The state's ongoing budget impasse landed Thursday in Ramsey County District Court, where a packed courtroom of high-priced legal talent argued over whether and how much the court should intervene.
Chief Judge Kathleen Gearin said she would not issue a ruling this week, pushing final decisions into the last days before a massive state government shutdown would begin next Friday.
"There has never been such an extensive impasse regarding appropriations that I'm aware of at this stage in our history," Gearin said.
"It would be far better if this were resolved by the legislative and executive branches getting together," she said in her courtroom. From the outside, she said, it looks like "a game of chicken" with people's lives.
The state's constitutional dilemma has come to this: Attorneys for DFL Gov. Mark Dayton argued Thursday that the governor has the power to make spending decisions after the state's two-year budget ends June 30. The courts, they said, could do nothing without intruding on the separation of powers.
DFL Attorney General Lori Swanson made the case that people depend too heavily on government's critical functions to allow it to falter over a dispute between the Legislature and governor. Swanson has asked that the court appoint a "special master" who could administer the state's budget after next Friday.
Gearin on Thursday rejected Dayton's request for a court-appointed mediator in the dispute. She also turned aside a petition by four Republican senators who wanted the court to continue only government functions mandated by the Constitution, federal mandate or state statute.
"We're [facing] some excruciatingly painful decisions. This is a tough time for the state. People are anxious, people are concerned. ... They will be affected significantly by a government shutdown. The courts cannot make that better," Gearin said.