Well, you don鈥檛 see this every day in America鈥檚 polarized politics.
Last week, the leaders of each party in Minnesota鈥檚 House of Representatives announced that committee chairs in the chamber will be equally divided come Jan. 14 when a new Legislature convenes. Two people will share custody of one gavel on each of 23 panels.
In addition, the leaders of each party (both women) are working on a plan to share the role of speaker in the tied chamber 鈥 a Democrat at some times, a Republican at others.
The reason for this amazing amity across the aisle?
The Nov. 5 election resulted in an evenly split state House (67-67), assuming legal challenges in two races don鈥檛 stand up.
鈥淲hat makes it work is if people respect each other and have a fundamental decency,鈥 Rep. Melissa Hortman, current House speaker and a member of the state鈥檚 Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, told Minnesota Public Radio. Her counterpart, GOP House Leader Lisa Demuth, told Twin Cities PBS, 鈥淭his is going to force the ability to work together from the very start鈥 and provides a 鈥減erfect opportunity鈥 for civility.
In the state鈥檚 Senate, Democrats will still hold a one-seat advantage. And Gov. Tim Walz, who was the 2024 Democratic vice presidential candidate, still holds veto power. Yet, as Ms. Demuth told WCCO radio, 鈥淸Voters] have chosen balance. They鈥檝e sent us back equally, not one party above the other or below in the House.鈥 A big test for the House will come by May when the state Legislature must pass a two-year budget.
This model of balanced leadership may be an underappreciated aspect of U.S. politics. 鈥淢oderates are often overlooked in contemporary research on American voters,鈥 wrote six political scientists in a 2022 academic paper using statistical analysis.
Conventional wisdom holds that American voters are polarized, the scholars wrote, but most voters 鈥済ive a mix of liberal and conservative responses on surveys and few are consistently and firmly on one side of the aisle.鈥 Moderate voters are also 鈥渆specially consequential鈥 in driving political accountability and candidate selection.
Through forced bipartisanship, Minnesota鈥檚 incoming House members may soon show Americans that not all voters are of a single ideological dimension. With a spirit of equality and an ear for listening, politicians need not govern with a winner-take-all mentality or stay in power through partisan gerrymandering. Minnesota may well live up to its nickname as the North Star State.