Politics & Government

The Shutdown is Over

Dayton signed the bills Wednesday morning, ending the 20-day shutdwon

The shutdown is over.

Gov. Mark Dayton signed all 12 budget bills Wednesday during a 9 a.m. ceremony.

The conclusion follows a tumultuous special session. Insults were hurled. Accusations were made. Pleas were ignored. But in the end, the people’s business is finished.

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By 4 a.m. Wednesday, all 12 budget bills had been passed in the Minnesota House and Senate and were ready for delivery to Dayton’s office. His signatures this morning ended the shutdown—at 20 days, the longest continuous shutdown of any state government in United States history.

Dayton kept his promise that he wouldn’t sign any of the bills until all 12 had passed through both houses of the legislature. 

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At the start of this special session, it seemed as though the process would be over quickly. In its first hour, the Senate passed six of 12 bills while the House passed five. But by 1 a.m. Wednesday, just eight bills were ready to be sent to the governor, with the House passing an additional two.

At that point, the legislative finish line was still well out of sight. As expected, the bills on taxes, health and human services, K-12 education and state government garnered the most spirited debates on the House floor.

Rep. Ryan Winkler (DFL-Golden Valley) called the Republican-written budget “morally bankrupt,” and Minority Leader Paul Thissen (DFL-Minneapolis) said Republicans had “every reason to hang (their) heads in shame.” House Majority Leader Matt Dean (R-Dellwood) countered by accusing DFLers of forgetting to do their jobs and “dragging (Minnesota) into a shutdown.”

In the end, the budget went the way most people expected it to go after Dayton, on July 14, accepted the Republican budget proposal, without the policy provisions first attached to the budget when it was first presented on June 30.   

Listed below are the bills and the votes that passed them:   

Special Session Bills
Senate Judiciary/Public Safety bill: 57-7
House Judiciary/Public Safety bill: 77-51

Senate Environment bill: 43-22
House Environment bill: 71-57

Senate Jobs and Economic Growth bill: 42-23
House Jobs and Economic Growth bill: 76-50

Senate Transportation bill: 38-27
House Transportation bill: 71-56

Senate Pension bill: 61-3
House Pension bill: 115-12

Senate Taxes bill: 37-27
House Taxes bill: 71-57

Senate Bonding bill: 53-11
House Bonding bill: 112-17


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