(UPDATED 6:52 p.m.)
The 134-seat Minnesota House of Representatives appears as though it will be evenly divided during the 2025-26 biennium.
Control of the body still hung in the balance Wednesday with results from the Office of the Secretary of State showing DFL and Republican candidates each having won 67 races. That balance could be tipped by razor-thin results in a pair of races that appear tight enough to trigger automatic recounts under state law:
Wolgamott and Tabke each released a statement Wednesday declaring victory in their respective races.
Election results are not official until certified by the state canvassing board. That is scheduled to occur Nov. 21.
Republicans gained seats on the Iron Range, the St. Peter area, and Winona to turn the 70-64 DFL advantage in the House during the 2023-24 session into a dead heat. A DFL special election victory in Senate District 45 means the party will retain its one-seat majority in that body.
An evenly-divided House would be nearly unprecedented in the state’s history, occurring just once previously.
Reaction
“We would prefer to have the majority, and I know the Republicans would prefer to have the majority, but this is a golden opportunity to show people that we can get along and we can get things done,” House Speaker Melissa Hortman (DFL-Brooklyn Park) said during an afternoon news conference.
House Minority Leader Lisa Demuth (R-Cold Spring), who said early Wednesday in a post on the social media platform X that, “House Republicans broke the Democrat trifecta and restored balance to Minnesota,” also expressed a willingness to work across the aisle.
“This is a perfect opportunity for us to work together with our Democrat colleagues and bring civility back where there has been a lack of that,” Demuth said at a news conference. “… Our priority is restoring the transparency and accountability in the state of Minnesota.”
Both leaders said they have spoken briefly with one another about what a power-sharing agreement could look like. Those talks are expected to resume soon, they said. Demuth ruled out a scenario that would involve co-speakers.
The DFL caucus plans to meet Thursday evening to elect its leaders for the upcoming session. Republicans have a similar meeting scheduled Friday morning.
Demuth said the leaders chosen at those meetings could then resume negotiations.
“It's going to take full cooperation in how we choose to do our House rules, joint rules," she said. "All of that will be looked at in a way that will work best for everyone."
Hortman said the DFL has started looking around the country at other jurisdictions that have dealt with a tied legislature. There are many models to choose from, she said, adding that a power-sharing agreement could be an opportunity to modernize the rules and help the House operate more efficiently.
“Everything would have to be pre-negotiated before it got to the [House Floor] because there's really no sense in going to the floor and having a long debate and tying 67-67,” she said. “… There might be some process improvements that are good for all the human beings who work in this building, and not just the members.”
The 2025 session will begin Jan. 14 at noon; it must end by May 19.
-Mike Cook contributed to this story