The lack of action
in the 2004 session is said to be one reason why a number of Republican
House members lost their seats in the November election. The Democratic-Farmer-Labor
minority grew from 53 to 66 and the Republican majority was reduced
from 81 to 68.
The Senate was not up for election in 2004 so the DFL was able to
maintain its 5 seat majority in the upper house. One State Senator
was an Independence Party member until December 2005, Sheila Kiscaden
of Rochester, she caucuses with the DFL today, although she had
been a Republican in the past. The DFL majority increased to six
Senators when Sen. Kiscaden announced her re-affiliation with the
DFL in preparation to run for Lieutenant Governor on a ticket with
DFLer Kelly Doran.
There is a mandatory adjournment date specified in the state constitution:
"The legislature shall not meet in regular session, nor in
any adjournment thereof, after the first Monday following the third
Saturday in May of any year." In 2005, the regular session
ended without passage of an overall budget, and a special session
opened. No overall budget passed by the end of the fiscal year on
June 30, and much of the government shut down for the first time
in state history. However, some essential services remain in operation,
and some departments received funding in legislation.
When the legislature is in session, it is broadcast on television
via KTCI channel 17 to the Twin Cities region. |