Shortly after 9 a.m., the sound of "Amazing Grace" rose from the rotunda floor at the State Capitol and bounced off columns of gleaming marble, everything painstakingly refurbished to its original splendor. The song echoed down adjacent hallways, rising up to the vibrant mosaics in the building's dome, which have suddenly come alive after years of neglect.
Democracy never looked or sounded so good.
Before long, legislators wearing their Sunday best hauled their kids by the hand and visitors took playful snapshots of each other in the shafts of winter sun that sifted through the building. New Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, R-Nisswa, paused by himself on a balcony for a moment just to look up and take it all in.
Perhaps he was thinking that this is what a healthy democratic institution can accomplish when it works, and works together. That was his tone at least, when he spoke to this newspaper recently.
The first day of the 2017 session of Minnesota Legislature was largely ceremonial, a day when the elected could relish the moment of their victory and celebrate the newly renovated Capitol with friends and family. They threw around terms such as "compromise" and "I'm willing to listen," and a popular one Tuesday, "I'm all ears."
But by the time Gov. Mark Dayton held his first news conference of the year, president-elect Donald Trump had already preempted him with an early morning tweet about Dayton's admission that the Affordable Care Act was "no longer affordable."
Dayton took the jab with whimsy and humor. "I don't have any control over the president-elect's tweets," he riposted. "It's proof positive that I'm not running for higher office again because I don't tweet."
Dayton and House Speaker Kurt Daudt, R-Crown, have spent much of the time between sessions snarling at each other. On Tuesday, however, he said they recently had lunch. It went fine, Dayton said. Just fine.