In your career, imagine that you faced a deadline to deliver on an employers’ assignment — a report, a construction project, a patient treatment, a classroom unit, a research paper, a production goal, a sales pitch. Then imagine that despite your best efforts, due to factors beyond your individual control, you run out of time.
It happens to all of us all the time. Do you double down on effort and finish your assignment, or point fingers, declare defeat, quit your assignment, and refuse to return to it?
If the latter, I’m guessing you probably have been fired at least once, or denied advancement.
Well, the Minnesota Legislature had an assignment from their employers, the constituents they are sworn to serve. The promise each of them made to their bosses on the campaign trail was to make life a little better for them during challenging times. But the legislators encountered challenges that were outside their immediate control–principally disagreement from the opposition party, which is to be fully expected. Because of the challenges, they ran out of time.
So, they walked away from the job, and say they’re not coming back to work until 2023. See ya!
So Close
Quite remarkably, legislators actually appeared to be very close to at least partially delivering on the assignment that their constituents gave them.
Tax deal? Done. It’s not everything that Democrats wanted, and not everything that Republicans wanted. But it was agreed upon and done.
Overall fiscal deal? Done. It outlines how much in tax cuts and supplemental spending would be acceptable to both parties. Again, the compromise agreement was equally satisfying and disappointing to both Democrats and Republicans.
Those two parts of the task are arguably the most difficult that legislators faced. That’s where past Legislatures often have failed. But to their credit, this 2022 Legislature got that difficult work done, along with deals related to unemployment insurance, health reinsurance, farm disaster aid, and other items.
But by the time the legislative clock ran out, this year’s Legislature hadn’t agreed on the specifics for how to divvy up already agreed upon sized budgetary pies for public safety, education, and health and human services. To be sure, those are challenging assignments for two parties with fundamentally different values.
But this Legislature got other difficult tasks done this year, so this final task is imminently doable.
Why Quitters?
If you try, that is. Democrats are willing to keep trying in a special session. Republicans apparently are not.
For now, Republicans are saying they won’t give one more second of effort to help those who clearly will be hurt by their refusal to come back to work – taxpayers, renters, seniors, children, parents, child care providers, nursing home operators, police officers, and crime victims.
Minnesota Republicans looked at those struggling constituents, shrugged cavalierly, and walked away before the assignment their employers gave them was done.
Why? I’m speculating here, because I’m not a mind reader. But I suspect it’s not because Republicans are lazy or incompetent. They seem industrious and competent bunch, at least when it comes to things they care about, such as campaigning.
I’m also guessing that it’s not a negotiating ploy. I hope I’m wrong, and that they’ll be back. But right now it doesn’t look like that’s what they’re doing.
I hope I’m wrong, but I suspect worse. I suspect they just don’t care about their job assignment. That is, at their core they don’t really think that making their constituents’ lives better as soon as possible is sufficiently important to merit the extra work and headaches associated with a special session.
Sure, these Republican legislators love much of what comes with the job — the title, office, public platform, power, and respect. That’s presumably what keeps them running for reelection year after year. But the work assignment itself? I’m just not convinced.
Worse yet, a few who are disproportionately influential on their caucus actually seem to feel that their work assignment is, in the name of conservative or libertarian ideology, to prevent the government from helping taxpayers, renters, seniors, children, parents, child care providers, nursing home operators, police officers, and crime victims.
That’s not what they tell those groups on the campaign trail, but it’s too often how they govern.
Do Voters Care?
Back to the opening analogy. After failing to complete your task on time, how do you suppose this would go over with your employer? “Yeah, I just don’t really believe in this job assignment, and it got really difficult, and the time clock ran out, so I quit and I’m not going back to the assignment you gave me.”
Yeah. Maybe it’s time Minnesotans reacted the same way.