Attorney General Lori Swanson jumped into the DFL primary for Minnesota governor on Monday, immediately shaking up the contest between state Rep. Erin Murphy and U.S. Rep. Tim Walz and complicating the Democratic effort to hold onto the state's top political job.
Swanson announced her plans at a hastily arranged, 20-minute news conference in Minneapolis. At her side was U.S. Rep. Rick Nolan of northeastern Minnesota, her newly minted lieutenant governor running mate.
"We're a couple of problem solvers. That's what I've done as attorney general, is to try to solve big problems on behalf of the people of Minnesota," said Swanson, citing the recent $890 million settlement with 3M over contaminated drinking water in the east Twin Cities metro.
A three-term attorney general, Swanson was unable to secure the DFL endorsement in her re-election bid at the party's state convention on Saturday. Her last-minute shift to the governor's race promises to intensify what already looked to be a competitive primary between Murphy, the DFL-endorsed candidate and state lawmaker from St. Paul, and Walz, a six-term congressman from southern Minnesota.
The political re-sorting rattled many DFL insiders as they prepare to defend a seat that Gov. Mark Dayton has held for eight years, and rumors flew throughout the day of further candidate shuffling ahead of Tuesday's 5 p.m. deadline to file for the Aug. 14 primary ballot. On the Republican side, former Gov. Tim Pawlenty will face off against the GOP-endorsed Hennepin County Commissioner Jeff Johnson, with Pawlenty an early front-runner thanks to name recognition and fundraising success.
Swanson mulled a run for governor for months until announcing earlier this year that she'd run for re-election as attorney general instead. But that plan derailed at the DFL convention in Rochester when Swanson fell short of endorsement on the first ballot. She dropped out, leaving delegates to endorse Minneapolis lawyer Matt Pelikan instead. A political newcomer, Pelikan ran on a platform of being a strong progressive voice.
Swanson's recruitment of Nolan potentially ends his planned political retirement before it starts. Previously a congressman from 1975 to 1981, Nolan came back in 2012 to win the increasingly competitive Eighth District through three elections. But he announced a few months ago that he would not run again this year.
Nolan said he and Swanson could "find that common ground and fix the things we can fix, and make sure the people of Minnesota have good jobs and good health care, and children have good education."