Republicans who control the Minnesota Senate outlined their vision for tax cuts and combating violent crime Wednesday, offering a conservative counterpoint to the succession of spending proposals from state Democratic leaders.
DFL Gov. Tim Walz also zeroed in on public safety as he rolled out the final piece of his budget plan Wednesday, and political leaders from both sides of the aisle overlapped in their desire to recruit and retain law enforcement. But they diverged on a long list of other ideas, from a public health insurance buy-in to marijuana legalization to how much the state should devote to government programs.
"Crime rates are up, kids are falling behind, and record inflation is eating away at family budgets," said Senate Majority Leader Jeremy Miller, R-Winona. "Things are moving in the wrong direction, and Senate Republicans are focused on solutions to put Minnesota back on the right track."
The divided Legislature will attempt to find common ground on how to use Minnesota's projected $7.7 billion budget surplus when it returns to work Monday for the start of the legislative session. Lawmakers will simultaneously signal their values to voters ahead of the November election, when the full Legislature and the governor's office are on the ballot.
During the past couple of weeks, House Democrats and Walz have been highlighting their hopes for the four-month-long session, including directing more money to support students and teachers, creating paid leave programs for workers and increasing the amount the state devotes to compensating pandemic frontline workers. On Wednesday, Walz added implementing marijuana legalization for adults and expanding health care coverage and housing support to his list.
Republican lawmakers denounced the scale of spending Democrats that are pushing.
Minnesotans are struggling with rising costs, said Sen. Julia Coleman, R-Chanhassen.
"Their bank accounts aren't facing record surpluses," Coleman said. "They deserve actual relief, not a government spending spree."