1980 Minnesota House of Representatives election explained

Election Name:1980 Minnesota House of Representatives election
Country:Minnesota
Flag Year:1957
Type:legislative
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1978 Minnesota House of Representatives election
Previous Year:1978
Next Election:1982 Minnesota House of Representatives election
Next Year:1982
Seats For Election:All 134 seats in the Minnesota House of Representatives
Majority Seats:68
Leader1:Irv Anderson
Party1:Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party
Leader Since1:1978
Leaders Seat1:3A–International Falls
Last Election1:67 seats
Seats Before1:68
Seats1:70
Seat Change1:2
Popular Vote1:900,218
Leader2:Rod Searle
(retired)
Party2:Independent-Republicans of Minnesota
Leader Since2:1978
Leaders Seat2:30B–Waseca
Last Election2:67 seats
Seats Before2:66
Seats2:64
Seat Change2:2
Popular Vote2:924,863
Speaker
Before Election:Fred Norton
Before Party:Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party
After Election:Harry Sieben
After Party:Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party

The 1980 Minnesota House of Representatives election was held in the U.S. state of Minnesota on November 4, 1980, to elect members to the House of Representatives of the 72nd Minnesota Legislature. A primary election was held on September 9, 1980.

The Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL) won a majority of seats, remaining the majority party, followed by the Independent-Republicans of Minnesota. The new Legislature convened on January 6, 1981.

Background

The last election resulted in the DFL and Independent-Republicans winning an equal number of seats. Under an agreement reached between the two parties, the Republicans would be given the speakership, the chairs of the divisions of the appropriations and tax committees, and a one-vote majority on the divisions of the tax committee. The DFL would be given the chairs and a one-vote majority on the rules and tax committees as well as the chair of the appropriations committee.[1] The chairs and membership of the remaining committees would be equally divided.

This arrangement would last until the end of the legislative session in May 1979, when the DFL obtained a majority after the House removed Republican member Bob Pavlak from office on a straight party-line vote, declaring that he violated the Minnesota Fair Campaign Practices Act and therefore was not legally elected.[2] Pavlak was legally barred from casting their vote on matters relating to his contested election, allowing the motion to remove him to pass. Pavlak ran in the resulting special election for his former seat held on June 19, 1979, losing to DFL candidate Frank Rodriguez.[3] After obtaining a majority, the DFL caucus voted to support caucus leader Irv Anderson to be speaker. However, some DFL members who felt were punished by Anderson "for prior policy disagreements or for personal reasons by denying them the committee positions in 1979 that they had expected by virtue of experience and geography" were opposed to electing him speaker. A group of 26 DFL members, led by Gordon Voss and Fred Norton, formed a coalition with the Republicans, electing Norton speaker in 1980.

Results

Summary of the November 4, 1980 Minnesota House of Representatives election results
PartyCandidatesVotesSeats
%
Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party122900,21870252.24
Independent-Republicans of Minnesota121924,86364247.76
Independent511,34400.00
Write-in11,84100.00
Total134±0100.00
Turnout (out of 2,882,406 eligible voters)[4] 2,079,41172.14%14.19

Aftermath

Although Irv Anderson was the leader of the DFL caucus, DFL representative Harry Sieben sought the support of the DFL caucus to be speaker. Believing that Anderson would have trouble leading a divided caucus following the election of Fred Norton as speaker, Sieben convinced Anderson to support him. Sieben and Norton tied on the first ballot, each receiving 35 votes. After two more ballots, Sieben won the unanimous support of the caucus.

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Searle Sr., Rodney Newell "Rod" . Minnesota Legislative Reference Library . Legislators Past & Present . November 15, 2015.
  2. Web site: Minn. H.J., 71st Leg., Reg. Sess. pp. 2577–78 (1979) . Minnesota House of Representatives . Journal of the House . November 15, 2015.
  3. Web site: Minnesota Legislative Manual 1979–1980 . . November 16, 2015 . 2.
  4. Web site: Minnesota election statistics 1950-2014 . . August 13, 2016 .