Minnesota Republican leaders are ramping up their opposition to the new state flag, hoping to turn anger over the redesign into an election-year issue.
Rep. Bjorn Olson, R-Fairmont, and Sen. Steve Drazkowski, R-Mazeppa, both nonvoting members of the State Emblems Redesign Commission, plan to introduce legislation in the upcoming session to put the final design to a vote of the public in the fall.
The Secretary of State’s Office has raised questions about whether such legislation is constitutional. But both legislators said they felt the process was rushed — the commission had to decide on a new flag and seal design in four months — and the public didn’t get enough chances to testify in front of the commission.
Earlier this month, David Hann, the chair of the Republican Party of Minnesota, also denounced the new state flag along with Deputy Chair Donna Bergstrom, arguing that the old flag was historically significant and arguing that the DFL is on a “quest to erase our history.” They’re raising money by selling “don’t PC our flag” and “erasing history” T-shirts on the party’s website.
Unlike the old flag, blue with the old state seal at its center, the new design features an abstract shape of Minnesota, an eight-pointed white North Star and light blue representing the state’s waters.
There’s no appetite from Democrats in the majority to change or undo that design in the upcoming session, said Sen. Mary Kunesh, DFL-New Brighton, who sponsored the legislation to create the commission and sat on it as a nonvoting member.
”We’re happy to support the decision of the committee, and while we know that it’s not the choice that everyone would have made, we feel like it’s a good, strong flag and will serve Minnesota for a long time,” she said.
She pointed to the many articles written about the redesign, more than 2,000 flag and seal designs submitted to the commission and more than 20,000 comments on a handful of finalists as evidence that the public was engaged in the process.