Minnesota lawmakers started the year trying to tamp down expectations: the legislative session would have a limited agenda, making tweaks to laws enacted last year, passing a few new policies and shaping a package of construction projects across the state.
As time ran short on the 2024 session Saturday evening, major pieces of even that limited agenda were still up in the air.
A deal on a bonding bill had yet to materialize despite a Sunday night deadline to finish work. The House and Senate were also working late into the night debating an expansive equal rights ballot initiative and trying to find a compromise on sports betting and pay minimums for Uber and Lyft drivers.
“It has been a hard session, but we’ve kept our eyes focused on the people of Minnesota and what we need to accomplish for them,” Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy, DFL-St. Paul, said Friday ahead of a marathon weekend of work. “You’re going to see the fruit of that labor over the course of this weekend.”
Lawmakers passed a massive two-year state budget last spring, along with a raft of policy changes that Democrats in control heralded as one of the most productive legislative sessions in state history. The law doesn’t require legislators to pass anything this year, but they traditionally spend election-year sessions working to piece together road, bridge, wastewater and other infrastructure projects across the state in a bonding bill.
Bonding bills require votes from the minority to pass, but Republicans accused Democrats of choosing “extreme partisanship” over finding a deal.
“Democrats and Republicans want to see that investment in our state,” Senate Minority Leader Mark Johnson, R-East Grand Forks, said Saturday. “I’m pretty disappointed. This could be a very nice, clean session, but they’ve chosen extreme partisanship on it right now.”
Republicans have said their votes in favor of a package of construction projects are conditioned on the House and the Senate not passing an expansive version of the Equal Rights Amendment, which would ask voters in 2026 if they want to add protections in the Constitution for everything from sex, race and gender to abortion access.