WINONA – Jeremy Miller is chief financial officer for his family's scrapyard, head coach of his son's football team, a real estate investor, owner of a hat company, long-distance runner, nonprofit board member, children's book author and soon-to-be restaurateur.
Now the 38-year-old father of three from Winona is about to become the top Republican in Minnesota government.
"A good friend of mine said, 'If you want to get something done, ask a busy person,' " Miller said.
Miller doesn't play the grandstanding and political games that often absorb so much time at the Capitol, colleagues said, making him a go-to when negotiations are stuck. Sen. Michelle Benson, R-Ham Lake, calls Miller "the fixer" because he repeatedly gets pulled into budget stalemates.
His reputation as a listener and consensus-builder will be tested as Miller heads into a legislative session in which lawmakers are set to clash over public safety and COVID-19 — and where they will attempt to redraw all 201 legislative districts as the 2022 election looms.
Republicans picked Miller as the face of their caucus and key negotiator after Sen. Paul Gazelka stepped down to run for governor, placing the self-proclaimed "behind-the-scenes kind of guy" at the center of political skirmishes during a heated election year.
"I think we'll have a good working relationship. It's a matter of whether his caucus is able to stand with him," said Sen. Melisa López Franzen, DFL-Edina, who is simultaneously stepping into the minority leader job.
House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, said she expects that, similar to her experience with Gazelka, they will be able to push past partisan divides to get deals done. Miller, Hortman and DFL Gov. Tim Walz will make up the "Big Three" who are poised to hash out differences next year on everything from police funding and accountability measures to a public infrastructure bonding bill.