Lynx stay undefeated. Twins win. OKC ties the NBA Finals. Game 3 tonight in the Stanley Cup finals.
It’s US Open Week.
St. Paul’s Jackson Street Bridge will be closed until September for repairs. BMTN: https://fluence-media.co/4jMb4N7
A CBS News poll finds that Donald Trump’s job approval is 45%, and his handling of the economy is at 42%. However, his handling of immigration is at 50%, and the administration’s deportation program has 54% approval. POLL: https://fluence-media.co/4jLRfph
All four legislative leaders — Speaker Lisa Demuth, Rep. Melissa Hortman, Sen. Erin Murphy and Sen. Mark Johnson — were guests on Sunday Take to discuss the latest developments in the Capitol. LISTEN: https://fluence-media.co/3HLdCxv
Happy National Strawberry Rhubarb Pie Day – a Minnesota classic.
Blois
TIPS: BloisOlson@gmail.com
Today’s morning take on WCCO Radio with Vineeta Sawkar. LISTEN: https://fluence-media.co/4knrTPn
Sponsorships available – to reach over 25,000 readers per day on Fluence’s tip sheet and website www.TheDailyAgenda.com – email BloisOlson@gmail.com
POLL: A new KSTP poll asked Minnesota voters who’s to blame for the state budget stalemate — 19% blame the governor, 13% blame the House, 8% blame the Senate, 40% blame all three, and 21% are unsure. Overall, the Minnesota Legislature’s net approval rating is -2% (41% approval, 43% disapproval, 15% unsure). Voters were also asked if they support enrolling undocumented immigrants in MinnesotaCare — 35% support adults and children, 23% support children only, 30% support neither, and 12% are unsure. RESULTS: https://fluence-media.co/448k3DG
TODAY: A one-day special session of the Minnesota Legislature is scheduled to begin today, with the House and Senate both meeting on the floor at 10:00 a.m. Before that, the Capital Investment working group will meet at 8:00 a.m. CALENDAR: https://fluence-media.co/4kwnolF
WATCH: The first vote to watch carefully is the vote to suspend the rules. If that vote doesn’t pass, there will be no way to finish before 7AM Tuesday.
BILLS: A link to all the bills in their current form. HERE: https://fluence-media.co/4kWqVJY
SESSION: via KSTP, VERBATIM: “Gov. Tim Walz and legislative leaders reached a deal for a special session, [and] lawmakers say there’s no chance they won’t finish by the [Tuesday] deadline. ‘In politics as in life, you’re only as good as your word,’ said DFL House Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman at a news conference on Friday. … When asked what would happen if they don’t finish by 7 a.m. Tuesday, Republican House Speaker Lisa Demuth simply said, ‘We’ll get the work done.’ … [But] there are potential obstacles, ranging from health insurance for undocumented immigrants to the tax bill that still needs to be resolved [to] a surprise provision in the transportation bill that shifts $93 million from counties to the Met Council.” READ/WATCH: https://fluence-media.co/4kVWSSv
MORE: via MinnPost, VERBATIM: “Speaker Lisa Demuth, R-Cold Spring, said they have pre-caucused ‘over half’ of the 14 bills in consideration and [continued] to do so through the weekend to assure swift passage. … If leadership is twisting enough arms to get a majority in place before Monday, the committee meetings and floor votes may be little more than tightly orchestrated political theater. But there likely remain some unsettled issues that have very vocal opponents who could derail or slow down the process.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/3ZJTy59
DETAILS: via House Session Daily, VERBATIM: “The agreement calls for a one-day special session to pass 14 bills, most of which are needed to fund the state government during the upcoming biennium. The session is to adjourn before 7 a.m. Tuesday. … The agreement confines legislative activity during the session to the remaining budget bills and says legislative leaders will not support amendments to the bills except where agreed upon by the leaders and the governor.” Gov. Tim Walz and all four legislative leaders signed the agreement, which also says it can be changed by the signatories as needed. READ: https://fluence-media.co/43xu0KG AGREEMENT: https://fluence-media.co/43weS05
BILLS: via Axios Twin Cities, VERBATIM: “The list of over a dozen pieces of legislation on tap includes: Outstanding spending and policy bills; A proposal to roll back state health care access for undocumented adults; A bipartisan capital investment package; [And] a yet-to-be-released ‘data center bill.’ … The final products may include changes to draft agreements released by informal working groups.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4dS400d
SENATE GOP: via MPR News, VERBATIM: “Republican Senate Minority Leader Mark Johnson hadn’t been part of the prior agreement, but signed off on this [special session] one after gaining some additional concessions. His support is important because bipartisan backing is needed here to speed the session along.” JOHNSON: “While Senate Republicans are not party to the overall budget agreement, we are glad to have found agreements to preserve jobs and invest in core infrastructure in our communities.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4kAdrns
FIXMN: We call on our state leaders to get back to work and pass a construction jobs bill immediately. See the Fix MN Failure Counter: www.fixmn.org (SPONSORED by LIUNA Minnesota and North Dakota)
BONDING: via MinnPost, VERBATIM: “Legislative leaders agreed on a bonding bill [Friday]. … The capital investment bill will fund $700 million in projects, with roughly $250 million earmarked for roads, wastewater, and other infrastructure. Because it is funded through state general obligation bonds, it is known as the ‘bonding bill.’ But because it requires a 60% majority to pass in both the House and Senate, it wasn’t clear if lawmakers could muster the votes.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/3FQyyTd
HUMAN SERVICES: via House Session Daily, VERBATIM: “After weeks of negotiations, legislative leaders have finalized a $7 billion health and human services budget for the 2026-27 biennium. It would reduce General Fund spending by $70 million compared to the February forecast base for programs operated by the Health Department, Department of Human Services and Department of Children, Youth and Families. … The budget shows savings related to making undocumented adults ineligible for Minnesota Care, though the language is in a separate bill. Members of a working group on health and human services heard a walkthrough of the agreement Sunday.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/3FQxe2H
TAXES: via Pioneer Press, VERBATIM: “Taxes have been another area that has troubled lawmakers in recent weeks, though legislative leaders said Friday afternoon that there was a final agreement. A big part of the debate centered around incentives for data centers. Now, they’ve agreed to end the electricity tax exemption for those businesses, but extend the length of the credit in other areas, such as hardware purchases. It’ll now last 35 years instead of 20. … Local government aid for legal cannabis enforcement is also set to see cuts. Republicans said they wouldn’t pass a budget with new taxes, but it appears they have agreed to boost the sales tax on legal cannabis from 10% to 15%.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/43SN6d9
MORE: via MinnPost, VERBATIM: “[One] contentious issue in the tax bill – how to tax data centers – will get its own bill following a heated debate in the tax committee. ‘There was a very strong push by [the] Senate DFL, House GOP, and the governor to achieve some movement on data centers,’ [Melissa] Hortman said. ‘We finally relented, the House DFL, when it became apparent that this was how we would get both the bonding bill and a complete budget agreement passed.’” READ: https://fluence-media.co/3ZJTy59
ENERGY: via House Session Daily, VERBATIM: “The 2025 energy bill scheduled to be presented at Monday’s special session is considerably smaller than the products of recent sessions, but it’s not nearly as small as the ‘lights-on’ bill passed off the House floor on May 7. Sponsored by Rep. Patty Acomb (DFL-Minnetonka) and Sen. Nick Frentz (DFL-North Mankato), the agreement reached by the energy working group — and unveiled Sunday afternoon — adds a significant amount of policy around ‘securitization’ that’s designed to head off the kind of skyrocketing natural gas price spikes experienced in 2021 after a Texas freeze. And it renews funding for renewable energy projects in St. Paul and Blaine.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/45LGBLH
Thank You Lawmakers For Listening to Minnesotans and Funding Reinsurance without Raising Taxes on Essential Safety-Net Coverage: Now that lawmakers have come together on a bipartisan framework to fund state government that includes funding for the state’s individual healthcare market, it’s critical that lawmakers stand firm in their agreement to not create a new Minnesota Insurance Coverage Tax. Non-medical safety-net insurance products aren't a luxury. It’s coverage that provides critical protection for families during some of life’s most difficult and unpredictable moments. In the upcoming special session, please continue to stand with Minnesota families, small businesses, and seniors to ensure coverage remains accessible to those that need it most. Learn More: ProtectOurCoverage.com (SPONSORED: Minnesota Insurance and Financial Services Council)
CALIFORNIA: via AP News, VERBATIM: “President Donald Trump is deploying 2,000 California National Guard troops to Los Angeles over the objections of Gov. Gavin Newsom after a second day of clashes between hundreds of protesters and federal immigration authorities in riot gear. … Newsom, a Democrat, said in a post on the social platform X that it was ‘purposefully inflammatory and will only escalate tensions.’ … In a signal of the administration’s aggressive approach, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth threatened to deploy the U.S. military. ‘If violence continues, active-duty Marines at Camp Pendleton will also be mobilized — they are on high alert,’ Hegseth said.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4mSnUMs
RESPONSE: via a Rep. Betty McCollum statement, McCOLLUM: “President [Donald] Trump is deliberately escalating the situation in Los Angeles by calling up the National Guard without a request from Governor [Gavin] Newsom. This decision is downright dangerous. Secretary [Pete] Hegseth’s statement implying active duty Marines could also be called up is outrageous. The active duty military has absolutely no legal role in domestic law enforcement. President Trump and Secretary Hegseth should read the Constitution and follow the law.”
TARIFFS: via Star Tribune, VERBATIM: “President Donald Trump said his tariff policy is expected to drive more business to U.S. manufacturing plants. But many Minnesota factory heads have yet to see it, and instead are juggling budgets as orders dry up while their own costs continue to rise. … Todd Olson, co-owner of Twin Cities Die Castings in Minneapolis, said the tariff increases create another round of the uncertainty. … In the past few months, supply costs surged while sales flattened. His aerospace and ag component orders have slowed. And his car-making customers are once again putting off redesigning vehicle models because of the metal tariffs, Olson said.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4dS3Hm5
EMMER: via Politico, VERBATIM: “House Majority Whip Tom Emmer isn’t concerned about the GOP megabill’s fate in the Senate, despite a raft of current policy disputes in need of speedy resolution. He’s also not worried about Elon Musk. … Asked what must be motivating Musk to urge lawmakers to ‘kill the bill’ at this time, Emmer chalked it up to high emotions. … Emmer said the only area he thinks there might be unease [in the Senate] is about the provider tax.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/3HzCRTv
KLOBUCHAR: Sen. Amy Klobuchar was interviewed on CBS’s “Face the Nation” this weekend to discuss the Democratic Party’s future as polls continue to show voters’ dissatisfaction with its leadership. Klobuchar said Democrats “cannot be the party of the status quo” going forward. WATCH: https://fluence-media.co/4kwrQAW
CRAIG: Rep. Angie Craig was interviewed on WCCO-TV this weekend to discuss the GOP’s federal budget bill and how it may affect Minnesota. WATCH: https://fluence-media.co/4mPr6IG
BETTING POLL: Support is surging among Minnesotans who want legal wagering on sporting events. New polling by the Sports Betting Alliance of Minnesota indicates 60% of voters in the state support the legalization of sports betting. The survey of 1,000 Minnesota voters also revealed overwhelming support for legal wagering among 18–29-year-olds, with 75% of females and 73% of males in favor of allowing sports betting in Minnesota — something that is available in 39 states. LEARN MORE: https://fluence-media.co/49uj4OF (SPONSORED: Sports Betting Alliance)
UMN: via Star Tribune, VERBATIM: “The University of Minnesota is proposing dramatic tuition increases for next year, including a 6.5% tuition jump for undergraduate, in-state students on the Twin Cities and Rochester campuses — amid what U leaders call an ‘existential crisis’ in American higher education. The tuition hike announced Friday would be the biggest increase in 14 years at the Twin Cities campus. Officials blamed anticipated flat funding from the state and declining federal support for research in outlining the tuition spike and a 7% cut in academic programming for the proposed 2025-26 budget.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4kxL49z
WFH: via MPR, VERBATIM: “Want to know how many state employees have been granted full telework waivers under the new return-to-office policy? That's hard to say. There is apparently no central tally being kept by the Walz Administration. … The executive branch’s enterprise-wide human resources hub isn’t pulling in data from agencies on implementation. An MMB spokesman said the requests for that information would have to be made to each of more than two dozen state agencies. … [State workers] can request exemptions through their agencies, whose HR departments and managers have the right to approve or deny those requests.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4mSIY5q
UNIONS: via Minnesota Reformer, VERBATIM: “State employees picketing [last week] said they were absolutely willing to strike over Gov. Tim Walz’s part-time return-to-office order that took effect this week. ‘One-hundred percent, I would [strike]. We can’t just roll over here,’ said Erin Malone, an auditor for the Department of Revenue, at a demonstration in St. Paul. … The soonest state employees could strike is in late summer — once contracts expire on June 30, they complete 45 days of mediation and then provide 10 days notice.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4jI1mLQ
TRANS SPORTS: via NBC News, VERBATIM: “Olympic gymnastics champion Simone Biles is going head-to-head with one of the most vocal opponents of transgender girls and women competing in female sports, former college swimmer Riley Gaines. Biles — the most decorated Olympic gymnast in history — called the former college athlete ‘sick’ and a ‘sore loser’ in a post on X Friday night. … On Friday, Gaines posted an image of a Minnesota girls high school [softball] team, which supposedly includes a trans player. She appeared to taunt the player, referring to her as a boy, which appears to have elicited Biles’ response.” READ/WATCH: https://fluence-media.co/4mPoRoK
IT’S POSSIBLE TO SIMULTANEOUSLY UPHOLD ENVIRONMENTAL INTEGRITY AND GROW OUR ECONOMY: Minnesota’s lengthy and uncertain permitting process has frustrated businesses for decades. A recent report found that air permitting in Minnesota can take up to six times longer than comparable states. A coalition of business and labor groups are advocating for reform that will shorten timelines and increase certainty while maintaining our strong environmental standards. Contact your legislators and tell them to support streamlining the permitting process. CONTACT: https://fluence-media.co/3Ea5Tbe (SPONSORED: Minnesota Chamber of Commerce)
MPD: via KSTP, VERBATIM: “Officials with the City of Minneapolis have released previously redacted invoices from the independent monitor overseeing police reform efforts. The invoices were submitted by Effective Law Enforcement for All, or ELEFA. The group has billed the city more than $1.1 million from March of last year to January of this year. … When 5 INVESTIGATES first received more than 200 pages of invoices back in April, the descriptions of what that money was spent on were completely redacted. … [But] hours before a story about those redactions was set to air and after three days of all-day promotion of that story, the city released the invoices without redactions.” READ/WATCH: https://fluence-media.co/3HKND9u
FEED FRAUD: via Star Tribune, VERBATIM: “An Apple Valley woman has been indicted on federal charges that she defrauded a federal child nutrition program by fraudulently claiming to have served 600,000 meals to hungry children during five months in 2021, for which she was paid $1.4 million. … [The defendant] enrolled two sites in the program, under the sponsorship of a nonprofit called Feeding Our Future, which prosecutors say was at the center of a $250 million fraud; so far 72 people have been charged in the sprawling case. Former Feeding Our Future CEO Aimee Bock was convicted in March of seven crimes.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/43NpUgk
GUN CTRL: via MPR, VERBATIM: “A gun owners group challenging a Minnesota ban on quick-fire trigger devices has won a partial legal victory. Ramsey County District Court Judge Leonardo Castro ruled [last week] that the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus is eligible to sue as an association over the binary trigger ban approved as part of a sprawling 2024 bill. … The group privately supplied member names to the judge to show they could face legal threat if the ban stands, giving the group clearance to sue on their behalf. The gun rights group argues the ban was inappropriately included in a 1,400-page bill in violation of a single-subject rule. The ruling will allow the case to proceed. Castro has not ruled on the merits of the lawsuit yet.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4mSIY5q
JUDGES: via Office of the Governor, VERBATIM: “Governor Tim Walz today announced the appointment of Daniel Hawley as a District Court Judge in Minnesota’s Ninth Judicial District. Hawley will replace the Honorable Erik J. Askegaard and will be chambered in Aitkin in Aitkin County. … Hawley is a partner at Gammello-Pearson PLLC.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/45ee811
SUPPORT SF 2929 AND HF 2677: Third-party lawsuit funding (TPLF) — or “lawsuit lending” — is a growing and extremely concerning trend in courts across the state and throughout the country that encourages frivolous lawsuits and threatens to drive up the costs of products, services, and insurance for Minnesota consumers. Fortunately, lawmakers are considering legislation — the Consumers in Crisis Protection Act (SF 2929 & HF 2677) — to increase transparency around this highly secretive practice and reasonably regulate third-party lawsuit funders to protect consumers and help keep premiums low. MORE INFO: https://fluence-media.co/4jivOfT (SPONSORED: ASPCIA)
DAM: via a Rep. Brad Finstad press release, VERBATIM: “Today, Congressman Brad Finstad (MN-01) celebrated the announcement of a $5,000,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) Federal Highway Administration’s Emergency Relief Program to help fund repairs to damaged roads and bridges that resulted from last year’s historic flooding across southern Minnesota. These federal funds will aid numerous communities across the First District…including the now-demolished Rapidan Dam in Blue Earth County, and the adjacent County Road 9 bridge.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4mN2EHX
ALLERGIES: via a Rep. Kelly Morrison press release, VERBATIM: “Today, U.S. Representative Kelly Morrison (MN-03) introduced the Allergen Disclosure in Non-Food Articles (ADINA) Act, which would require pharmaceutical companies to clearly label common allergens present in medications. The ADINA Act is named after Minnesota’s Third District constituent Adina, who suffered a severe allergy attack due to an unlabeled allergen in an antibiotic. Adina, who recovered and is now entering high school, brought her concerns to the U.S. House of Representatives.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/44fapyb
AG JOBS: via Office of the Governor, VERBATIM: “Governor Tim Walz today announced a new $2.4 million initiative to develop and implement agriculture-focused workforce training programs. … The new Growing Careers Program will award grants up to $500,000 for partners to develop training programs that will help more Minnesotans enter agriculture careers, especially dislocated workers, including those with low-income or who need assistance with basic skill development. It aims to increase the number of new and emerging farmers and farm businesses.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/45KQWHG
PUSH BACK AGAINST TAX BREAKS FOR BIG TECH DATA CENTERS: Our tax money should be going to essential services for Minnesotans, like education, health care, and infrastructure — not subsidies for billionaire owned data centers. The current tax credit has already cost our state an estimated $5 million a year since 2011. In 2025 it will be over $100 million. It’s time to stop these skyrocketing numbers. Tell your legislators, ‘No big tax breaks for Big Tech.’ LEARN MORE: https://fluence-media.co/3ErmQh8 (SPONSORED: Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy)
HWY 252: via Star Tribune, VERBATIM: “The Minnesota Department of Transportation has yet to decide whether to convert Hwy. 252 into a four- or six-lane freeway or leave the dangerous road as it currently is. That decision isn’t likely to come until late this year or early in 2026. But should MnDOT opt to transform the highway through Brooklyn Park and Brooklyn Center into a freeway, the agency has come up with five options for where and how motorists, pedestrians and bicyclists would get on, off and cross over the highway. … Plans will be discussed at open houses Tuesday and Wednesday in Brooklyn Park and Brooklyn Center.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4e2WRKA
WRIGHT CTY: via Minnesota Lawyer, VERBATIM: “In an ‘unprecedented scenario,’ the Minnesota Tax Court determined that a brief submitted by Wright County appeared to be at least partially written by artificial intelligence software that generated false case citations. The court found that the filing violated Minnesota civil procedure Rule 11, but it declined to order sanctions. However, it did refer the matter to the Minnesota Lawyers Professional Responsibility Board for further review. … Wright County acknowledged that the cases cited do not exist and that most of the brief was generated using AI.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4naoGVx
RAMSEY CTY: via Star Tribune, VERBATIM: “The decision to abandon plans to build a streetcar line down St. Paul’s W. 7th Street has left Ramsey County with $730 million to spend on other transportation projects over the coming decade. After the County Board said in September that it no longer backed the line, Public Works officials began figuring out how to best use the funding. What they came up with is a plan to make it easier for buses, cars, cyclists and pedestrians to get around the county. … [But] it’s a framework critics say doesn’t focus enough on transit and other alternative modes of transportation. Some residents also worry the plan continues to overlook the long-ignored West Seventh Street corridor.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/3HLh37n
STILLWATER: via Pioneer Press, VERBATIM: “Construction will begin this summer on a temporary solution to PFAS chemicals found in parts of Stillwater’s water supply. Market and Johnson Inc., of Eau Claire, Wis., submitted the lowest bid to construct a temporary facility to treat water from one of Stillwater’s wells to meet the latest standards. … Five bids were received and opened, city officials said. Market and Johnson, which has a local office in Stillwater, submitted a bid of $2,517,000, which beat the engineer’s estimate of $2,678,000, city officials said. The Stillwater City Council voted [last week] to accept the bid.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4mQCofJ
CELEBRATING 70 YEARS: The Pine Bend refinery in Rosemount is a landmark like no other – the tall columns, bright lights and steam during cold winter days can be seen from miles away. Generations of workers have helped operate, maintain and transform the refinery, making it one of the nation’s most innovative and efficient energy facilities of its kind. This year, Flint Hills Resources celebrates 70 years of dedicated employees at the Pine Bend refinery who have produced the fuels that help move us forward. LEARN MORE: About the Pine Bend refinery (SPONSORED: Flint Hills Resources)
From Friday’s Fluence newsletters:
STOCKS: via KAAL-TV, VERBATIM: “A bill reintroduced by U.S. Representative Angie Craig would restrict other representatives from trading or owning stocks. It’s called the ‘No Stock Resolution,’ and it would require every sitting member of the U.S. House of Representatives to immediately sell any stocks they own and refrain from future stock ownership while in office. Craig originally introduced the legislation in 2022 and brought it back as part of the ‘End Corruption Now’ legislative agenda with her colleagues.” READ: https://fluence-media.co/4dQhqcV
AGRICULTURE: via Agri-Pulse, VERBATIM: “This week's Open Mic guest is U.S. Representative Angie Craig, Ranking Member of the House Agriculture Committee. The Minnesota Democrat stands in strong opposition to the House Reconciliation Act that took billions of dollars from the SNAP program to make room for tax cuts and adds to the nation's budget deficit. Craig opposes the Trump Administration's use of tariffs and doesn't believe the nation's farm economy can withstand the economic challenges presented by reciprocal tariffs from offended trading partners. Craig says change to farm and food programs should come from regular order in Congress and not from the MAHA Commission.” LISTEN: https://fluence-media.co/4kQYT2n
TODAY: Gov. Tim Walz has no public events.
TODAY: via news advisory at 8:15AM, VERBATIM: “Minnesota House People of Color and Indigenous (POCI) Caucus will be joined by community leaders and advocates at a press conference to condemn the GOP's repeal of MNCare coverage for undocumented adult Minnesotans.”
THURSDAY: Gov. Tim Walz will testify at a U.S. House Oversight Committee hearing about “sanctuary states” on Thursday, June 12. Walz will appear alongside Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and New York Gov. Kathy Hochul. The event is at 9:00 a.m. central in Washington, D.C. DETAILS: https://fluence-media.co/43IBcCA
FRIDAY: The MN DFL announced its annual Humphrey-Mondale Dinner will be held on Friday, June 13 with Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker as the keynote speaker. DETAILS: https://fluence-media.co/4iiEa5R
SATURDAY: Sen. Amy Klobuchar will be the keynote speaker at a New Hampshire Democratic Party dinner on Saturday, June 14. She is reportedly traveling to support Chris Pappas’ Senate campaign. DETAILS: https://fluence-media.co/3HiY83C
BDAYS: fmr. candidate Melisa Franzen, Rochester leader Kathleen Harrington
TIPS: How do we get the best news and most buzzed about stories? Send us your tips at BloisOlson@gmail.com
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