After three or four years in the Minnesota House of Representatives, Jeff Johnson knew that he wanted to be governor someday. "If you actually want to change things, that is the place to do it," he says.
But his political aspirations took root decades earlier.
When he was a boy in Detroit Lakes, one wall in his bedroom was red, one white and one blue — probably his late mom Dianne's homage to the nation's 1976 Bicentennial. He had just turned 13 when he watched on TV as Ronald Reagan announced his presidential run in 1979. Reagan, he said, made being conservative cool. He worked on legislative races as a teen and at Concordia College.
Those experiences put Johnson, now 51, on a path to the Legislature, a run for attorney general, the Hennepin County Board, a 2014 bid for governor — and now a second shot at the job he covets most. He had a gut feeling that he'd beat former Gov. Tim Pawlenty in the Aug. 14 Republican primary despite polls and predictions that he'd lose.
"I feel that same energy and interest right now," Johnson said in an interview. He didn't have that hunch when he lost to DFL Gov. Mark Dayton four years ago, he said.
Johnson's optimism may belie the landscape he faces. His DFL opponent, U.S. Rep. Tim Walz, led 45 to 36 percent in a Star Tribune/MPR News Minnesota Poll last month; one in five respondents didn't recognize Johnson's name. The GOP establishment preferred Pawlenty. Walz, who depicts his rival as a stingy conservative, could be helped if there's a Democratic "blue wave."
Johnson isn't underestimating Walz — who he said would govern "to the left of Mark Dayton" — but allies are working on a transition to the governor's office, weighing hires, a budget and legislative priorities.
First up: "Tax conformity, which is so sexy and interesting," Johnson said with a laugh. "We've got to fix that." Dayton vetoed a bill in May that would have aligned the state tax code with changes in federal law.