A Republican legislator who has been a vocal critic of pandemic-related business closures is now fighting to keep his own doors open — in this case, a red door leading to a basement speakeasy in downtown Anoka.
Nucky's Speakeasy, which Sen. Jim Abeler, R-Anoka, co-owns, was open for three days in November before Gov. Tim Walz's latest executive order closing bars and restaurants went into effect.
"We were totally surprised," Abeler said. "We didn't mean to open in a pandemic, but that's how it worked out."
Abeler has owned the historic post office building on Anoka's Main Street since 1994. It's taken different forms over the years, from a charter school to an antique store.
Abeler tried selling the building a year and a half ago, but in "the most random of happenstances," he crossed paths with husband-and-wife chefs Rowan Brown and Von Inthisone last November.
That's when an employee of the couple's former restaurant in Big Lake had an appointment with Abeler, a second-generation chiropractor in Anoka. The employee and Abeler struck up a conversation about the restaurant business, how Brown was looking for a new location and how Abeler needed new occupants in the post office.
Brown and Inthisone brought their "Jamasian" cuisine — a combination of their Jamaican and Laotian roots — to Club 300, the restaurant above Nucky's.
"All by luck" is how Brown describes the partnership. But now the fates of the bar and restaurant hang in the COVID-19 balance.