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Posts Tagged ‘Margaret Anderson Kelliher’

The Great Minnesota Governor’s Race 2010: Endorsed (and Other) Candidates

Posted by draabe on 30 April, 2010

Last weekend the Minnesota DFL Party endorsed Speaker of the House Margaret Anderson-Kelliher for governor. Her running mate will be endorsed on May 23, 2010 at the DFL State Central Committee meeting. Although former Sen. Mark Dayton and former Rep. Matt Entenza will run against Anderson-Kelliher in the democratic primary on August 10, the DFL-endorsed candidate historically survives the primary. Exceptions since 1944 include then-incumbent Rudy Perpich’s win over DFL-endorsed Warren Spannaus in 1982 and Skip Humphrey’s primary success over DFL-endorsed candidate Mike Freeman in 1988. During the same time period, there has only been one election in which democrats did not hold a primary. (Source: David Weinlick-DFL for Politics in Minnesota)

The republicans endorsed Sarah Palin/Tea Party Favorite Tom Emmer for governor and his running mate, Annette Meeks, for lieutenant governor earlier today. Despite garnering less than 5% of the first ballot for endorsement at today’s GOP convention, republican activist Leslie Davis intends to stay in the race.

The Independence Party will hold its endorsing convention on May 8. Candidates vying for the endorsement include publisher (The Midwest Wine Connection and Minnesota Prep Sports) Rob Hahn, Republican pundit Tom Horner, and former U.S. Marine and Prudential Insurance employee John Uldrich. Recent straw poll results give Horner the lead with 50% of the vote.

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Minnesota DFL Endorses Margaret Anderson-Kelliher for Governor April 24, 2010

Posted by draabe on 24 April, 2010

Rybak vs. Anderson-Kelliher

After six rounds of voting and concessions from Sen. Marty, Rep. Tom Rukavina, Rep. Paul Thissen and Mayor R. T. Rybak, the Minnesota DFL endorsed Margaret Anderson-Kelliher for governor. She is expected to face either Marty Seifert or Tom Emmer in the general election this fall. However, Democrats  Matt Entenza, Susan Gaertner and Mark Dayton have all stated they will be on the primary ballot when Democrats go to the polls on August 10, even though several candidates who conceded today called on Entenza, Gaertner and Dayton to do the same.

See earlier details of this event, including vote totals by round, here.

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Minnesota State DFL Convention, April 24, 2010 – Gubernatorial Endorsement

Posted by draabe on 24 April, 2010

After a fairly organized event for Minnesota’s DFL yesterday, thanks to Chair Brian Melendez and Associate Chair Donna Cassutt, the party will be endorsing a candidate for Minnesota’s gubernatorial race today. Rumor has it Minneapolis Mayor R. T. Rybak may hold a slight lead over MN Speaker of the House Margaret Anderson-Kelliher with Rep. Paul Thissen in third place. It’s expected that Rep. Tom Rukavina and Sen. John Marty will split about 10% of the total delegate vote. But this is politics – and anything can happen.

Watch for updates throughout the day — and evening — and follow the live blog at gather.com.

After a 60-minute Q and A period, the floor was frozen and the doors were shut. The first round of voting began with an updated credentials report (1,288 delegates and 60 upgraded alternates, meaning 809 votes are needed to secure the endorsement).

Round 1: 1,352.5 votes cast

Margaret Anderson-Kelliher 365.5 votes (27%)
RT Rybak 294 votes (21.7%)
Paul Thissen 254.5 votes (18.8%)
Tom Rukavina 249.5 votes (18.4%)
John Marty 175.5 votes (13%)
No Endorsement 6.5 votes (.5%)
Matt Entenza 3.5 votes (3%)
Peter Idusogie 3 votes (.3%)
Ole Savior 0 votes (0%)

Round 2: 1,356 votes cast

Margaret Anderson-Kelliher 377.5 / 27.8%
RT Rybak  332 / 24.5%
Paul Thissen 270 / 19.9%
Tom Rukavina 238 / 17.6%
John Marty 136 / 10%

Sen. John Marty has just conceded.

Round 3: 1,351 votes cast

Margaret Anderson-Kelliher 414.5 / 30.7%
RT Rybak 370 / 27.4%
Paul Thissen 295 / 21.8%
Tom Rukavina 269 / 19.9%
No endorsement 2.5 / 0.2%

Round 4: 1,332.5 votes cast (60% required to endorse)

Margaret Anderson-Kelliher 437 / 32.8%
RT Rybak 380.5 / 28.6%
Paul Thissen 285 / 21.4%
Tom Rukavina 226 / 17%
No endorsement 4 / 0.3%

Rep. Tom Rukavina conceded just after 8:30 p.m. and asked his delegates to cast their votes for Margaret Anderson-Kelliher in Round 5.

Nominations Committee Chairs Jeannie Thomas and Bill Usher announced the nominees for state directors. The female nominees are: Nimco Ahmed, Mary Merrill Anderson, Ann Friedrich, Jeanette Martimo, Cheryl Polling, Shivanthi Sathanandan, Katherine Speer, and Vicki Wright. Male nominees are: Wes Gadsen, Del Jenkins, Eric Margolis, Eric Nelson, Dan McConnell, Bob Peterson, Mike Rothman and Tim Velde.

David Lillehaug moved for a 25-minute recess to allow groups such as reNew MN to meet before the next round of voting. He said the motion had been approved by the three remaining campaigns (Kelliher, Rybak and Thissen). The motion was argued, then passed.

After the recess, Sen. John Marty addressed the room offering support for Margaret Anderson-Kelliher citing a personal commitment he received from her. Ballot results from the fifth round of voting were announced.

Round 5: 1,344 votes cast (807 required for endorsement; 20% required to stay in the race)

Margaret Anderson-Kelliher 630.5 / 46.9%
RT Rybak: 434 / 32.3%
Paul Thissen: 269.5 / 20.1%
No endorsement: 9 / 0.7%
There was 1 spoiled ballot.

Rep. Paul Thissen addressed the group at 10:02 p.m. He thanked everyone and conceded the race. The floor was frozen for another round of voting.

Round 6: Unofficial results were Anderson-Kelliher 56% and Rybak 43%.

At 11:09, Mayor Rybak took the stage and conceded the race, calling on candidates Matt Entenza, Susan Gaertner and Mark Dayton to do the same. Anderson-Kelliher was endorsed by acclimation.

Posted in POLITICS, The Great Minnesota Governor's Race 2010 | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

The Great Minnesota Governor’s Race 2010 – Paul Thissen

Posted by draabe on 26 January, 2010

Perhaps not as familiar to voters as former Sen. Mark Dayton or Speaker of the House Margaret Anderson Kelliher, Rep. Paul Thissen (D) is creating a buzz among progressives – as well as republicans and independents – and with good reason. Representing Legislative District 63A since 2002, he has chaired the Health and Human Services Policy Committee and served on several other committees including the Finance Committee, Health and Human Services Finance Committee, Legislative Commission on Pensions and Retirement, Health Care Access Commission (Member) since 2007. In 2009 he was also assigned to the Environment Policy and Oversight Commission, and the Game and Fish Division.

His successful legislative record includes core work on covering 40,000 more kids with health insurance, reforming electronic records and billing (saving $70 million per year), allowing small communities to control how long-term care dollars are used, advocating renewable energy standards since 2003, encouraging entrepreneurship on social issues with Community Solutions Grants that will themselves become self-sustaining, reforming eminent domain laws to protect homeowners and small businesses, streamlining government reporting requirements and requiring cost-benefit analysis of privatization proposals, reforming campaign [rules] to reduce incentives for partisanship and speed up the resolution of complaints, preserving housing and other benefits for homeless veterans, writing and passing the Abigail Taylor Pool Safety Bill, and prohibiting sales of lead jewelry to children.

During a November 2009 debate, Thissen said that all the candidates were there for the same reason: they love Minnesota and think the state is headed in the wrong direction. The difference among them is how they plan to change that. He said the DFL has been playing “not to lose” for too long, and that it’s time to let go of the old ways of doing things and old grudges and political battles. He expressed a willingness to do things in a whole new way, which is exactly what many voters have been asking for since the 2008 election and beyond.

Both Thissen’s parents were Minnesota schoolteachers and his three children all attend public school. During the November debate, Thissen said that there are good things going on in our schools, and there are a lot of hard-working teachers in Minnesota. He said we need to have a discussion about this and then move on to the educational challenges we face. Rather than pitting charter schools against the public system, Thissen suggested looking at and taking what works in charter schools, and incorporating that into our public schools. He said we need to create exciting, engaging learning environments that fit the diverse needs of our students, and that we can solve the achievement gap if we have the political will.

With no shortage of political will, Thissen has a way of looking at the whole picture and “connecting the dots”. (Think how “no new [income] taxes” equated to unmanageably high increases in property taxes under Gov. Pawlenty.) He agreed that the state tax system needs reform, making the astute observation that we are taxing a 30-year-old “goods” economy, not today’s “service” economy. Thissen says we need a sustainable tax system, which means making it fair and changing the way we spend tax dollars so as not to have to constantly raise taxes.

Thissen has also connected the dots when it comes to our economy. One of today’s biggest financial challenges for small businesses and family farms (not to mention individuals) is the rising cost of health care. Thissen says we need to pay “smarter” for health care. His experience on the Health and Human Services Finance Committee and as Chair of the Health and Human Services Policy Committee since 2007 has taught him that “by redesigning health coverage, we can hold down the cost of health care for Minnesota’s families and businesses” and that “we must also fundamentally change the way we think about health care.” (Read more about his plan to reshape and improve health care here.)

In addition to acknowledging a moral imperative, Thissen recognizes how the lack of health coverage for Minnesota’s children and the upcoming difficulties in caring for Minnesota’s seniors affect our economy. In 2007 he authored the Children’s Health Care Security Act which provides a health care option for nearly 40,000 previously uninsured children in Minnesota. Regarding aging and seniors Thissen says, “The most cost-effective and many times the most desirable way to get needed care to older Minnesotans is with assistance from friends and family.” Putting words into action, he authored the Long-term Caregiver Protection Act, the goals of which are “to offer support to informal caregivers, delay the time when an older person is placed in a nursing facility and consequently, offer a significant savings to the state.”

Thissen’s understanding and expression of the interconnectedness of issues suggest a transformational style of leadership that might be just what Minnesota needs now. What excites voters about Paul Thissen is that his goals complete the vision Minnesotans have for their state – and he has already demonstrated a unique ability to create a path to achievement.

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The Great Minnesota Governor’s Race 2010 – November 24 DFL Debate Final Comments

Posted by draabe on 9 January, 2010

On November 24, 2009 Minnesota’s DFL gubernatorial candidates met at the Hopkins Center for the Arts for a debate moderated by Tom Hauser of KSTP. The lineup included Ramsey County Attorney Susan Gaertner, former Sen. Mark Dayton, Ole Savior, State Sen. Tom Bakk, former State Rep. (and DFL Minority Leader) Matt Entenza, State Rep. / Speaker of the House Margaret Anderson Kelliher, former State Sen. Steve Kelley, State Sen. John Marty, State Rep. Tom Rukavina, Minneapolis Mayor R. T. Rybak and State Rep. Paul Thissen. In their final comments, candidates thanked the audience and hosts of the debate and tried to leave voters with a reason to remember them – and a reason to vote for them.

Ole Savior said there ought to be a limit on healthcare executive pay and spoke about the poor, disadvantanged people in our state who have been taken advantage of. He said we need to refinance the budget – not cut programs, concluding,  “Anything Pawlenty cut, I will restore.”

Susan Gaertner pointed out her position as an “outsider” who, as Ramsey County Attorney, has been fighting crime which she says is “a winning formula.”  She said she is a proven vote-winner and a go-getter, “I said I’d reduce gun violence, get kids back in school, increase child support enforcement – I got it done…I’ll bring progressive values and passion for the state and get job done.”

Mark Dayton recalled his teaching stint right out of college in lower east side New York City. At the time, he lived with a welfare family in New York City which experience has shaped his political values. He said these children were born into circumstances completely different from his own and seeing the injustice done to them through no choice and no fault of their own is profoundly wrong. Dayton said that progressive taxation is a fundamental value of the DFL party and that the wealthiest 10% of Minnesotans are not paying their fair share.

Tom Bakk said people are looking for easy answers but there has to be a debate about the problems Minnesota faces. He said the government has to be totally different from what it’s been like under Gov. Pawlenty. The new governor has to be a uniter, set the tone at the capitol, bring in business and labor, and have an honest debate. He said the candidate who can connect with people on the “jobs” message will be the next governor.

Matt Entenza drew upon his experience growing up in Worthington, Minnesota when, at the age of 15, he lost his father. His family had no health care and were facing homelessness, but lived in a state and a town that rallied around his family, a state where education was a priority. Entenza said, “It’s not like that now.” He said we opportunities to become an economic powerhouse and a leader who has a vision of where we can go. He believes we can pay ourselves for energy, that we can put money back into our state through clean energy – building wind turbines and using solar collectors.

Margaret Anderson Kelliher said she’d been personally thanked by a man who said he had a job because of her. Kelliher’s work building a coalition to override Gov. Pawlenty when he said no to needed investments brought road construction jobs to our state. During the past three years in the MN House of Representatives, she has helped ” put together a coalition to pass funding progressive taxation for education, renewable standards, the legacy amendment, and health care reform.” She said Minnesota needs a governor who understands them and who will be as hardworking as they are.

Steve Kelley said Minnesotans need a governor who will “pay attention to the long-term greatness of Minnesota to make sure our grandchildren prosper in this state.” He wants to create the same prosperity for working families that his grandparents enjoyed,  the kind of small business environment his parents enjoyed, and opportunities for all kids to graduate from post-secondary education. He said, “I know we can. One governor and five million heroes in the state will get it done.” In 1992, he was able to win his seat in the MN House [from the Republicans] and hold it. “With your help,” Kelley said, “that’s what we’ll do in the governor’s office in 2010.

John Marty said he wants to build a great future for Minnesota, where everyone has educational opportunities, health care, a clean environment and a safe community. He reiterated that he does not take PAC or lobbyist money. He believes in “health care for all, not insurance for some.” He said this race needs someone who can win and that he lost in 1994 (during the “Gingrich Contract for America” years) because he was ahead of his time, but his time is now. He has won seven times in his Republican-leaning district in the state senate race.

Tom Rukavina said, “Tough times call for innovative leadership” and that he is running a “refreshingly honest campaign.” Proud of his University of Minnesota-Duluth education, he returned to the Iron Range after graduating. He’s been a steel worker, owned his own business and has been a legislator for 12 years. Upon closing, he referred to himself as a cross between Paul Wellstone and Jesse Ventura.

R. T. Rybak spoke about the American Dream and how his mother had to run the family store after his father passed away, and was able to put herself through college. He said the community had a basic core value not shared by leaders in the capitol today. He said we need to rebuild common value and that “Minnesota needs leadership that’s about us, not him or her,” and that we can move the state forward together.

Paul Thissen said it’s been a privilege serving in the legislature and it wouldn’t have been possible without the help and support of his family. He  doesn’t like the consequences of Pawlenty’s decisions but sees how some Minnesotans respect his decisiveness and that “Democrats have been lacking that for too long in this state.” He said we have a moral imperative to cover every child in this state and that health care legislation has passed here because someone said we are more than a balanced budget. We need to “create a moral vision for this state and lead this state forward this way” and that “your involvement is what’s going to take back the governor’s office.”

Read more about the debate here.

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The Great Minnesota Governor’s Race 2010 – November 2009 Debate Notes

Posted by draabe on 7 December, 2009

On November 24, 2009 Minnesota’s DFL gubernatorial candidates met at the Hopkins Center for the Arts for a debate moderated by Tom Hauser of KSTP. The lineup included Ramsey County Attorney Susan Gaertner, former Sen. Mark Dayton, Ole Savior, State Sen. Tom Bakk, former State Rep. (and DFL Minority Leader) Matt Entenza, State Rep. / Speaker of the House Margaret Anderson Kelliher, former State Sen. Steve Kelley, State Sen. John Marty, State Rep. Tom Rukavina, Minneapolis Mayor R. T. Rybak and State Rep. Paul Thissen.

Only three candidates were onstage simultaneously at any one time, making it difficult to compare answers across the board. Each candidate was given time for an opening statement, some shared questions and a few moments for rebuttal. First up were Susan Gaertner, Ole Savior and Mark Dayton.

Regarding first days in office, Gaertner said she wanted to restore the political contribution refund but added that contributions should be reported as they are collected to make the process transparent.  She said the main piece of legislation to pass would be a budget bill that pays for today’s bills and is structurally balanced for future needs.

Dayton said that because he was funding his own campaign, he had more time to spend talking and listening to people rather than “dialing for dollars” adding that “special interest money pollutes the political process.” He said that every dollar contributed should be reported immediately. Dayton wants to focus on education in Minnesota including the increase of state spending for public education for real inflation adjusted dollars every year, which would be linked to progressive taxes.

Savior said it was noble of Dayton to pay for his own campaign and want to raise his own taxes, but that they system should be fair.

Tom Bakk said the first bill he would pass, assuming we were still operating under current law, would be to restore the general assistance medicare program – to” help the poorest of the poor and the sickest of the sick.” Dayton saluted Bakk’s remarks, then said he would forego any parties if elected and get immediately to work because there was so much for the next governor to do adding that he planned to get more done in one week than Pawlenty had in a year. Gaertner pointed out that needs are increasing yet there has been a decline on the part of the state to try and meet those needs. Under her leadership, she said, “The buck stops here.”

Dayton spoke about the usurious interest rates and predatory loan practices. The state of Georgia has imposed a limit on interest rates and Minnesota should follow suit. Under his leadership, there would be a limit on credit card and bank loan interest rates. (Currently, there is nothing to stop banks from charging over 30% on a credit card and payday-type loan interest is as high as 450%.)

Savior was replaced at his podium by Tom Bakk who said, “…it’s not [that] simple but I do think that the governor’s office needs to call in the big banks and find out what the state can do to partner with Minnesota banks to improve the standard of living for people needing payday loans and for people that need jobs.”( Bakk authored a provision in the senate tax bill that would  have put interest charges over 15% into the state’s general fund which has already passed the senate twice – but was vetoed by Pawlenty. Additionally, as Chair of the Senate Tax Committee, Bakk helped pass a windfall profits tax. )

Matt Entenza took over Gaertner’s podium and asked, “What is the role we want the governor to have?” People need the opportunity to live life to the fullest and we need to have regulations when the private sector (regarding payday loans, pollution, home mortgages, etc.) becomes predatory. He said Republicans think the only time to regulate is with regard to personal activity which is “the wrong balance.” As a legislator, he successfully worked to stop rent-to-own practices which amounted to interest rate charges as high as 4000%. Entenza, who is the founder of the progressive, non-partisan public policy think tank Minnesota2020, said Minnesota used to be a state that believed in opportunity but that’s been taken away.

Margaret Anderson Kelliher took over Dayton’s podium and gave an opening statement highlighting her proven ability as Minnesota’s Speaker of the House to bring people together from all political persuasions to get things done. Kelliher co-authored and shepherded the Legacy Amendment because it represents Minnesota’s values including clean water, arts and culture. She said she wants to leave Minnesota in better condition for our children and grandchildren, and we have a lot of work to do.

Regarding transportation, Kelliher said, “We need leadership…someone who brings people around the table to solve the problem [and] attack the challenge not each other, whether it’s renewable energy standards or the work done after the 35W collapse to pass a comprehensive transportation bill over the objection of Gov. Pawlenty.” (Kelliher spent six months working hard to build a coalition that put together first funding ever dedicated to transit in our state law.)

Entenza said we need a comprehensive plan that includes the leveraging of federal funds. He then spoke about a clean energy economy which is a way forward for the state. Entenza has a degree in Environmental Studies and said we should be paying ourselves for energy, by manufacturing  wind turbines, etc. (Ninety percent of our turbines are currently owned by out-of-state and foreign companies.) We could save money and help the environment by moving forward with a clean energy economy.

Before Steve Kelley took over his podium, Bakk (who recently retired as business representative for the United Brotherhood of Carpenters) pointed out that when a business is deciding whether to move to your state, the first things they look at are the availability of the workforce and the transportation infrastructure.

Entenza followed with what constituted his opening remarks including the belief that Minnesota needs a leader who wants to be in Minnesota (think Pawlenty) and who has a hopeful positive vision of where we can go. In the last two gubernatorial elections, Democrats in Minnesota have been lacking in message. Entenza said he could win because he has a progressive message. He wants to get Minnesota working and create opportunities so people can live their lives, work hard, get a job, have kids, send them to school, retire. His strategy includes a new clean energy, building the economy, and reinvesting in education and health care. In a nutshell: “Get MN working again. Have a strategy. [Build] a new clean energy economy.”

Kelley, a Senior Fellow at the Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs (currently teaching Public Budgeting which focuses on budget principles and processes at the state and federal levels) is a former MN state senator (1997-2006) and representative (1993-1996). He said Democrats need to stop being shy about talking about their values. Republicans talk as if they corner the market on values, but the Democrats believe in opportunities and justice for everyone. He will put into action those values that we as Minnesotans share. During the 14 years he served in the legislature, Kelley worked on energy and environmental issues leading to energy efficient standards financed by bonding dollars, health care, and education. (The venue in which this debate was held was built through Kelley’s efforts as a state senator in District 44, a fact pointed out by Entenza with thanks.)

John Marty and Tom Rukavina came on stage as Kelliher and Entenza left. Marty declared he did not take PAC or lobby money saying “you can’t speak truth to power if you’re taking that money.” His agenda is a “bold and progressive” one where Minnesotans do better and “every kid graduates.” He believes health care is becoming the defining issue of the age, and we have reached a tipping point where we must make the choice between insurance companies and providing health care. He said, “We’re going pass [a] MN health plan, tackle poverty, [and] take big money out of politics so we can pass a progressive agenda.”

Rukavina, a 23-year legislator from the Iron Range chairs the Education/Workforce Committee and “hates the direction Minnesota is going in.” He believes in hard work, taking care of your neighbors and community, and a good education for children.

Regarding party platform, Kelley said the party platform should express the values we share. He also spoke about the state’s commitment to education for all its children: “The future of our state is in what we do for our children.” He said schools have been asked to solve achievement gap and other disparities caused by poverty by themselves, but we need to offer health care, jobs and opportunities in those communities where the gaps exist.

Marty said the role of government is to represent everyone in the state and the party platform states what the party believes. He said his record is the closest to what the DFL party stands for: “I authored marriage equality [legislation], a MN health plan, and was willing to fund education even when taxpayers league says we have to cut taxes in 1999…I had the courage to stand up and say no because we ought to fund education.” He said the party stands for fair policies, human rights that respect everyone and health care that covers everyone and “the platform is a pretty good road map for getting us there.”

Rukavina said the Iron Range comprises the strongest DFL’ers in the state. He believes in the basic principles of the platform: fair taxes, educating youth, higher education that’s affordable, health care that’s affordable, a minimum wage that lifts people up, and taking care of people. He said, “I’ll be governor for [the] entire state so I might have to put state ahead of some principles, but not basics. You have to know when to compromise, but not give up basic principles.”

Regarding charter schools, Marty said they’ve added some good things but taken money away from public schools, and that schools shouldn’t have to keep depending on property tax referendums for funding but should be funded properly by the state. Charter schools should not be expanding as public schools continue to experience cuts. Rukavina says some charter schools are good; some are not. And when money goes out to public schools, we need to keep track of how it’s spent. Charter schools serve a diversity purpose, but “we need to keep an eye on that taxpayer money.”

R. T. Rybak took the stage and said charter schools provided innovation but haven’t delivered on the original intent to incubate innovation for our public schools. He said we need to change the way we fund our schools and it needs to be fair. Committed to the Minneapolis Promise which says to our young people that if they stay in school and focus on where they want to go, we will get them there, Rybak noted that schools should not be raising our children. He said, “We have to have higher standards for our schools [and] every Minnesotan has to be a part [of that].”

Rukavina noted that during the last Democratic governorship 15% of the budget went toward education. Today, that number is only 8%. In 2003, schools that received $6,000/per pupil; today, that number is only $4,000. Rukavina says schools are expected to do more – but with less. He said teachers are caught up in testing and measuring, and should be allowed to teach.

Rybak said Minnesota’s brain power is deeply threatened, and  education leadership in our state is threatened. It starts with money but one size does not fit all; it’s about equity plus fairness. Different parts of the state face different challenges. In the rural areas, there’s a loss of music (and other) programs. In the inner city, we need to surround families with the support they need – including jobs. He said he’s been able to bring money in from out-of-state sources, not just Democrats, that has moved kids into the workforce.

Paul Thissen came on stage during a familiar conversation; his parents are both teachers and he has three children in public school. He said, “There are great things going on in our schools [and] hard working teachers. [We have to] start a discussion acknowledging that [and] move to [the] challenges.” The achievement gap proves that we’re not serving every child the way we ought to, but “we can do it if we have the political will…making sure we create learning environments that are exciting and engaging – learning styles are different.” He said we need choices that serve all kids and all learning styles, and that we should take what works in charter schools and incorporate that to public schools. He also noted that we haven’t been investing in higher education or figuring out how to keep tuition down. He proposed a tax break on tuition repayment to students who go to college – and then work – in Minnesota.

Thissen’s opening remarks: “We’re here for same reason – we love the state, [but] think it’s going in wrong direction. [We need to] make it more fair, more just for everyone. The question is how to get that done. You can play to win or not to lose. In Minnesota, in the DFL party, we’ve been playing not to lose for too long – holding on too tightly to old ways of doing things, and old grudges, and political battles, and old relationships. We need to turn that around. I have  the willingness to do things in a whole new way. [We need to] have new ways, energy, and excitement around Minnesota’s future. I’m committed. We can transform health care in this state. We can transform education, close the achievement gap, [prepare] communities so they’re ready for the age wave. [I am a] transformational leader. That’s the kind of governor Minnesota desperately needs.”

On taxes, Rybak said we need state tax reform and to take the pressure of property taxpayers. And we need to see the budget as a challenge – to cut spending and reform the way we deliver services.

Thissen agreed absolutely that we need state tax reform. He said property taxes should be moved back to a fair and progressive state tax. The number one thing he hears about taxes is the frustration with property tax increases and suggested people “connect the dots between [Pawlenty's] No New Taxes and property tax increases.” Thissen says we need to “look at the entire tax system…We’re taxing a 30-year old economy — not today’s economy (which is a service economy not goods economy).”  Thissen also said we have to go after health care costs as they eat up more of local, state and family budgets. We have to be smarter about paying for health care. We have to pay for the right things, not the expensive things.

Rybak agrees with “progressivity and service-based taxes, and getting off property taxes.” He said, “As Mayor [of Minneapolis], I understand basic services are critically important. I want to go back to local governments to deliver more for less.”

Regarding the criteria for choosing state commissioners, Thissen said he wanted people with on-the-ground experience. For example, the Department of Education should employ people with experience in the classroom. He spoke to the importance of developing a culture of innovation in empowering employees. Pawlenty has put up barriers between those on the ground and those in the capitol. Thissen believes in working with Health and Human Services employees to solve hospital problems. He says, “The answers are with those on the ground.”

Savior said qualities and experience would guide his state commissioner appointments – not friendships – and that we need new ideas.

Gaertner’s appointees would “have subject matter knowledge and experience in the particular area [in which they were] asked to lead.” Beyond that, she’d be looking for temperament, passion and pragmatism, and not give out commissioner appointments as favors.

All the candidates were gracious and had ideas to move Minnesota forward. The format, previously untested, may not have been the best way to compare detailed positions on specific issues, but it did provide some basics on what the candidates believe and how they might govern the state. With caucuses coming up fast (February 2, 2010), voters ought to start thinking about what the candidates have to offer and how that fits in with where we need to see the State of Minnesota once Pawlenty [officially] leaves offices.

Closing remarks here

Posted in POLITICS, The Great Minnesota Governor's Race 2010 | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

The Great Minnesota Governor’s Race – 2010

Posted by draabe on 13 October, 2009

minnesota_state_sealIn what is being touted one of the most crowded races in Minnesota history the list of candidates for governor is full of good people, many of whom have already been out on the trail for some time. The straw polling has begun although most seasoned political junkies would say it’s premature to put much stock in the results. One DFLer who has attended some gubernatorial-candidate events around the state, St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman, announced on October 8 that he would not be running for governor and is focused on being a good mayor for the city of St. Paul.

On the DFL side, there’s State Sen. Tom Bakk, former Sen. Mark Dayton, former State Rep. (and DFL Minority Leader) Matt Entenza, Ramsey County Attorney Susan Gaertner, former State Sen. Steve Kelley, State Rep. / Speaker of the House Margaret Anderson Kelliher, State Sen. John Marty, State Rep. Tom Rukavina, Minneapolis Mayor R. T. Rybak (still unofficial the date this was written), and State Rep. Paul Thissen.

Kelliher is a favorite among house legislators, largely due to her effectiveness as speaker; Kelley has a proven record for making education a priority in the state of Minnesota and is currently a senior fellow at the Humphrey Institute and the director at the Center for Science, Technology and Public Policy where he teaches Public Budgeting; and Thissen has just been endorsed by the Minnesota Nurses Association, the fastest-growing union for registered nurses in Minnesota and the Midwest.

With Gov. Tim Pawlenty having already [unofficially] begun his 2012 presidential campaign, the list of Republicans currently running is growing every day and includes former State Auditor Pat Anderson, Leslie Davis, State Rep. Tom Emmer, former State Rep. Bill Haas, State Sen. David Hann, Phil Herwig, State Sen. Michael Jungbauer, State Rep. Paul Kohls, and State Rep. Marty Seifert. The word on the street is that former State Sen. / Rep. Jim Ramstad could be announcing his candidacy soon as well.

Seifert, Jungbauer (who is currently pursuing a degree in Environmental Policy at Metropolitan State University) and Ramstad probably possess the most name recognition amongst the republicans. Herwig, an ardent pro-lifer who says “I don’t play defense. I play offense!” was the first GOP candidate to file, and Davis is the author of a book called “Always Cheat” which he claims was “the book that knocked Jesse Ventura out of office.”

For more information, click on a candidate’s name and you will, in most cases, be directed to the candidate’s official website, and check back here often for candidate profiles and updates on the Minnesota Governor’s Race.

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