When incoming Senate Majority Leader Kari Dziedzic was deciding where to attend college, her good grades won her admission to the University of Minnesota's Institute of Technology. She majored in mechanical engineering.
"I was good at math and music and the sciences and I got in, so I went with it," the Minneapolis DFLer said on a recent afternoon as she moved into her new corner office across the street from the State Capitol. She was decorating the space with thrift-store finds and a damaged Dziedzic Av. street sign that she salvaged from her brother's garage.
Dziedzic (pronounced DEED-zick) never did work as an engineer. But her choice of a college major demonstrated the traits she's known for to this day: serious, pragmatic and smart. She'll need all that when she leads the DFL Party's 34-33 majority in the upcoming legislative session — as the first Democratic woman to serve as majority leader, and the second woman in the Senate's most powerful post.
Along with Gov. Tim Walz and House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, Dziedzic will shape and shepherd the agenda at the Capitol, owing to a surprising Democratic hat trick in November: control of the House, Senate and governor's office.
The specifics of the DFL agenda won't be unveiled until Wednesday. But Dziedzic said she's certain voters are tired of gridlock.
"We're just going to try to get things done," she said.
She said the DFL will move quickly in January to protect abortion access. Another priority will be what she called "helping Minnesotans afford their lives": money toward education, environmental protection, affordable housing and child care.
Cathy Lawrence, chief development officer for Twin Cities Habitat for Humanity, calls Dziedzic a trustworthy straight-shooter who will work across the aisle. "She really has a blue-collar mentality," Lawrence said.