BRAINERD – Near the end of a 90-minute talk with teachers and administrators here at Harrison Elementary, Lt. Gov. Tina Smith realized that the event to publicize the Dayton administration's push for improved early learning was occurring right after the first day of kindergarten.
"You must be so tired," she said to the group gathered in a small gymnasium. Then she set her microphone on the table and clapped for the teachers — just the kind of off-the-cuff personal touch that has propelled her from longtime DFL insider to Gov. Mark Dayton's lieutenant. And now, many at the Capitol wonder, possibly his successor.
Whether it's talking up prekindergarten funding in Brainerd, touring an egg farm in Wrenshall or touting rural broadband expansion in Luverne, Smith has logged thousands of miles on Minnesota roads since taking office in January. In the process, she has become nearly as much the face of the administration as Dayton himself. And he plans to hand her even more responsibility next year for his second-term agenda.
Just months into the job, Smith is transforming the often obscure role of lieutenant governor. She is in the room when Dayton makes his biggest decisions, and was at the negotiating table — sometimes sitting in for the governor himself — during the high-stakes talks that brought this year's legislative session to a close. That unusual level of influence is fueling growing speculation among Minnesota politicos that Dayton sees his trusted partner as his heir apparent.
"I think she's a real possibility for 2018, with a good chance of being our candidate," said former Vice President Walter Mondale, a political mentor to Smith and one of many prominent Minnesota Democrats who call her friend. "Of course there'll be a heated contest, but you have to put her at the top of the list."
Smith has little to say about the next governor's race, which is certain to feature some of the DFL's biggest names battling to replace the retiring Dayton. "It's hard to say what things will look like a couple of years from now," Smith said in an interview, calling herself undecided about a bid.
'I'll defer to her'
Dayton also demurs at talk of 2018. But he told the Star Tribune recently that he has duties in mind for Smith next year that will elevate her even higher. Dayton plans to make his lieutenant the administration's point person on his two biggest priorities — expanded early learning classes at schools statewide, and major spending to update the state's transportation infrastructure.
"Increasingly," he said, "I'll defer to her decisionmaking on those areas."