An expensive and hotly contested battle for control of the Minnesota Legislature came to a head Tuesday, with the outcome of a handful of legislative races expected to shape state politics for the next decade.
The final split in both chambers remained in flux late Tuesday, with a number of competitive races across the state too close to call hours after polls closed.
While all 201 state legislative seats were on the ballot this year, the fight was focused on fewer than a dozen competitive seats likely to determine majority control in the state Senate, where Republicans hold a narrow 35-32 advantage. Democrats were defending a 16-seat edge in the state House.
Results in those closely watched races trickled in Tuesday. But with many seats in play on both sides and ballots still being counted, legislative leaders braced for a late night.
"We're telling people to be patient, to just wait and see how the system plays out," state Sen. Melisa Lopez Franzen, DFL-Edina, told reporters Tuesday.
The results in a handful of those competitive races, some of which could come down to hundreds of votes, will determine whether state government remains politically divided as it is now or fully controlled by Democrats.
The outcome will likely have significant implications for state policy, as DFL Gov. Tim Walz and the Legislature prepare to tackle a budget deficit, the pandemic and the redrawing of the state's political maps. The fate of issues such as marijuana legalization, school funding and tax policy hang in the balance.
Given the stakes, campaigns, political parties and outside groups have dedicated tens of millions of dollars in campaign cash to state races. The spending is on track to exceed the $30 million spent in 2016, the last time the entire Legislature was on the ballot. The latest campaign finance reports, filed in late October, showed DFL-aligned groups outspending GOP rivals by significant margins.