Emma Greenman Explained

Emma Greenman
Party:Democratic (DFL)
State House:Minnesota
District:63B
Constituency:63B (2021-present)
Term Start:January 5, 2021
Education:George Washington University (BA)
Harvard University (MPA)
University of California, Berkeley (JD)
Predecessor:Jean Wagenius
Occupation:Attorney
Residence:Minneapolis, Minnesota

Emma Greenman is an American politician who has served in the Minnesota House of Representatives since 2021. A member of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party (DFL), Greenman represents District 63B, which includes parts of south Minneapolis in Hennepin County, Minnesota.[1] [2]

Early life, education and career

Greenman attended high school at Minneapolis South High School. She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science from George Washington University, a Master of Public Administration from Harvard University and a Juris Doctor from the UC Berkeley School of Law.[3]

In 2007, Greenman worked as a legal intern at the Brennan Center for Justice. In 2008, she was a summer associate at King & Spalding. She was then a legal intern in the United States Department of Justice Civil Rights Division. In 2010, she was the deputy campaign manager of Margaret Anderson Kelliher's campaign for governor of Minnesota. She then worked as an attorney in the Public Defender's Office in Ramsey County, Minnesota, and as a state director for the Service Employees International Union.

From 2013 to 2015, Greenman was a political trainer for Wellstone Action, a progressive advocacy organization.[4] She also worked as an attorney for Maslon LLP from 2012 to 2015. In 2015, she represented Tony Webster, an independent journalist who sued the city of Bloomington for failing to release records related to a Black Lives Matter protest.[5] From 2015 to 2021, she was the director of voting rights and democracy at the Center for Popular Democracy.[6] In 2018, she was a member of Attorney General Keith Ellison's transition team.[7]

In 2016, Governor Mark Dayton appointed Greenman to the Minnesota Campaign Finance Board. She served briefly in an interim capacity, but her appointment was not confirmed by the Republican-controlled Minnesota Senate.[8] While a member, she was the only vote against allowing the then-city council member Jacob Frey to transfer his campaign funds from his council races to his mayoral campaign.[9] In the 2021 Minneapolis mayoral election, Greenman did not endorse Frey, and signed on to a letter that advocated for a "new mayor" who would do more to end racial disparities and increase public safety.[10]

Minnesota House of Representatives

Greenman was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives in 2020 and reelected in 2022. She first ran after 17-term incumbent Jean Wagenius announced she would not seek reelection.

Greenman is vice chair of the Elections Finance and Policy Committee, and sits on the Education Finance, Labor and Industry Finance and Policy, and Veterans and Military Affairs Finance and Policy Committees. From 2021 to 2022, she was as an assistant majority leader of the House DFL caucus.

Election policy

Greenman co-chairs an Inclusive Democracy caucus announced on the two-year anniversary of the January 6 insurrection.[11] She is the author of the "Democracy for the People" Act, the House DFL's major elections bill of the 2023 legislative session.[12] She has been outspoken about the threat that the Republican Party poses to democracy after the January 6 insurrection.[13] She has opposed efforts to institute voter ID requirements in Minnesota, and advocated for automatic voter registration, pre-registration for 16- and 17-year-olds, and restoring the vote to felons after they leave incarceration.[14] She has sponsored legislation to increase protections for poll workers and to tighten reporting requirements for independent political expenditures.[15] She has also proposed a "Democracy Dollars" program that would send voters two $25 coupons that could be used to donate to political candidates.[16]

Labor and worker's rights

Greenman has been outspoken about the poor working conditions at Amazon package facilities, writing, "When Amazon arrived in Minnesota six years ago, it promised to provide our state with safe, reliable jobs with dignified wages. Instead, it delivered our communities quite the opposite."[17] She wrote a bill to increase worker protections at warehouse facilities.[18] She also wrote a bill to restrict who can be classified as an "independent contractor" to protect Uber and Lyft workers from exploitation.[19]

Personal life

Greenman lives in Minneapolis.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Greenman, Emma . 2023-02-21 . Minnesota Legislature.
  2. Web site: Rep. Emma Greenman (63B) . Minnesota House of Representatives . 2023-03-03 .
  3. Web site: Emma Greenman '09 Targets Youth Vote at Democratic National Convention. March 8, 2023. Berkeley Law . Andrew Cohen . August 29, 2008.
  4. Web site: Emma Greenman for House District 63B. 2021-04-30. MN350 Action .
  5. Web site: Nelson . Emma . June 19, 2015 . Man sues city of Bloomington over Black Lives Matter records . 2023-03-03 . Star Tribune.
  6. Web site: 2017-08-25. Voting rights: the fight for our democracy. 2021-04-30. MinnPost.
  7. Web site: Bierschbach . Briana . November 19, 2018 . AG-elect Ellison announces transition team . 2023-03-03 . MPR News .
  8. Web site: Bakst . Brian . May 27, 2016 . Campaign regulatory board stymied by Legislature . 2023-03-03 . MPR News .
  9. Web site: Belz . Adam . January 31, 2017 . Campaign finance board: Frey can spend council campaign money in Minneapolis mayor's race . 2023-03-03 . Star Tribune.
  10. Web site: Navratil . Liz . October 18, 2021 . Divided left field of Minneapolis mayoral hopefuls have unified message: Don't rank Frey . 2023-03-03 . Star Tribune.
  11. Web site: Bierschbach . Briana . January 6, 2023 . Minnesota Democrats announce plan to expand voting access . 2023-03-03 . Star Tribune.
    - Web site: Rodriguez . Barbara . 2023-02-08 . Women lawmakers in Minnesota are in the vanguard of the democracy movement . 2023-03-03 . MinnPost .
  12. Web site: Winter . Deena . 2023-02-14 . Election bill that would make it easier to vote moving through Legislature . 2023-03-03 . Minnesota Reformer .
    - Web site: Winter . Deena . Minneapolis voting rights attorney lays out DFL plan for election reform . 2023-03-03 . Minnesota Reformer . January 5, 2023 .
  13. Web site: Greenman . Emma . Port . Lindsey . 2022-01-07 . One year after the insurrection, a democracy in crisis . 2023-03-03 . MinnPost .
    - Web site: Greenman . Emma . 2022-11-18 . The big winner of the midterm elections in Minnesota was democracy . 2023-03-03 . MinnPost .
  14. Web site: Sturdevant . Lori . February 13, 2021 . OPINION EXCHANGE Voter ID is back to haunt Minnesota democracy . 2023-03-03 . Star Tribune.
    - Web site: Bakst . Brian . February 8, 2023 . Voter sign-up bill causes partisan split in MN Legislature . 2023-03-03 . MPR News.
  15. Web site: November 17, 2022 . More work needed to protect elections . 2023-03-03 . Star Tribune.
    - Web site: Bierschbach . Briana . February 17, 2023 . Minnesota Democrats push for more reporting on outside money in elections . 2023-03-03 . Star Tribune.
  16. Web site: Callaghan . Peter . 2023-01-23 . Should Minnesota make public spending on campaigns less like Menards rebates? . 2023-03-03 . MinnPost .
  17. Web site: Greenman . Emma . December 15, 2021 . OPINION EXCHANGE Minnesota legislators must respond to Amazon's business model . 2023-03-03 . Star Tribune.
  18. Web site: Coolican . J. Patrick . Minnesota House passes bill aimed at Amazon worker safety; unlikely to pass Senate . 2023-03-03 . Minnesota Reformer .
  19. Web site: Nesterak . Max . 2022-10-21 . Uber and Lyft drivers press lawmakers to address long-standing labor complaints . 2023-03-03 . Minnesota Reformer .