventura's 1998 election also marked the end of the DFL's nearly 30-year domination of Minnesota politics. The Democratic candidate for governor, Skip Humphrey, garnered just 28 percent of the vote. In conceding defeat, Humphrey promised better times ahead for the party.

"If you believe in Minnesota as I do, then we know tomorrow will be brighter," he said then.

The showing by the son of political icon Hubert Humphrey was the worst of any DFL gubernatorial candidate since the party's creation in the mid 1940's, when Minnesota Democrats and Farmer Laborites joined forces.

In addition to failing to win the governor's office, the DFL lost control of the Minnesota House of Representatives.

The DFL had controlled the House and the Senate for nearly a quarter century. Voters in 1998 left Democrats with only a relatively narrow majority in the Senate. And that majority would narrow even more four years later.

In 2002 Ventura stepped aside. Former Congressman Tim Penny bolted from the DFL and ran under Ventura's Independence Party banner, winning 16% of vote. Democrats lost the governor's race again. Republican Tim Pawlenty, with his 'no new taxes pledge,' defeated longtime Democratic Senate leader Roger Moe.

In October 2002, the party also lost U.S. Sen. Paul Wellstone, the party's ideological and emotional leader, when his campaign plane crashed, killing all aboard.

MPR political analyst - Democratic strategist Bob Meek - says it has become clear, the third party movement has stung the DFL and improved circumstances for the GOP.

"The tough invention in Minnesota politics in recent years has been the rebirth of third parties. So now in order to beat a Republican you actually have to get this coalition to come together and as long as we're separated, as long as there's so many votes for Tim Penny and so many votes for Roger Moe then the one guy who isn't splitting any votes -- Tim Pawlenty -- wins the election," Meek says.

Despite Democrats relative stronghold on power in Minnesota in the last part of the 20th century, it's a widely held misconception that Minnesota has long been a bastion of Democratic strength, according to University of Minnesota History Professor Hy Berman.

"If you look at it from the total historical perspective from 1859 on, actually 1860 on, the state has been a Republican state," Berman says.

He says many people think of Minnesota as a Democratic state because in recent history Minnesota produced several well known Democrats; Hubert Humphrey, Eugene McCarthy, Walter Mondale. The reality, Berman says, is altogether different.

"If you look at who the governors are you see it's evenly divided, even the last 50 years," Berman says. "The state Senate has been Democratic ever since in 1973 but was Republican from 1860 to 1973. The House, has been more Democratic than Republican in the last 50 years, but the House has had Republican control, as it has now, periodically through the time. Well how do you define it? A Democratic state? A Republican State? On balance it's more Republican than a Democratic state historically."

Berman says strong parties often force weak parties to become more competitive; to drop infighting and to unite and to sharpen their mission. Democrat Ted Mondale, son of the former Vice President, says that's exactly what's happening in the Minnesota DFL right now.

"I think we've licked our wounds and we're coming back and I think we're smarter, faster and better and more united than we were in the past and understand that we need to do business in a different way," Mondale says.

But Republican Chris Georgacus, who chaired the Minnesota GOP in the mid 1990's and ran Tim Pawlenty's gubernatorial campaign, is convinced the current trend toward Republicans will continue.

"I believe that Democrats are still coping with a series of election disappointments over the last several years and unless the Democrats come up with a program that's going to be more attractive to voters, the march of the Republican party toward permanent majority status is going to happen."

Ted Mondale concedes, when Democrats were the majority party in Minnesota they lost focus and became smug. He says the way for DFL'ers to win back support is to convince voters they are good stewards of the taxpayers' dollars.

"The Democrats are always going to be seen as the party of government and we always think about government as a real tool to help people in their lives." Mondale says. "It needs to be a tool about opportunity, not about a handout and these systems need to be fiscally accountable if people are going to accept the Democratic view on a lot of issues and policies. If we're not able to convince the public with pure evidence that that's where we're headed, then we're not going to be the majority party again."

Mondale, who initially supported Howard Dean's candidacy, says he and other Minnesota Democrats are rallying around John Kerry. He says the party is more united now than it's ever been. Democrats are hoping that unity will transfer into gains for the party's national and Minnesota candidates this fall.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Political Humor/Cartoons; Politics/Elections; US: Minnesota
KEYWORDS: dfl; minnesota; moosescankill
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"Hope is not a course of action."
1 posted on 05/23/2004 6:58:54 AM PDT by jdege
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To: **Minnesota

Bang!


2 posted on 05/23/2004 7:00:33 AM PDT by jdege
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To: jdege

The Democrats are always going to be seen as the party of government...

Right there it is!
3 posted on 05/23/2004 7:12:48 AM PDT by Aeronaut (John Kerry fell off his bicycle one Sunday in Massachusetts - and put in for the Purple Knee.)
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Comment #4 Removed by Moderator

Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

To: QuokkaPerth
The Red Star Tribune was apoplectic, and it showed in its coverage of Grams over his one term in office.

The non-stop Grams bashing by the state's leading newspaper put that empty suit Mark Dayton in the senate.

6 posted on 05/23/2004 7:21:39 AM PDT by daler
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To: QuokkaPerth

What's wrong with Sen Dayton?..his health..or is he a drunk/druggie..his performance at the hearings was awful..he was incoherent....


7 posted on 05/23/2004 7:22:42 AM PDT by ken5050 (Ann Coulter needs to have children ASAP to propagate her genes.....any volunteers?)
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Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

To: QuokkaPerth

Can you clarify?


9 posted on 05/23/2004 7:25:21 AM PDT by ken5050 (Ann Coulter needs to have children ASAP to propagate her genes.....any volunteers?)
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: Aeronaut
As a Minnesota resident for 50 years I can say that as far as I can see Minnesota will remain Democratic, or more to the point, Socialist. The highly motivated and active political groups are deeply entrenced and in control of the major institutions. a simple example: Minnesota Teachers Union have enough control to oust a 2 year sitting Republican Governor's Eduction Commissioner just because she challenged the entrenched liberal system.</ Kerry will win here easily, - Hillary would win in a landslide.
11 posted on 05/23/2004 7:27:07 AM PDT by John Felix
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To: QuokkaPerth

But since Kerry won't win......can we assume that Dayton goes..anyways?


12 posted on 05/23/2004 7:29:27 AM PDT by ken5050 (Ann Coulter needs to have children ASAP to propagate her genes.....any volunteers?)
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To: QuokkaPerth

Why..if the styate is in fact trendign GOP..and I think it is...and Dayton is sooo incompetant..incoherent...


14 posted on 05/23/2004 7:33:05 AM PDT by ken5050 (Ann Coulter needs to have children ASAP to propagate her genes.....any volunteers?)
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To: John Felix

To MN's Democrat liberals, the "dream," as EMK calls it, is "not dead." It was sidetracked in 2002. MN will vote heavily for the Kerry ticket in 2004 because people there still "dream" of "liberty, equality, and fraternity."


15 posted on 05/23/2004 7:33:27 AM PDT by Theodore R. (When will they ever learn?)
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To: John Felix

Moreover, the GOP is weak in MN in recent years because so many of the Republican voters are "moderates" who vote Democrat when the GOP offers a real conservative: Pawlenty, being the exception to that trend.


16 posted on 05/23/2004 7:34:44 AM PDT by Theodore R. (When will they ever learn?)
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To: Theodore R.

I agree. Minnesota Repulicans are Norm Coleman style Repulicans.


17 posted on 05/23/2004 7:37:59 AM PDT by John Felix
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To: John Felix

Repulicans=Republicans, although I like the sound.


18 posted on 05/23/2004 7:39:39 AM PDT by John Felix
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To: John Felix
Minnesota Repulicans are Norm Coleman style Repulicans.

What votes or stands of Coleman's do you disagree with?

19 posted on 05/23/2004 7:43:43 AM PDT by Wissa
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To: Wissa

Don't missunderstand me - I somewhat like Coleman, he's a pragmatist - but most of his political career he was a Democrat and was kicked out because he was pro life. He is in favor of expanded Social Spending, especailly the expanded public school initiatives of GW.


20 posted on 05/23/2004 7:52:04 AM PDT by John Felix
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