Gov. Tim Walz and legislators were holed up in their longest budget negotiation meeting of the legislative session Tuesday and appeared determined to make progress on a two-year state budget as a May 20 deadline looms.
Top lawmakers spent five hours in negotiations Tuesday afternoon before breaking for dinner and returning to their meeting shortly after 8 p.m. As they came and went, they said little about what was happening behind closed doors.
"We're working though the budget. The fact that we were there that long should say something," said Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, R-Nisswa.
Legislative leaders have said they need to come up with an overall spending plan no later than Wednesday to meet their constitutional deadline next Monday, when they are scheduled to adjourn for the year.
Walz, a first-term DFL governor trying to shepherd his first budget through the Legislature, is seeking a gas tax increase, corporate tax hikes and the extension of a 2% tax on health care that is set to expire this year. Joined by the DFL majority in the Minnesota House, Walz wants the money to upgrade schools, roads, health care and aid to cities and counties.
"Moving along, we have to get this budget done. ... Our plan is to be here all night," Walz said as he left the negotiating room on the way to dinner Tuesday evening.
Republicans who control the state Senate have held firm that they will not agree to any tax increase and want the current 2% tax on health care to expire at the end of the year as scheduled. Gazelka has been resolute in his opposition to tax increases, suggesting that an additional $100 million in spending offered by the GOP to boost schools and public safety funding could come instead from the budget surplus and reserves.
That came in response to Walz and DFL leaders offering to cut spending and dropping their proposed gas tax hike from 20 to 16 cents per gallon.