After spending most of last year trying to undo Gov. Tim Walz's emergency powers, Republicans in control of the Minnesota Senate are trying a new strategy.
They've introduced more than half a dozen proposals this session that would not end the peacetime state of emergency outright but would dramatically change how long the governor could wield executive power without legislative approval and limit his ability to shutter schools and businesses in response to the coronavirus pandemic.
"It's one of our strongest messages that we'll push this year," said Sen. Andrew Mathews, R-Princeton, whose measure would allow businesses to fully reopen if they have a COVID-19 safety plan in place.
It is a new twist on a debate that has been simmering in St. Paul for nearly a year: How can the Legislature get more say in the state's response to the COVID-19 pandemic?
Leaders in the DFL-controlled House, who have supported the governor's actions, want to get involved too. But they're looking to alter or write some of Walz's individual executive orders into state law this session, a move that could take political pressure off the governor to continue using emergency powers.
"I do want to take a look at the executive orders and I want a full understanding of which executive orders we may need to keep statutorily and how are we going to do that," said Rep. Gene Pelowski, DFL-Winona, who held the first in a series of hearings Friday on the governor's executive powers.
The emergency powers debate is one of a handful of issues expected to dominate the 2021 legislative session, including the continued COVID-19 response and the state's two-year budget, which the divided Legislature must agree on by summer.
At the heart of the debate is Chapter 12, before now a rarely used section of state law that allows a governor to declare a state of peacetime emergency in a time of crisis and issue executive actions to quickly respond. Throughout history, it's typically been tapped by governors to respond to natural disasters such as floods, tornadoes and storms.