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When the Minnesota Legislature adjourned on May 20, it completed the most productive two-year session since the Minnesota Miracle of the 1970s.
The values behind our work were simple: We believe that all Minnesotans — no matter where they live or what they look like — should have the opportunity to build better lives for themselves and their families.
House and Senate DFL majorities replaced gridlock and timidity with historic progress for Minnesotans on the issues they told us they care about most: good public schools, making health care more affordable and accessible, improving economic security for workers and families, protecting reproductive freedom, taking action on climate change, reducing gun violence and strengthening our democracy.
Minnesota’s children and students deserve every chance to succeed. After years of GOP disinvestment, DFLers made historic investments in every level of education from child care to college. We helped family budgets and reduced student hunger through free breakfasts and lunch at school. After decades of underinvestment in higher education, we froze tuition at Minnesota State and made college free for families making less than $80,000 a year. In 2024, we increased funding for the READ Act to improve student achievement and literacy.
DFLers took steps to improve the affordability and accessibility of health care. Our budget includes a Prescription Drug Affordability Board to reduce drug costs, and caps co-pays for prescription drugs to treat diabetes, asthma and allergies at $25 for one month’s supply. This year, we enacted significant medical debt reforms because Minnesotans struggling with illness should not also have to be saddled with unmanageable debt. A new law curbing “prior authorization” will keep insurance companies out of basic care decisions for cancer and mental health care, minimizing paperwork and delays in treatment.
Our priority has been to un-rig an economy that often seems tilted in favor of big corporations and the wealthiest among us. Democrats delivered solutions to improve economic security and build a fairer, more equitable economy. We passed paid family and medical leave, earned sick and safe time, and historic investments in infrastructure and housing affordability. A nation-leading Child Tax Credit is already working to reduce child poverty, and we took further steps to improve the credit this year.