Minnesota legislators were more than a month into a quiet session when the unexpected happened: Uber and Lyft threatened to leave the Twin Cities over an ordinance enacted by the Minneapolis City Council, and a Democratic state senator was arrested and charged with felony first-degree burglary.
The two events would upend the rest of the DFL-controlled body’s session. Democrats scrambled to pass a bill that would prevent the rideshare companies from leaving parts of the state, causing other priorities such as a bonding bill and an expanded version of the Equal Rights Amendment to fall by the wayside. And the arrest of Sen. Nicole Mitchell opened a gaping partisan divide in the Senate, prompting Republicans to attempt to expel her and drag out debates in protest of her continued participation in the chamber.
Partisan tensions erupted in the session’s final hours, as Democrats merged several remaining bills on higher education, transportation, gun safety and other issues into a monster 1,400-page omnibus. They suspended debate and passed the bill in a single vote. Cries of “tyranny” and “communism” echoed through the Capitol as dozens of Republicans shouted into their microphones in protest.
Several legislators and political observers said they had never seen such a spectacle, and questioned if the Legislature could recover from the meltdown.
“As a former Senate Minority Leader, it saddens me to witness the erosion of this institution. The minority must always have a voice in the legislative process,” former DFL Sen. Melisa López Franzen said in a social media post. “May we find the courage to work together to restore the public trust and that of each other.”

In dueling news conferences an hour after midnight, Democrats and Republicans blamed each other for the chaotic end to the session.
“This has been an absolute sham,” said House Minority Leader Lisa Demuth, R-Cold Spring, who swiftly filed an ethics complaint against DFL House Speaker Melissa Hortman for shutting down debate. “It is very concerning what was done.”
Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, said the Republicans’ use of filibusters was “disrespectful to the institution” and required Democrats to take “extraordinary measures” before the midnight deadline.